Rugby verbs: A new lexicon

By Harry Jones / Expert

Super Rugby has the best names. Listening to Super Rugby commentators every weekend is a splendid cacophony of Spanish, Japanese, Xhosa, Sotho, Afrikaans, Tongan, Maori, or Fijian names stewed into an expressive anthem of speed and power.

“Akira Ioane busts through Lood de Jager’s tackle! Akker the Warthog is free, with only Perenara to beat! Boffelli has buffaloed Burger!”

But as was recently discovered on The Roar, the names of Super Rugby can be adapted to verbs, often quite muscular verbs with precision, supplying our never-ending English tongue with new and descriptive action words.

I believe the first verb was ‘riccitelli’, meaning to deliver a lineout ball from well inside the field of play, boots not even near the touchline.

More verbs occurred to me:

1. To sheek: to paint a lovely picture of days gone by, otherwise known as ella-cindering.
2. To joubert a referee: to focus on one error made in the heat of the moment and drive the official out of the sport.
3. To nonu or faauli an opponent: to impale a ball carrier with one’s shoulder, but smile boyishly as the victim is stretchered off, and then check on them in hospital.
4. To lord: to have many constituent facts wrong, yet still magically reach the right conclusion.
5. To jantjies: to fold into a fetal position upon the slightest setback on the pitch, resulting in a lopsided haircut.
6. To kitshoff an opposing prop: to create such morbid fear of ginger beer, ginger ale, ginger snaps, the ginger next to sashimi, and Ginger Rogers, that your opponent dances backward at scrum time like Fred Astaire.
7. To akker: to run 10 cm off the turf, bellowing and snorting and generally behaving like Diggercane on amphetamines.
8. To rhule: to evade evasively, on attack and defence.
9. To beale: or not to beale, that is the question.
10. To ned: to limply lope languidly into contact, except when rhuled.
11. To bosch: to kick like a mule, but run away from all collisions as if an eggshell.
12. To levanini: to burger and eben and franks another player, but get carded by a referee who peypers your actions like a fionn.
13. To sanchez: either to dive soccerly upon a whisper of contact or to snipe from the base of a disintegrating scrum.
14. To RG: to pretend to be a criminally fast giraffe who despises English tourists.
15. To hayden: to look even more like an accountant than Bun Smith.

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16. To crockett: to soar and boar, with an emphasis on the arse.
17. To PSDT: to be just slow enough to fail, and just fast enough to almost not fail.
18. To ioane: to be kainoed, or to float, to glide, to score, to win, to smile; or to bash, and scowl, and dream of joining one’s brother on a test team, also known as barretting or du preezing.
19. To be thorred: to be nuggeted by a South African eighthman, while trying to tackle up high, only to be lifted higher than a toilet door, and disposed of, and crudened, or put to sleep.
20. To mounga: to create a flyhalf selection controversy by being brilliant while supported by a pack that loods and reads and furlongs and marxes other packs.
21. To jordie: to invade homes which seem like they have someone named Schalk inside.
22. To lam: to score miraculous tries and never do anything else.
23. To whiteley: to turn haplessly to the sideline to seek guidance on 3 versus 7 calls.
24. To kwagga: to waiseke and akira defenders, while breaking one’s nose.
25. To phipps: to urinate in costume, but not when being putined or colluding.
26. To bishop: to turn anything into a diagramme, and be laconic about it.
27. To cooper: to quade fans and ashley coaches.
28. To gill: to be the best, but never prove it.
29. To cronje: to move like a crab, but sting like a bee.
30. To angus: to scold or perenara, in a clear voice.
31. To mckay: to tip retroactively better than prospectively.
32. To crotty: to find knees with your head.
33. To whitelock: to shave without success.
34. To spiro: to be faxed in the middle of the night.

The Crowd Says:

2018-08-08T10:12:13+00:00

RobC

Roar Guru


Thanks Hazżżźźzzžaaàaaaàáæąą That's hilarious. Though you missed one. To Damien McKenzie...

2018-08-05T23:13:12+00:00

Tuc Du Nard

Guest


Thanks Harry....why have I not read this before! Great stuff. To Gregan: to milk penalties with ridiculous unaware direct passes into shocked opp players heads thus illuminating offside play.

AUTHOR

2018-08-05T11:37:01+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Jajajajaja!!

AUTHOR

2018-08-05T11:36:08+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


To be limaed

2018-08-05T11:00:56+00:00

Nobrain

Roar Guru


To Jones : To decide to become a comedian when all tipping strategies failed. Great job Harry!! LOL

2018-08-05T10:24:54+00:00

Brett McKay

Expert


WHY AM I ONLY SEEING THIS NOW!?!? :lol: :lol:

2018-08-04T07:13:46+00:00

Akari

Guest


Funtastic Hazza and I am now in the mood and ready to watch the Lions and the Saders belt each other shortly.

2018-08-04T07:09:13+00:00

Akari

Guest


Thanks moa as it reminds me of: the Brian Lima treatment - the chiropractor to avoid at any cost

2018-08-04T01:33:16+00:00

Pickett

Guest


To haribaldi it... When a player does the offbeat, unconventional and something-outside-the-box type thing. Might not pull it off but leaves a smile on the crowd.

2018-08-04T01:12:52+00:00

rebel

Roar Guru


I believe the only one in existence is his ultrasound scan image.

2018-08-04T00:26:43+00:00

Gewurtz

Guest


To cheika: to repeatedly rant and make a complete fool of yourself. So far it seems to be an incurable disease.

2018-08-03T23:39:44+00:00

aussikiwi

Guest


I am a man more Thorred against than Thorring?

2018-08-03T21:14:01+00:00

moa

Guest


Shout out for the Samoans and Canadians as well.

2018-08-03T20:21:20+00:00

Hugo

Guest


Good stuff, Harry. Here's a challenge that should be easy for a scholar like you - put some rugby names into famous Shakespeare quotes. You may use anything from the First Foleyo.

2018-08-03T16:32:25+00:00

Carlos the Argie

Guest


Oh no! I didn't see this when I wrote my to creevy below.

2018-08-03T16:30:38+00:00

Carlos the Argie

Guest


Thirtysomething: To creevy, is to look in astonished bemusement at the referee call.

2018-08-03T16:28:34+00:00

Carlos the Argie

Guest


Nice job Harry. You did miss some nationalities. Sanchez may be a Spanish. But a Boffelli is really an Italian. Same as a Lavanini. Or a Matera. You have quite a few. As you know, Argentines are statistically speaking Italians who speak Spanish, they think they are French and they play English games.

AUTHOR

2018-08-03T11:54:10+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Does anyone have a photo of Sam Whitelock clean shaven?

AUTHOR

2018-08-03T11:52:57+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Ha! Love the TMO definition

AUTHOR

2018-08-03T11:52:20+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


NB To halfpenny: to kick inerrantly after almost disrobing

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