penis
Language:
Australian:
Cud-da
English JS Main:
penis
English:
{Ga-dia (the penis), they called Cud-da; Go-rey (the ear), they called Ben-ne; in the word mi (the eye), they pronounced the letter I as an E. And in many other instances their pronunciation varied, so that there is good reason to believe several different languages are spoken by the natives of this country, and this accounts for only one or two of those words given in Captain CookÕs vocabulary having ever been heard amongst the natives who visited the settlement.}
Category:
body parts and products
Sub-category:
privates
Source:
Phillip in Hunter
Page:
347
Line:
10.1
Respelt:
ga-da
Part of speech:
noun
Date:
1792
Meaning Clue:
"Cud-da" gada = "penis (Buruburongal)" penis : Phillip in Hunter [:347:10.1] [DG]
Source Details:
The Journal of Governor Arthur Phillip from 3 June 1790 to 17 December 1791 (pp. 299-375) in AN HISTORICAL JOURNAL OF EVENTS AT SYDNEY AND AT SEA 1787-1792 by Captain John Hunter, Commander H.M.S. Sirius with further accounts by Governor Arthur Phillip, Lieutenant P. G. King, and Lieutenant H. L. Ball (originally published 1793), edited by John Bach, Ph.D., Senior Lecturer in History, University of Newcastle.
Published by Angus and Robertson, 89 Castlereagh Street, Sydney, in Association with the Royal Australian Historical Society. This edition published in 1968. Copyright. National Library of Australia Registry Number AUS 67-2147
Printed in Australia by Halstead Press, Sydney. xxxv + 452 pages.
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This edition was scanned, read by optical character recognition and formatted, and dates and subject headings added, by Jeremy Steele in April 2004, for his private use.
There is a copy of Hunter’s Journal in the Rare Books Library, Fisher Library. It does not entirely match this 1968 edition.
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Originally published as An Historical Journal of the Transactions at Port Jackson and Norfolk Island,with the Discoveries which have been made in New South Wales and in the Southern Ocean , since the Publication of Phillip's Voyage, compiled from the Official Papers including the Journals of Governors Phillip and King, and of Lieut. Ball; and the Voyages from the First Sailing of the Sirius in 1787, to the Return of that Ship's Company to England in 1792. By Iohn Hunter, Esqr., Post Captain in His Majesty's Navy . Illustrated with Seventeen Maps, Charts, Views, & Other Embellishments
Drawn on the Spot by Captains Hunter & Bradley, Lieutenant Dawes, & Governor King. London. Printed For John Stockdale, Piccadilly, January 1, 1793.