AUSTRALIAN REACTS TO AUSSIE SLANG | AMERICANS REACT

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  • Опубликовано: 17 дек 2023
  • #BrianneWorth #Australia #Australian #Aussie #Slang #AmericansReact #Reaction #DreamTeamNeal
    Join D. Neal and Makensey as they react to Miss Brianne's hilarious take on Aussie slang. From phrases like "flat out like a lizard drinking" to "carrying on like a pork chop," they dive into the wacky world of Australian linguistics. Get ready for a laugh-out-loud journey through the land of down under! Don't forget to hit subscribe and ring the notification bell for more entertaining reactions.
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Комментарии • 165

  • @noellzy
    @noellzy 7 месяцев назад +21

    50 year old Sydney boy, born and raised. This woman has done the best slang explanation I've seen. And in our cultural tone, dry and self mocking. She's a bloody legend.

    • @johnlaverty9994
      @johnlaverty9994 7 месяцев назад +1

      The only thing they could have done was set replay speed to 75%, missed a few of them.

    • @vernonwright8886
      @vernonwright8886 3 месяца назад

      60y.o. from Tassie , I watched lots of U.S. t.v.

  • @petemedium2185
    @petemedium2185 7 месяцев назад +45

    "Carrying on like a pork chop" was originally "You''re carrying on like there's a pork chop in the Synagogue." Obviously to some that could be offensive, so it just got shortened ... older Aussies knew what it meant.

    • @xxillicitxx
      @xxillicitxx 7 месяцев назад +2

      I thought it was because they spit when you cook them and the fat makes popping noises

    • @petemedium2185
      @petemedium2185 7 месяцев назад

      @@xxillicitxx Oh yes I remember that one. I thought that was a pork sausage. They probably derived from a similar base somewhere long ago.

  • @bluedog1052
    @bluedog1052 7 месяцев назад +42

    As a middle-aged Aussie, yes, I've used all of them, most not daily however, and there's plenty more left on the shelf too.

  • @dutchroll
    @dutchroll 7 месяцев назад +38

    Fun fact: the aussie slang saying "Buckley's chance" or just "Buckley's" (which means slim or no chance, extremely unlikely) originates from a real story. William Buckley was an escaped convict here in the 1800s. He lived in the bush among the aboriginals and eluded authorities for 30 years - a feat considered next to impossible for a white person back then. A variation of this saying is "you have two chances - Buckley's and none" which means it just ain't gonna happen.

    • @BeeDotEee
      @BeeDotEee 7 месяцев назад +4

      Buckley & Nunn was also a department store in Melbourne.

    • @brianmalady1190
      @brianmalady1190 7 месяцев назад

      You got two chances and they're both in Bourke Street. Is the saying

  • @heathergoldsmith
    @heathergoldsmith 7 месяцев назад +10

    Don't forget that our slang is also very regional. Not all states and regions use the exact same words for things. Beer size names is a great example, but there are many others. This was a fun reaction. 😂

  • @margothealy6881
    @margothealy6881 7 месяцев назад +18

    Nah Yeah…she did a top job and didn’t exaggerate …we say all of these

  • @shanegates678
    @shanegates678 7 месяцев назад +17

    This is all legit everyday Aussie language..i take for granted but some make think we have murdered the English language. I was in Nevada recently.. just talking normally and our lovely host said, "Dear, i barely picked up half of of what you just said, and I only know its English because i got the other half." 😂

  • @trevorkrause7220
    @trevorkrause7220 7 месяцев назад +10

    "fair suck of the sauce bottle" is an old slang term that may make more sense if one considers that in times past the rum or whisky or just ill-defined home brewed alcoholic spirits was referred to sometimes as "sauce". These bottles of "sauce" were often shared with mates with no glasses in sight. If one got a bit greedy or spent too long swigging from the bottle then the others could chide him by stating the unwritten rule "mates should get a fair suck of the sauce bottle, no more, no less". Thus it came to mean that mates share what they have, nobody should get more than their share, and expect a suitable rebuke if you fail to stick to that rule.

    • @kerrydoutch5104
      @kerrydoutch5104 7 месяцев назад +1

      Oooooohhhh brilliant that explains it makes total sense

    • @nevilleapple629
      @nevilleapple629 7 месяцев назад

      Really to me and the state or country ,maybe QLD is different,I’m from always said fair suck of the sav until KRudd came along with some sort of a dad like illiterateration that turned the sav into a sauce bottle of which he was heckled for doing by the media.

  • @aussiebornandbred
    @aussiebornandbred 7 месяцев назад +53

    I've got a Mexican mate who has been studying ( US ) English for for some time and thought he had a great grasp on the English language, and then he came to Australia in September, and he was like WTF are these people saying???😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @catherinemckay7959
      @catherinemckay7959 7 месяцев назад +7

      Tell him I'm an Aussie Mexican 😂

    • @aussiebornandbred
      @aussiebornandbred 7 месяцев назад +9

      @@catherinemckay7959 I'm originally a Mexican too, from Victoria that is but, i snuck across the border a looooong time ago 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @catherinemckay7959
      @catherinemckay7959 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@aussiebornandbred 😂😂😂😂

    • @paulrodsted3905
      @paulrodsted3905 7 месяцев назад +5

      You made me laugh....
      We have a phillipino guy at work who's English name is warren....
      Wazza...... 😆

    • @grantmcauliffe3437
      @grantmcauliffe3437 7 месяцев назад +3

      Yes indeed. I have a friend from Germany and learnt English and after a little while began to realise that she was missing something important in our slang.

  • @jamesmorgan4121
    @jamesmorgan4121 7 месяцев назад +12

    Only thing you need to know is that we (Australians) are natural smart arses and our slang reflects that 😊

  • @trevorkrause7220
    @trevorkrause7220 7 месяцев назад +4

    There is another Aussie saying that is either "S.O.L" or "Shit On the Liver" which basically means the same as "Cracking the shits". In olden times the heart was considered the source of passion and love, while the liver was the source of anger and temper. Thus if the liver wasn't cleansed or voided by various means or potions or spells there could be a buildup of basically waste or faeces on the liver that would cause that person to go towards anger and rage. So "cracking the shits" basically means the coming out of the symptoms or the external expression of an internal disorder of the accumulation of faeces on the liver.

  • @user-bi8wp6wy3l
    @user-bi8wp6wy3l 7 месяцев назад +9

    According to an Aussie slang expert I was watching recently carry on like a pork chop was shortened from the longer carry on like a pork chop in Jerusalem on a Saturday and was a pretty common expression back in the 1920s..

    • @user-mm4rz8mk3e
      @user-mm4rz8mk3e 7 месяцев назад +3

      I was about to write that, but I was obviously a bit slow off the mark.

  • @julzhunt7790
    @julzhunt7790 7 месяцев назад +6

    Yep… “Let’s confuse the Americans” And it’s worked. 😆😂 this was fun😂😂❤️🇦🇺👍🏼

  • @catherinemckay7959
    @catherinemckay7959 7 месяцев назад +7

    Im a Mexican. Im an Aussie but i live south of the border.

  • @bestbeerman
    @bestbeerman 7 месяцев назад +1

    The Dropped Pie one can also be "head like a smashed crab". Keep up the good work guys, take it easy. Cheers

  • @069diesel069
    @069diesel069 7 месяцев назад +1

    A head like a deep sea racing mackerel
    A head like a robbers dog
    A head like a smashed crab 🦀 just a few more aussie sayings for ugly that isn’t personal. Love the show, you 2, and COME OVER AND JOIN THE PARTY 🎉❤🇦🇺🇺🇸

  • @Nonny54aussie
    @Nonny54aussie 7 месяцев назад +2

    It originates from rhyming slang of the UK brought over from the convict era. It has, however, grown and expanded since then. More commonly used in country areas as opposed to the major cities.
    More commonly used by the older generations, hence the presenter not aufait with some of them.
    One that wasn't mentioned was 'a face like a wet week', think on it. Many of the sayings are self-explanatory.
    Merry Christmas to you both, we do not say Happy Holidays.

  • @user-mm4rz8mk3e
    @user-mm4rz8mk3e 7 месяцев назад +3

    Servo is short for 'Service Station' as back in the day, an attendant would come out and give you a full car service like topping it fuel, water and oil, hence Service Station. It no longer applies today as people serve themselves at the pump but the name stuck.

  • @peterfisher6873
    @peterfisher6873 7 месяцев назад +6

    Nice 2 c u 2 enjoying our cultcha. When I was young a common saying when u were leaving a party bbq or whatever, was have some for RON. Meaning later on, usually smokes, beer, food or whatever.

  • @tbonesfishies1797
    @tbonesfishies1797 7 месяцев назад +12

    Neal, i'm hoping that you and Mackenzie would do a reaction video to Kevin Bloody Wilson's rude but very funny song called Hey Santa Clause. It is Christmas,after all.I hope you guys will remember it's rude but funny 😁.

  • @clivegilbertson6542
    @clivegilbertson6542 7 месяцев назад +4

    G'day Guys! So some Aussie slang does get international traction like the word "selfie." Sometimes an expression will come from or be inspired by films/TV...A now little used expression was "Going to point Percy at the porcelain" this was inspired from the movie 'Percy's Progress about a penis transplant called "Percy." Cheers!

  • @jaywan5553
    @jaywan5553 7 месяцев назад +1

    Sparrows fart is based on the fact the lots of men fart when the wake up. Sparrows rise before dawn. To be awake at a sparrow’s fart is to be awake before dawn. Makes sense to me.

  • @Danny-kf3mj
    @Danny-kf3mj 7 месяцев назад +5

    Many of these are British slang too

  • @nimbinguy
    @nimbinguy 7 месяцев назад +2

    Here’s one…Banging like a dunny door in a windstorm!

  • @jodiecostello6356
    @jodiecostello6356 7 месяцев назад +1

    Fair pull of the polly waffle. If you have a weird looking head often you'll here it said you got hit with the ugly stick which means you fell out of the tree and hit all the branches on your way down. Busy as a one arm brick layer, or a dog trying to bury a bone in a cement floor, im fifty been listening to my farthers slang my whole life and still have to ask him to explain alot one recently a Jewish till with no springs, when a shop shuts early.

  • @bexfloo4511
    @bexfloo4511 7 месяцев назад +4

    You guys so need to come for a trip here! I live in an apartment in downtown Melbourne. Would love to take you guys out for a drink at an Aussie pub and watch the utter confusion on your face trying to understand what everyone is going on about... 😂😂

    • @Jaydaydesign
      @Jaydaydesign 7 месяцев назад

      I’m retired up on the northern border of Vic. Can you imagine them trying to figure out what the local farmers at the pub are saying up here? I swear they think I’m a bit simple because they leave me staring into space trying to translate what they are saying myself half the time 😂 I’m always about 2 sentences behind in the conversation…

  • @jenniferharrison8915
    @jenniferharrison8915 7 месяцев назад +8

    That was really brilliant, and very useful, we love Brianne! 🤗 I hope she can rest her brain with some proper English after that! 👍

  • @marymarlow3646
    @marymarlow3646 7 месяцев назад

    As an Australian I like the fact this Aussie woman speaks well and doesn’t sound like a bogan which I always brace myself for when I see Australians interviewed.

  • @grantmcauliffe3437
    @grantmcauliffe3437 7 месяцев назад +1

    Carrying like a pork chop is missing a bit. It is "Carrying on like a pork chop on a hot plate". I.e. sizzling like a fatty pork chop with lots of fat when it is cooking on a hot-plate/BBQ etc. Basically it means being melodramatic.

  • @albertvangestal3696
    @albertvangestal3696 7 месяцев назад

    Dear Americans. A lot of these sayings and expressions came from London cockney slang and dialects from East Anglia brought by the first British settlers in the late 18th century. It's a unique accent and one of the most colourful and witty voices of the many varieties of English around the world.

  • @_alifeallmine_
    @_alifeallmine_ 7 месяцев назад

    I also use ‘U-Bolt’, which is to do a risky, quick ‘Uey’. Used to crack my young Son up every time. 😀

  • @paulrodsted3905
    @paulrodsted3905 7 месяцев назад +1

    I love watching this vid....
    I smile because it's all true....
    We all don't use everything but we all know what they all are....
    Deffo

  • @aussiebrewer
    @aussiebrewer 7 месяцев назад +1

    I’m a 66yo Aussie from Melbourne and I remember as a kid there was a department store called Buckley and Nunn (obviously surnames of original proprietors). In true Aussie fashion, it got shortened to Buckley in the vernacular and then because we are descended from Poms (Brits) Buckleys became a kind of Cockney rhyming slang for “none”.
    It gets even more confusing because I remember a very popular derivation of this slang as “you’ve got two chances -buckleys and none” because buckleys already meant no chance in effect two chances really meant no chance! Told you it was confusing! Welcome to Aussie slang.

  • @louisaklimentos7583
    @louisaklimentos7583 7 месяцев назад +1

    I am so glad you two enjoyed learning Aussie slang.

  • @charlesemerson6763
    @charlesemerson6763 4 месяца назад

    She forgot one. "It's the other side of the black stump" which is similar to the other side of woop woop but the black stump is real place just 50kays south of woop woop.

  • @alandoherty1332
    @alandoherty1332 6 месяцев назад +1

    If u live here, it makes petfect sense!!

  • @michaelgrantham125
    @michaelgrantham125 2 месяца назад

    Shes a riot. In South Australia. We would say shes heaps good.

  • @trevorkrause7220
    @trevorkrause7220 7 месяцев назад +2

    "Flat out like a lizard drinking" actually has two completely different meanings, and the correct one depends not only of the context or situation it refers to but could also be one's own interpretation of the situation. "Flat out" as in "I'm flat out with work at the moment so no new jobs booked until next week" means "I'm busy as a blue-arsed fly with no time to even scratch myself so don't pile on extra work that won't be done on time", "Like a lizard drinking" means lying low, flat and horizontal, like how most people sleep. But also lizards rarely drink water and generally don't stay in that position very long as they can be vulnerable and exposed to predators gathered near the watering hole. So "flat out can mean busy or it can indicate your position lying down, and "like a lizard drinking" can indicate the low flat horizontal position or the state of wariness, skittiness, busyness or being rushed in one's actions. Therefore the slang term can often be used sarcastically to indicate being busy but at the same time to also indicate probably not.

    • @edwardlansdowne291
      @edwardlansdowne291 7 месяцев назад +1

      Personally I've always liked "Busy as a one-legged man in a bum-kickin' contest".This was my dads go to answer when ever asked to do something !!

    • @marymarlow3646
      @marymarlow3646 7 месяцев назад

      👍 I didn’t know about the second interpretation of flat out. But I did get off on Stafanos Tsitsipas trying to prove his Australian creds at the AO this year and mangling it in the process 😀

  • @n3j663
    @n3j663 7 месяцев назад

    Fair shake of the sauce bottle lol

  • @lisaskalko1414
    @lisaskalko1414 7 месяцев назад +3

    there once was a town called woop woop in 1925

    • @user-mm4rz8mk3e
      @user-mm4rz8mk3e 7 месяцев назад +1

      Indeed it was 10km west of Wilga W.A it was set up by a timber mill Company from Adelaide in 1925 and dwindled into oblivion.

  • @kathleenmayhorne3183
    @kathleenmayhorne3183 7 месяцев назад +1

    Sanger, sandwitch, toasted sanger, much better it's been put in the sanger toaster for 8 minutes. That is also a toastie. Crisp browned bread, sealed edges, melty cheese, whatever you like in it. A deep dish sanga toaster will do a baked egg sanga. Do you guys get spicy fruit loaf? Put a share size mars bar in it, in the sanga toaster, yum.

  • @ericafarrow667
    @ericafarrow667 7 месяцев назад

    I notice that both of you say ‘ I swear ‘ all the time. I like it.

  • @where_is_my_slippers
    @where_is_my_slippers 7 месяцев назад +1

    You ever cooked a pork chop or bacon on high heat? It spits and carries on. To me, it just means getting carried away. 🤷🏼‍♀️💛

  • @MichaelSorensen-bl3ec
    @MichaelSorensen-bl3ec 7 месяцев назад

    You're getting it. Well done.

  • @andreamoore367
    @andreamoore367 5 месяцев назад

    Mak you are improving. Chocka block is over flowing

  • @lesleyking4059
    @lesleyking4059 7 месяцев назад +2

    Bingle is really a prang

  • @andyjames2082
    @andyjames2082 7 месяцев назад

    As an Aussie, hearing this explained has me scratching my head!

  • @stevetarrant3898
    @stevetarrant3898 3 месяца назад

    Dimmies.
    Whats a dimmie?
    A dim sim.
    Whats a dim sim?

  • @shelleyburslem3802
    @shelleyburslem3802 7 месяцев назад

    Omg I’ve never realised how we talk until rn 💜😂😂😂😂🇦🇺 ps we’re all just lazy, have to shorten everything

  • @ianwhite1858
    @ianwhite1858 7 месяцев назад +1

    New drinking game, every time McKenzie says I Swear take a shot - careful though you'll end up smashed.
    I wish i could say that instead of actually swearing but hey I'm Australian

  • @colkellahan6676
    @colkellahan6676 Месяц назад

    And the Ozzie word for goodbye is 'ooroo'

  • @andysparks1973
    @andysparks1973 7 месяцев назад

    We have worked hard as a country and we have heaps of flies , words matter .

  • @matthewmcclure5218
    @matthewmcclure5218 7 месяцев назад

    When someone suggests something and you say i reckon . It means you concur.

  • @user-hr6bb5qz8t
    @user-hr6bb5qz8t 7 месяцев назад +2

    To add more to flat out like a lizard drinking is flat out like a lizard on a rock means you're doing nothing

  • @christineprice2411
    @christineprice2411 7 месяцев назад

    I could barely understand the guy on the left, but I am Aussie!

  • @silkyaqua5167
    @silkyaqua5167 7 месяцев назад

    You two are so cute love watching you especially Aussie ones, keeping it real 😂

  • @eleonora-of-earth
    @eleonora-of-earth 7 месяцев назад +1

    Coming next...Australian reacts to Americans reacting to Australian reacts to Aussie slang. Reaction inception.

  • @GumnutLaneJewellery
    @GumnutLaneJewellery 7 месяцев назад +2

    OMG, if you put a pork chop in a frying pan what does it do? It jumps around and splatters crap all over the place! So the reference is " If you're carrying on about something and jumping up and down and crap is coming out of your mouth" then you're carrying on like a pork chop! Have you never fried a pork chop before?

    • @bexfloo4511
      @bexfloo4511 7 месяцев назад

      She looks pretty young.... Maybe she hasn't? calm down...

  • @doraexplora9046
    @doraexplora9046 7 месяцев назад +1

    Ozzie Slang was invented by the Convicts so that they could openly talk amoung themselves in front of the Soldiers, without the soldiers understanding what they were talking about. Obviously, the trend kept going and today it's a living language. However, NO ONE other than Ozzies born in this country understand it or use it. It can never be used overseas because, like you guys, you just stare at each other and wonder what we said! She did bring up some good ones, but there are waaaaay more and way more cryptic phrases. "Knee high to a grasshopper". A really young kid. "When Adam was a boy". A really really really long time ago. "Fair suck of the sav". You're annoyed that your not being treated fairly or you think you're being extorted.

  • @johnjohnsson344
    @johnjohnsson344 7 месяцев назад

    The one I use is head like a beaten favourite

  • @allanhindmarch7323
    @allanhindmarch7323 7 месяцев назад

    "Reckon" is an actual word we use as slang, but it means to calculate or to solve...I think 😁

    • @wayland76
      @wayland76 7 месяцев назад

      I would've said "estimate". But may or may not be an informed estimate. So "how long dyer reckon it is" could be informed by having a look, whereas "Reckon we should go to Macca's" is just a request for an opinion.

  • @missrocks
    @missrocks 7 месяцев назад

    Woop Woop did exist though... briefly

  • @dameonbowles2342
    @dameonbowles2342 7 месяцев назад

    nice I'm going to start using the words

  • @user-ic8wh5su2t
    @user-ic8wh5su2t 7 месяцев назад

    Real English words used to confuse (non Aussie) English speakers😊

  • @butternutterz8817
    @butternutterz8817 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hate to break it to you but yeah, Woop Woop is a real place lol

  • @dameonbowles2342
    @dameonbowles2342 7 месяцев назад

    that's just what I was about to say

  • @billschild3371
    @billschild3371 7 месяцев назад

    If you have ever seen a thirsty lizard drink with it's tounge going a million miles an hour trying to get liquid into it you'd understand flat out like a lizard dronking. Another werid bit of slang I came across was the term some trying to flog you something. It just means to put the hard sell on you but it beats me where that came from.

  • @alexradojkovic9671
    @alexradojkovic9671 7 месяцев назад +1

    What do you reckon (recognize)?

  • @lillibitjohnson7293
    @lillibitjohnson7293 7 месяцев назад +1

    Flat out like a lizard drinking. Busy

  • @tammyfinnemore
    @tammyfinnemore 7 месяцев назад

    lol, but they all make sense to me...but i'm Aussie lol

  • @Steve_P_B
    @Steve_P_B 7 месяцев назад

    Pork chop referring to something dramatic could be related to "went down like a pork chop at a synagogue" referring to something unpopular, because a synagogue is a Jewish place of worship and pork isn't kosher

  • @DavidPola1961
    @DavidPola1961 7 месяцев назад +2

    She is only a youngster who was not around to hear all the Bush Slang of yesteryear oh well suppose I'll hop on Shank's Pony and get out of here

  • @redhorsburgh..2345
    @redhorsburgh..2345 Месяц назад

    Its not slang... its our lingo.. lol every Australian understands it... l call it Australian English.

  • @matthewcullen1298
    @matthewcullen1298 7 месяцев назад

    We are like the code whisperers of slang. Foreigners cant decipher our slang

  • @allanhindmarch7323
    @allanhindmarch7323 7 месяцев назад

    Nah your head's fine dude. Another version is "a face like a half eaten pastie"

    • @LILBEF
      @LILBEF 7 месяцев назад +1

      My mum's fave were "face like a smashed crab" and "face like a hat full of busted arseholes"

  • @stanleywiggins5047
    @stanleywiggins5047 7 месяцев назад

    I made up my own slang quote, that hasn't court on yet.
    "Man I'm sweating like a pork chop on a barbie,!"
    Work that out, 😊

    • @aussiebornandbred
      @aussiebornandbred 7 месяцев назад +2

      I say I'm sweating like a dog shittin' razorblades😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @-sandman4605
    @-sandman4605 7 месяцев назад

    🤣😂 Aussie Aussie

  • @dameonbowles2342
    @dameonbowles2342 7 месяцев назад

    I was just about to say

  • @andreamoore367
    @andreamoore367 5 месяцев назад

    Lizards drink fast

  • @dameonbowles2342
    @dameonbowles2342 7 месяцев назад

    I was the first one to

  • @jamesru1
    @jamesru1 7 месяцев назад

    We know American slang because of Hollywood

  • @allyouneedisloveandweed
    @allyouneedisloveandweed 5 месяцев назад

    someone told me once that our accent came from flies and trying to talk with our mouths shut cos the flies haha but like seriously try not to open your mouth as you talk, its OG aussie

  • @abetoyzsamtsirhc4024
    @abetoyzsamtsirhc4024 7 месяцев назад +2

    Same level as a cockney slangs, its a whole another language,,I'm always look dumb founded about what they're saying

  • @tankosaurus
    @tankosaurus 7 месяцев назад

    To be fair, African-Americans have been doing some pretty interesting things to the English language as well. The only difference is, most of what you guys say ends up in movies, tv shows and/or music so the world gets to learn about it.

  • @steveheywood9428
    @steveheywood9428 7 месяцев назад

    Not every Aussie uses most of those terms...

  • @rodeo4786
    @rodeo4786 7 месяцев назад

    Mate ..she's f.king right mate.

  • @alandoherty1332
    @alandoherty1332 6 месяцев назад

    Pork chop dropped into hot oil/ fst in z pan spits alot and is noisy. Simple

  • @trevorkrause7220
    @trevorkrause7220 7 месяцев назад

    Most Americans simply cannot make the correct sounds for "Sanger" even if they can interpret the combination of letters to mean sounds that are generally not written that way. Probably the closest one could get is to interpret the first syllable "sang" like many African Americans tend to when they say "She didn't just sing that song she sang that song, it was so good". The "er" is pronounced may like "a" or "ah". That will get you closer but then everything probably has to be opened out or rounded to sound like an Aussie word.

  • @cydery
    @cydery 7 месяцев назад +1

    Buckley's chance you've already heard, or a snowflakes chance in hell, or a ham sandwich at a Bar-mitzvah, and hasn't anyone mention my favourite farmyard dinosaur the Might Chook, and there are about 150 others that have sexual connotations that definitely could "not" be mentioned here

  • @balex3211
    @balex3211 7 месяцев назад

    Na not a head like a dropped pie. Maybe face like a punched in lasagne or head like a smashed crab.

  • @dameonbowles2342
    @dameonbowles2342 7 месяцев назад

    LOL yeah sore

  • @dee-smart
    @dee-smart 7 месяцев назад

    I wouldn't worry too much about learning Aussie slang, even if you plan a visit. Why? Well 63 years of living in Adelaide (born and bred), and I don't use it and there are a heaps of people that don't. Now if you go to bars or spend your time in the outback or very small rural towns, you are bound to come across it, but cities? It's not everywhere and it is NOT compulsory to speak it.

    • @BarbaraMacDonald-bq1lb
      @BarbaraMacDonald-bq1lb 7 месяцев назад

      Well south Aussies speak with more of a plum in the mouth, a bit posh compared with the eastern states that have more of a nasally sound and south Australia wasn't settled by convicts, it was mostly Germans and religious groups

    • @dee-smart
      @dee-smart 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@BarbaraMacDonald-bq1lb Well in my case my grandfather contracted the Spanish Flu in Wales in 1918 and when dad was born in 1922 his doctor advised he move the family to a warm climate, hence their move by sea to WA. After a short time in a camp there they moved to Adelaide. Dad always sounded British to me, not very Australian but he never left Adelaide and died at 85. I didn't do a lot of interstate travel over the years but did note differences between SA and Victoria. Certain words stood out like school for instance.

    • @BarbaraMacDonald-bq1lb
      @BarbaraMacDonald-bq1lb 7 месяцев назад

      @@dee-smart i was born in Victoria but I moved to south Australia 32 years ago, im now 62, it was very obvious i was from country Victoria due to my accent and the way I spoke and the words I used, you could say I stuck out like a sore thumb and I found south Aussies rather posh with there accent, my father was also from the UK, London actually 😊

    • @dee-smart
      @dee-smart 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@BarbaraMacDonald-bq1lb That is an interesting take on South Aussies. I never listened to them and thought - my dad, yes, but not the general South Aussies. Oh well, that is what makes us all so different.

  • @dameonbowles2342
    @dameonbowles2342 7 месяцев назад

    devilfaded faded with

  • @dameonbowles2342
    @dameonbowles2342 7 месяцев назад

    5:12 hi what is up how are you

  • @JohnSmith-sj2dk
    @JohnSmith-sj2dk 7 месяцев назад

    half a point for sure

  • @whytedraegon66
    @whytedraegon66 7 месяцев назад

    as far as the saying carrying on like a pork chop my grandfather told me the saying came about because of the high dramatics performance pigs go through when you pick them up .....being a bit dramatic there mate stop carrying on like a pork chop

  • @dee-smart
    @dee-smart 7 месяцев назад

    You might not know and understand Aussie slang, BUT just try and go to England and listen to people who speak Geordie in the midlands of England. When I was there in '88 I could not understand a word of it. Not one word!! To me it wasn't English at all.

  • @haydenposnansky968
    @haydenposnansky968 7 месяцев назад +3

    Flatoutvlike a lizard drinking actually means you ARE NOT FLATOUT bcoz a lizard drinks slowly, so it's a play on words, Flat out means fast, a lizard drinking is slow.

    • @kevintrodd3732
      @kevintrodd3732 7 месяцев назад +2

      Flat out like a lizard drinking comes about because when a lizard drinks, it’s body flattens out.

    • @marcusfox2443
      @marcusfox2443 7 месяцев назад

      @@kevintrodd3732 exactly

  • @jaywan5553
    @jaywan5553 7 месяцев назад

    Carrying on like a pork chop - being overly dramatic and creating a scene for little or no reason, just like a pork chop jumps around crazy, spitting fat and making a squealing sound when put in a hot pan.

  • @fc7424
    @fc7424 7 месяцев назад +3

    It fair shake of the sauce bottle, not suck.

    • @aussiebornandbred
      @aussiebornandbred 7 месяцев назад

      Depends where you're from, I say and hear suck of the sauces bottle all the time