1862. G. T. Lloyd, `Thirty-three Years in Tasmania,' p. 21:
"If a slab or log hut was required to be erected . . . a cart-load of wool was pitchforked from the wasting heap, wherewith to caulk the crevices of the rough-hewn timber walls."
1884. Rolf Boldrewood, `Melbourne Memories,' c. vi. p. 42:
"`The hut,' a substantial and commodious structure, arose in all its grandeur."
1890. Id. `Miner's Right,' c. vi. p. 62:
"Entering such a hut, as it is uniformly, but in no sense of contempt, termed—a hut being simply lower in the scale than a cottage—you will find there nothing to shock the eye or displease the taste."
1891. W. Tilley, `Wild West of Tasmania,' p. 29:
"Bark and weatherboard huts alternating with imposing hotels and stores."
<hw>Hut-keep</hw>, <i>v</i>. to act as hut-keeper.
1865. S. Sidney, `Three Colonies of Australia,' p. 380