this post was submitted on 05 Aug 2025
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A dictionary is descriptive not prescriptive.
If Aussies wanna say bingle for a prang, they can go right ahead
Feel like a bingle is more like when you reverse into a pole or scratch the bumper, or maybe rear end/reverse into another vehicle at <10km/h. Prangs require panel beating and maybe a trip to the hospital.
Ah interesting I think we would maybe say dinged if it was a minor superficial bump, prangs go from there up to about what you described, generally no one gets hurt in a prang over here though. After that it's probably just crash until you get to the totaled/wrote-off territory
Yeah, I think "dinged" and "bingle" are pretty interchangeable. And a hospital trip from a prang is probably more for whiplash or a sprain - not broken bones in traction or being admitted to ICU... You can definitely have an injury-free prang, though, I agree.
"dinged" when your car gets hit by a trolley, "bingle" when you back into a bollard, "prang" when you get rear-ended at stop lights.
This interpretation is solid. I've lived in various regions over about a 2000km span of the east coast, and noticed usage varies a bit depending on where you are.
(Kind of jarring when you find yourself talking cross purposes with someone of the same nationality and almost identical accent - like when I moved to Qld and discovered some people up there have a very different interpretation of the word "toey" from what we do down south... 😅 )