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Kel Richards'
Ozwords

Kel Richards' OzwordsKel Richards' OzwordsKel Richards' Ozwords

The Ozword of the Day: "Wild and woolly"

I’ve been asked for the origin of the expression ‘wild and woolly.’ 

According to the Oxford English Dictionary it means ‘barbarous and lacking in culture.’ 

This is American in origin (does that surprise you?), and the story is that it comes from the days of the American wild west on account of its primitive and uncivilized character. 

Which is all well and good as far as it goes. 

And that certainly explains the ‘wild’—but where does the ‘woolly’ come from? 

The answer is (according to the Phrase Finder website) the Californian Gold Rush era of the 1850s. 

A US publication The Protestant Episcopal Quarterly Review and Church Register of 1855, included a reference to the ‘wild and woolly-haired Negrillo’ which is almost there. 

The first example the website provides of the precise phrase in print is in the Missouri newspaper The Sedalia Daily Democrat, December 1875 in a story about someone called William Palmer, of South Bend, Indiana, who was a murderer. 

It says ‘Bill always was one of the “wild and woolly” kind...’ 

And the fact that they put the phrase in quotation marks indicates that it was still a new (and unfamiliar) phrase. 

The Oxford quotes from a book called Rangers and Pioneers of Texas (from 1884)—and here’s the quote: ‘Occasionally, in some Western village, you will hear a voice ring out on the night air “Wild and woolly” and then you may expect a few shots from a revolver. It is a cowboy out on a little spree.’ 

It’s not entirely clear (at least to me) where the ‘woolly’ part comes in, but America’s pioneering cowboy days are the source of the expression. 

One final thought—there is a suggestion that during cold nights on the prairie cowboys would wear jackets made of lamb’s wool, and it may be that the prevalence of these jackets contributed to the phrase. 

It’s a possibility.


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If you'd like to see my A-Z list of Aussie slang, you'll find it here in the Australian Geographic website -- A-Z list of Aussie slang. Here’s the link: The A-Z of Aussie slang - Australian Geographic


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THE AUSTRALIAN LANGUAGE

Kel Richards has been reporting on the Australian language for more than 30 years, and is the author of ten books about words and language. He has been described in one newspaper article as "the wordsmith to the nation." Kel is a veteran Australian author, journalist and broadcaster. In a long and distinguished career he has hosted ABC radio's flagship daily current affairs show "AM" and his own talkback shows on commercial radio. For 12 years Kel wrote and presented the popular daily feature "Word Watch" on ABC NewsRadio. For several years Kel was a member of the Standing Committee on Spoken English (SCOSE) at the ABC. Kel presents the weekly "Words Matter" segment on Peta Credlin's program on Sky News, he writes the "Language" column for The Spectator Australia and the "Ozwords" and "Placenames" columns for Australian Geographic. Kel joins John Stanley on 2GB, 4BC, 2CC and the Nine Radio Network each week for "The Word Clinic."

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