A fork of Rural Dictionary
(often, 'Durry') Generic term for a cigarette in the Antipodeas, esp. Australia. Short for 'Bull Durham' - an old brand of rolling tobacco. "David Bradley, Australian Journal of Linguistics (1989) suggests that it may be derived from a widely used brand of loose tobacco used for roll-your-owns, Bull Durham, clipped and resuffixed with the most productive suffix for forming new colloquial words in Australian English." Source: AUSTRALIAN NATIONAL DICTIONARY CENTRE
Please will you light my Durrie mate.
A slang term for cigarette. Used mainly in Australia but sometimes New Zealand.
"Oi ranga!" "Yer mate?" "Passus a durrie would ya!"
An Australian slang term for a cigarette, usually a rollie.
may I buy a packet of durries, cheers mate?
Smoking a durrie refers to a cigarette. During the 1st world war, ANZACs , particularly the Australian Light Horse, trained in Egypt before deploying to the Dardanelles. While training they had some time off in towns, where they could buy souvenirs and comfort items like tobacco. Tobacco was sold in the market place, and displayed on carpets, called dhurries. If you got to the market at the end of the day, and bought the last of the tobacco, they sometimes got some carpet fluff mixed in with the tobacco, and the diggers joked that they were smoking more carpet fluff than tobacco, hence the term smoking a dhurrie. Still used in the Australian army to this day as slang for a smoke= durrie.
Hey mate, can I Bludge a Durrie off ya?