Pommie



Pommie

  1. Pommy
  2. Pommies Nighties
  3. Pommies
  4. Pommie
  5. Pommies Meaning
  6. Pommie Dog

English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Pommy definition is - briton; especially: an English immigrant. Figure 1: The 11 IMGT 'Physicochemical' classes of the 20 common amino acids. The 11 IMGT 'Physicochemical' classes were defined on the 'Hydrophathy', 'Volume', 'Chemical', 'Charge', 'Hydrogen donor or acceptor atoms' and 'Polarity' properties of the side chains (or R- groups).

Pommy

From pom +‎ -ie(diminutive suffix). Australian from 1912.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /pɒmi/
  • Audio (AU)

Noun[edit]

pommie (pluralpommies)

  1. (colloquial,Australia,New Zealand,South Africa, sometimes pejorative) An Englishimmigrant; a pom.
    • 1953, Nevil Shute, In the Wet, 2010, unnumbered page,
      “It′ll be a long time before I do that,” the pilot said grimly. “She′s my Queen as well as yours, you know. I′m not a bloody Pommie.”[]“Too right, it′s difficult,” the Australian said. And then he added, “All Pommies aren′t bloody. I used that as a kind of figure of speech.”
    • 2005, Craig Zerf, Plob, page 234,
      A Pommie. They were sending him to England to work with a Pommie. After all that he had done for this country they were shipping him off to a cold, rain-infested, windy little isle to work a case with a Pommie.
    • 2011, Ali Lewis, Everybody Jam, unnumbered page,
      There are a lot of Pommies in Australia; travelling round, looking for work, and Dad reckoned you could pay them peanuts.[]If Sissy couldn′t go back to school, I thought she should help out more, then we wouldn′t have to hire a Pommie house girl.
Definition

Adjective[edit]

pommie (not comparable)

  1. (Australia,New Zealand,South Africa, sometimes derogatory)English; British.
    • See citations atpommy.

Related terms[edit]

Pommie
Retrieved from 'https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=pommie&oldid=55322372'
(Redirected from Mpumelelo Mbangwa)
Pommie Mbangwa
Personal information
Full nameMpumelelo Mbangwa
Born26 June 1976 (age 44)
Plumtree, Rhodesia
NicknamePommie, Vuvuzela
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight-arm fast-medium
RoleBowler
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 33)24 October 1996 v Pakistan
Last Test19 September 2000 v New Zealand
ODI debut (cap 48)1 November 1996 v Pakistan
Last ODI18 September 2002 v England
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1996–2004Matabeleland
Career statistics
CompetitionTestODIFCLA
Matches15296264
Runs scored343432488
Batting average2.004.856.894.63
100s/50s0/00/00/00/0
Top score81131*28
Balls bowled2,5961,3698,6272,871
Wickets321112638
Bowling average31.43103.6328.4154.39
5 wickets in innings0020
10 wickets in match0010
Best bowling3/232/246/143/29
Catches/stumpings2/–3/–21/–17/–
Source: ESPNcricinfo, 8 August 2015

Pommies Nighties

Mpumelelo 'Pommie' Mbangwa (born 26 June 1976) is a Zimbabwean cricket commentator and former cricketer. A right-arm fast bowler, he played 15 Test matches and 29 One Day Internationals for Zimbabwe between 1996 and 2002. After being dropped from the international side after the 2002 Champions Trophy, he took up work as a cricket commentator for television, and he has remained in that line of work since.

His nickname 'Pommie' arises from his pseudo-accent that he claims to have picked up during his brief studies in England. However, his formative school years were undertaken in Zimbabwe, a fact that his intonation and pronunciation of certain words and phrases betray.[citation needed]Given a qualification of twenty innings, Mbangwa has the lowest batting average (2.00) of all Test cricketers.[1] However, as of 2008, he is one of nine Zimbabweans to have taken 30 Test wickets, and of those only Heath Streak and David Brain took them at a lower average.

Pommies

Mbangwa's rise to prominence was all the more remarkable as he had no family background in cricket. A little short of the top pace, he was primarily a line-and-length bowler, using both seam and swing, with the away-swinger his stock ball. He spent a year at school in England, and in 1996 he went to Madras for coaching by Dennis Lillee; on his return he was offered a place in the Plascon Academy in South Africa, which he attended from April to September 1996.

A surprise choice for the Zimbabwe tour of Pakistan in 1996–97, he made his Test debut after the first choice bowlers were injured but made the most of his opportunity, taking the vital wickets of Ijaz Ahmed and Wasim Akram. But thereafter he struggled to maintain consistency, and his lack of pace meant that he was easy picking for international batsmen. He drifted in and out of the side, before disappearing from the international scene. In 2001 he started television commentary, where his quiet thoughtful views were well received, and in 2005 he ended a brief foray into coaching by committing full-time to his TV career. He was one of international cricket's genuine No. 11s.

References[edit]

  1. ^Frindall, Bill (2009). Ask Bearders. BBC Books. p. 87. ISBN978-1-84607-880-4.

Pommie

Sources[edit]

Pommies Meaning

  • Pommie's new playground, by Haydn Gill, published on Cricinfo on 3 May 2006

Pommie Dog

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