English
Etymology
Coined by Australian journalist and politician w:Daniel Deniehy|Daniel Deniehy (1828-1865) in 1853 satirise|satirising a proposal of w:William Wentworth|William Wentworth for an hereditary peerage in the then colony of New South Wales. (Reference: Bill Wannan, Australian Folklore, Lansdowne Press, 1970, reprint 1979 ISBN 0-7018-1309-1, entry for "Bunyip Aristocracy".)
At that time in the Sydney underworld bunyip was slang for an imposter or con-man, a sense Deniehy may have been taking in, but one almost certainly unknown to Wentworth. (Reference: The Lingo: Listening to Australian English, Graham Seal, w:University of New South Wales Press|University of New South Wales Press, 1999, ISBN 086840-680-5, page 16.)
Noun
en-noun|sg=bunyip aristocracy|-
- AU A peerage (hypothetical or proposed) in Australia. The term is used scorn|scornfully for such a scheme.
#: 1853: we all know the common water mole was transferred into the duck-billed platypus, and in some distant emulation of this degeneration, I suppose we are to be favoured with a "bunyip aristocracy" — w:Daniel Deniehy|Daniel Deniehy, speech at the Victoria Theatre in Pitt St, 15 August 1853, and reported in the w:Sydney Morning Herald|Sydney Morning Herald the following day
ru:bunyip aristocracy
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