digger
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 9
- Words With Friends
- 11
- Letters
- 6
See all 2 pronunciations Show less
Definition of digger
12 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included
noun
-
A large piece of machinery that digs holes or trenches.
“The cables are placed from 16 in. to 2 ft. down, and to save time and labour use was made of a mechanical digger lent by the Swedish State Railways.”
See all 12 definitions Show less
noun
-
A large piece of machinery that digs holes or trenches.
“The cables are placed from 16 in. to 2 ft. down, and to save time and labour use was made of a mechanical digger lent by the Swedish State Railways.”
-
A tool for digging.
“The post hole digger did look ancient. I was pretty certain myself that it hadn′t dug any holes for a long, long time.”
- (slang)A spade (playing card).
-
One who digs.
“You′ve tried the supposedly sure method of squirting the digger with water from a hose, and that hasn′t worked.[…]This step will discourage 99 percent of the diggers.”
“Most retrievers are not inveterate diggers — that′s a trait usually reserved for other breeds like wire-haired terriers and schnauzers.”
-
(Australia, obsolete)A gold miner, one who digs for gold.
“A successful Australian digger — successful, not merely in siftings and washings, but bearing the title, and its best credentials, of a “nuggetter” − came down from Forest Creek recently and took up his abode in a low lodging-house in Little Bourke Street, Melbourne.”
“Proofs of the presence of the white man are found all over the Territory in the shape of old bouilli tins, &c., and often when out after a strayed horse, I have imagined myself to be in wilds untrodden except by the foot of the blackfellow, but the sight of an unassuming empty sardine tin would remind me that the ubiquitous digger had been there first.”
-
(Australia, informal)An Australian soldier.
“Costume played a key part in his differentiation from British soldiers as the Digger uniform came to embody Australian versions of masculinity and mateship.”
“For many, the congruencies of the Anzac legend and the diggers who served in Vietnam were slight, too slight, and the legend seemed unable to accommodate them.”
“Like many other Queensland communities, the workers from the North Ipswich Railway Workshops chose a statue of a soldier, or digger, to honour their fellow workers.”
- (Australia, broadly, dated)a friendly term of address, especially to a man.
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(US, dated, ethnic, offensive, slang, slur, vulgar)A member of any Native American people in the western United States, especially Native Californians.
“White men are not usually hanged for killing Chinamen, but Indians who commit such a crime are strung up with little ceremony. Last week a Digger was hung at Jackson, Amador county, for having last summer murdered some Chinamen at Rancheria.”
“From what we could see and all we could learn, they are very considerably inferior to even the despised Digger Indians of California; inferior to all races of savages on our continent; inferior to even the Terra del Fuegans; inferior to the Hottentots, and actually inferior in some respects to the Kytches of Africa.”
- A soldier from Australia or New Zealand.
- (historical)One of a group of Protestant English agrarian communists, begun by Gerrard Winstanley as "True Levellers" in 1649.
- (derogatory, obsolete)One of a degraded tribe of California Native Americans who dug up roots for food.
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(Internet)A user of the American news aggregator Digg.
“THANKS TO DIGG, the Web’s most frequented news-ranking site, we now know: Geeks like gaming gossip, incendiary technology policy stories, and NASA photos. Diggers vote early and often, and can get breaking news to the front page surprisingly quickly.”
“Redditors are similar to Diggers (twentysomething geeks), albeit the former are slightly more educated and gender neutral.”
“As Justin Halpern told me, “I think what both [Rob Corddry and actress Kristen Bell] did, especially Rob, was that they got Shit My Dad Says seen by people that aggressively share stuff online. Diggers, Redditors, etc.[…]””
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
From Middle English dyggar, equivalent to dig + -er. In the sense of "Australian soldier", attributed to the considerable time that soldiers spent digging trenches during World War I.
Words you can make from digger
34 playable · top: RIGGED (9 pts)
Best play rigged 9 points5-letter words
4 words4-letter words
8 words3-letter words
15 words2-letter words
6 wordsHooks
1 extension · 1 back
A single letter you can add to digger to make another valid word.
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