Durry
Origin
Unknown. Possibly (putative obsolete brand of roll-your-own tobacco) + -y ("diminutive suffix").
From 1940s; evidence of colloquial use from early 20thC.
Alternative forms
Full definition of durry
Noun
durry
(plural durries)- (Australia and New Zealand, colloquial, slang) A cigarette, especially a roll-your-own. From 1940s.
- 2003, C. C. Saint-Clair, Far from Maddy, page 224,“Fire-head lady, you got a smoke?†asks the younger of the two men. “You got a durry. Cigarette.†His timbre is low but void of inflexion. “Come,†he says again, brown hand scooping the air in front of him.
- 2004, Jay Verney, Percussion, page 118,He pulled a tobacco pouch out of his pocket with a plastic bag containing what had to be a mind-altering substance. “You′re welcome to join me in a durry,†he said, rolling himself a cigarette.
- 2007, Kevin Hallewell, Woop Woop, page 151,He thought for a moment as he deftly rolled the paper and tobacco into a durry, licked the edge and stuck it down.