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jackeroo

or jack·a·roo

[ jak-uh-roo ]

noun

, plural jack·e·roos.
  1. an inexperienced person working as an apprentice on a sheep ranch.


verb (used without object)

, jack·e·rooed, jack·e·roo·ing.
  1. to work as an apprentice on a sheep ranch.

jackeroo

/ ˌdʒækəˈruː /

noun

  1. informal.
    a young male management trainee on a sheep or cattle station
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Word History and Origins

Origin of jackeroo1

1875–80; jack 1 + (kang)aroo; -eroo
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Word History and Origins

Origin of jackeroo1

C19: from jack 1+ ( kang ) aroo
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Example Sentences

In 1964, he signed up as a ranch hand, known as a jackeroo, after embellishing his abilities on horseback, and was sent to the Kimberley, a vast region in northwestern Australia.

The trek doesn’t go quite as planned, and Lola takes a job as a jackeroo — the term is explained — at the winery’s nearby sheep farm.

And how many Americans of any century would say “jackeroo?”

My boyfriend and I have set up a meeting with Father David Barry, a soft-spoken scholar who worked as a bricklayer and as a jackeroo — a cattle station worker — before joining the monastery in 1955.

Happy Valley resembles the country that White rode across as a handsome young jackeroo, an unsalaried apprenticed drover.

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