English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From back +‎ block.

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Noun edit

backblock (plural backblocks)

  1. (Australia, New Zealand, usually in the plural) A remote tract of land in the interior; hence (in plural) sparsely populated country far from major cities and lacking conveniences common in urban areas. [from 19th c.]
    • 1931, New Zealand House of Representatives, Parliamentary Debates[1], volume 229, page 281:
      I speak solely for the backblock roads, and I contend that the time has arrived when the Government should turn its attention to the metalling of these roads.
    • 1955, Helen Wilson, My First Eighty Years[2], page 185:
      It has happened in other districts that new settlement has turned the old centres into isolated backblocks.
    • 1991, Robin Hyde, Gillian Boddy, Jacqueline D. Matthews, Disputed Ground: Robin Hyde, Journalist, page 225:
      Backblocks hardship is a very real thing, but Mary Scott expresses it somewhat too much in the Victorian ‘There′s a tear on your eye’ mode, little graves on the hillside and old servants, horses and dogs, faithful to the last.
    • 2001, Richard Flanagan, Gould's Book of Fish, Vintage, published 2016, page 82:
      The weeping man was an emancipist who had a backblock in the next valley & sometimes came over to see his cobber the shepherd, both being Roscommon men.
  2. Land behind that which fronts on water; land without a permanent watercourse. [from 19th c.]