woolly back

Etymology
The Liverpool Echo suggests two possible origins for the term, both dating back to the early 1900s: Another suggestion is that it could have originated in the Middle Ages from non-resident Welsh and English people trying to avoid the entry fee at the Chester city walls on market day by sneaking in the livestock entrance with a sheep on their back.
 * It may be a term for scab workers brought into the city from surrounding towns to manually load and unload ships in the Liverpool docks; unloading ships, the dockers would carry the woollen bales on their backs, leaving wool on their clothes.
 * It may be a term for men who delivered coal into Liverpool from mines surrounding the city, who wore sheep fleece to protect their backs.

Noun

 * 1)  A non-Liverpudlian person who travels to Liverpool, especially to work at the docks.
 * 2)  A person from the Merseyside area surrounding Liverpool such as Skelmersdale, St. Helens, Southport, Widnes, and the Wirral.
 * 3)  Any unsophisticated person from the countryside.
 * 4)  A Welsh person.
 * 5)  A New Zealander.

Translations

 * Finnish:, , ,