See also: digger

English edit

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

  • (Can this(+) etymology be sourced?) Derived from Australian Colonial goldfields terminology. The term represents the mateship of common interests and activities where most of the population were gold miners, and almost everybody was a mate, a "digger", with a common cause against the troopers, the traps, the mining licence inspectors.

Noun edit

Digger (plural Diggers)

  1. A soldier from Australia or New Zealand.
  2. (historical) One of a group of Protestant English agrarian communists, begun by Gerrard Winstanley as "True Levellers" in 1649.
  3. (obsolete, derogatory) One of a degraded tribe of California Native Americans who dug up roots for food.
Translations edit

Etymology 2 edit

From Digg +‎ -er.

Noun edit

Digger (plural Diggers)

  1. (Internet) A user of the American news aggregator Digg.
    • 2006, PC World, page 115:
      THANKS TO DIGG, the Web’s most frequented news-ranking site, we now know: Geeks like gaming gossip, incendiary technology policy stories, and NASA photos. Diggers vote early and often, and can get breaking news to the front page surprisingly quickly.
    • 2009 November, Dan Zarrella, “Social News and Bookmarking”, in The Social Media Marketing Book, O’Reilly Media, published 2011, section “Reddit”, page 121:
      Redditors are similar to Diggers (twentysomething geeks), albeit the former are slightly more educated and gender neutral.
    • 2012 September, B. J. Mendelson, “And Now You Know … the Rest of the Story”, in Social Media Is Bullshit, New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s Press, →ISBN, part I, page 53:
      As Justin Halpern told me, “I think what both [Rob Corddry and actress Kristen Bell] did, especially Rob, was that they got Shit My Dad Says seen by people that aggressively share stuff online. Diggers, Redditors, etc. []

Anagrams edit

German edit

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

Borrowed from English digger.

Noun edit

Digger m (strong, genitive Diggers, plural Digger)

  1. digger
    Synonym: Goldgräber
Declension edit

Etymology 2 edit

Pronunciation respelling of Dicker in a Hamburg accent, from where the term was popularized via hip-hop culture starting from the 1990s.

Noun edit

Digger

  1. (colloquial, regional) Pronunciation spelling of Dicker (literally fatty), used as an informal term of address.
    Synonyms: Alter, Keule, Kumpel, Bre, Bra, Bratan
Alternative forms edit

Further reading edit