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Definition 2024
carn
carn
English
Noun
carn (plural carns)
- Archaic form of cairn.
- 1807, George Chalmers, Caledonia
- The Druid Carns are generally fenced round the bottom, by a circle of stones: these Carns had always on their summits, a large flat stone, on which the Druid fires were lighted […]
- 1807, George Chalmers, Caledonia
Etymology 2
Adapted from the vernacular pronunciation of c'mon, itself an informal variant of come on. The first uses of the term in its extended sense appear to have been amongst Australian rules football fans in Victoria, with the use later spreading to other states and sports.
Interjection
carn
- (Australia, informal) Come on.
- (Australia, informal) An exclamation of support or approval, usually for a sporting (especially football) team.
- 1956 September 10, "Carn the Magpies!", The Argus
- 2001 March 26, "Rabbitohs win hearts and minds of the disaffected", The Sydney Morning Herald
- Cries of "Carn the Bunnies" rang out, and the talk was of past glories, present disappointments and future hopes.
- 2004 February 12, "Keeping sport local on our ABC", The Age
- Surely there is someone in ABC Television management who has read Bruce Dawe's evocative poem Life Cycle: "When children are born in Victoria/they are wrapped in the club-colours, laid in beribboned cots/having already begun a lifetime's barracking/Carn, they cry, carn … feebly at first."
- 2011 October 11, "Carn the Four'n Twenty, says Preston", Herald Sun
Anagrams
Catalan
Etymology
From Old Provençal carn, from Latin carō, carnem, from Proto-Italic *karō, from Proto-Indo-European *ker-, *(s)ker-.
Noun
carn f (uncountable)
Derived terms
- carn de bou
- carn de porc
- carn de vaca
Old French
Noun
carn f (oblique plural carns, nominative singular carn, nominative plural carns)
- (early Anglo-Norman) Alternative form of char (flesh)