Russian officials ridiculed the threat made by Prime Minister Tony Abbott at a news conference last month, warning that President Vladimir Putin was a judo expert.
Susan Butler, editor of the Macquarie Dictionary, the definitive authority on Australian English, said Monday that the controversy made her editors realise that the term had taken on a broader meaning in recent decades than an illegal manoeuvre on the football field.
Abbott, an athletic 56-year-old former amateur boxer, never explained what he meant by his plan to "shirtfront" Putin, 62, when the pair met on the sidelines of the annual G-20 summit of leaders of wealthy and emerging countries, held in the Australian city of Brisbane on November 15-16.
Abbott later tempered his language, promising a "robust discussion" when the leaders met. Abbott has demanded more cooperation from Russia on the Dutch-led investigation into the downing of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 in eastern Ukraine in July by a missile suspected to have been fired by Russian-backed rebels.
Draft definitions include "to grab (a man) by the front of his shirt in an aggressive and threatening manner, usually as a preliminary to abusing or berating him." The meaning could also be as innocuous as "to confront (someone) with a complaint or grievance."
Abbott was also at the centre of a political storm in 2012 that prompted the same dictionary to change its definition of "misogyny."
When then-Prime Minister Julia Gillard branded Abbott a misogynist in a fiery speech, her critics accused her of hyperbole, pointing to dictionary definitions of misogyny as hatred of women.
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