"A general name for all Australian clubs is `waddy,' and, although they are really clubs, they are often used as missiles in battle."
(2) The word is sometimes used for a walking-stick.
<hw>Waddy</hw>, <i>v. trans</i>. to strike with a waddy.
1855. Robert Lowe (Viscount Sherbrooke), `Songs of the Squatters,' canto ii. st. 7:
"When the white thieves had left me, the black thieves
appeared,
My shepherds they waddied, my cattle they speared."
1869. `Victorian Hansard,' Nov. 18, vol. ix. p. 2310, col. 2:
"They were tomahawking them, and waddying them, and breaking their backs."
1882. A. Tolmer, `Reminiscences,' p. 291:
"In the scuffle the native attempted to waddy him."
1893. `The Argus,' April 8, p. 4, col. 3: