AUSTRALIAN Slang Words BRITS Find CONFUSING! 🇦🇺

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  • Опубликовано: 25 июл 2024
  • We go through Australian Slang words that confuse Brits! This video contains an AD for Square Space. Head to www.squarespace.com/joelandlia and use our code JOELANDLIA for 10% off domains and hosting!
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Комментарии • 480

  • @ThoseTwoBrits1
    @ThoseTwoBrits1  4 года назад +84

    *We're so saddened by the bushfires in Australia, if you are able to, then please consider donating to the Australia Appeal. There are many charities you can donate to, but here's the WWF's donation page:* support.wwf.org.uk/australia-bushfires

    • @LeoTheShortGuy
      @LeoTheShortGuy 4 года назад +6

      Joel & Lia Thoughts and prayers to Australia.

    • @razzo086
      @razzo086 4 года назад

      Aussies only say root in very limited ways mostly saying it like ‘fuck that bird was a good root’

    • @jecos1966
      @jecos1966 3 года назад

      the story behind Fair dinkum is in the time of the gold rush after work people would go to the pub but when those who go there late the beer was gone so a sign was put up fair drinking but people with a accent pronounce the word fair drinking it sounded like FAIR DINKUM

    • @faliqkhudadost1603
      @faliqkhudadost1603 3 года назад

      where are your kids

    • @TheManuel012009
      @TheManuel012009 2 года назад

      I’m taking piss out a yah,

  • @bellsTheorem1138
    @bellsTheorem1138 4 года назад +106

    American "Yeah, no" is basically saying "I hear you, but I don't agree with you. So the "Yeah" is simply acknowledgment.

    • @kerlygerl
      @kerlygerl 4 года назад +2

      Bell's Theorem agree

    • @FionaEm
      @FionaEm 4 года назад +2

      Yep, same in Australia.

    • @Lt.BunnyGirl
      @Lt.BunnyGirl 4 года назад

      Nah, yeah nah... same same but different.

    • @joeyderosa8494
      @joeyderosa8494 4 года назад

      Yes
      True!
      #American

  • @clpeucker85
    @clpeucker85 4 года назад +57

    As an Aussie this made me laugh so much 😂

  • @kimberlyk2295
    @kimberlyk2295 4 года назад +27

    I should not take a drink of anything while watching J&L videos. I almost spit my coffee all over when Joel said "Visit our personal channels...I have a dog & Lia has......
    a new hair style..." Sooooo funny all the way through!!😂😆

  • @AprilCGriffith
    @AprilCGriffith 4 года назад +28

    Classic J&L content. So funny 😂 Australians sure know how to have fun with the english language. I love how they shorten words. So fun.

  • @kayagrocott302
    @kayagrocott302 4 года назад +18

    Ripper video! Can't stop laughing.
    As an Aussie had to laugh when Lia said she was going to get a "tinnie" which is (usually) a small, metal boat. Good to be reminded what words we use over here that no one else will understand

    • @markbernier8434
      @markbernier8434 4 года назад

      Tinnie is a small aluminum boat here in Canada also

    • @richardrejmer8721
      @richardrejmer8721 4 года назад +4

      In the 1960's and 1970's a "tinnie" was a very common expression in Victoria, New South wales and Queensland to mean "can". . . as in can of beer.
      "Gonna sink a few tinnies with my mates on the weekend" (Gonna drink a few cans of beer with my pals on the weekend)
      It may have also been used in other states other than those I mentioned. .
      Anyway, it has slowly faded in use and you never hear it any more in that context. . Just to mean a small aluminium boat

  • @brucewilliams8714
    @brucewilliams8714 4 года назад +22

    Dinkum = genuine, true, honest, etc. More used as a query: Are you (they) fair dinkum? But not so much in use these days.

    • @NannaTina
      @NannaTina 4 года назад +3

      I use it more often than I realised, but maybe it’s cos I’m from the bush.

    • @Mav_F
      @Mav_F 3 года назад +1

      @@NannaTina Yes people in the country and older generation still use it. The younger generation thinks it cool to shorten a saying. The country people have stronger aussie accents and city people are all mixed up.

  • @Geoskan
    @Geoskan 4 года назад +34

    As an Australian, I can't say I know anyone who actually says "Facey", lol. Maybe my friends aren't camp enough, though, lol. I hang around a lot of "bogans".

    • @Liamshavingfun
      @Liamshavingfun 4 года назад

      What's bogans

    • @Philly94M
      @Philly94M 4 года назад +3

      😂 bogans describing someone who is uneducated Americans would probably call hill billies or if your British riff raff.

    • @achiruel
      @achiruel 3 года назад

      @@Philly94M I think the closest thing to bogan in Britain would be chav.

    • @Kalani_Saiko
      @Kalani_Saiko 3 года назад

      @Anne Heinrich I'm in country vic and haven't heard anyone say it yet, maybe it's different state to state

  • @ashleybellofsydney
    @ashleybellofsydney 4 года назад +4

    "Ripper" was very popular in the 1980's/early '90's. Virtually nobody in Australia says that anymore.

  • @michaelmullard4292
    @michaelmullard4292 4 года назад +10

    You guys obviously had fun filming this video. I watched it twice because I enjoyed the word play so much, haha! Thanks for the primer on Aussie slang. Now, go have some Prosecco!

  • @sheilaspetrelief3253
    @sheilaspetrelief3253 4 года назад +16

    Ripper is a type of fart in America. Leslie Nielsen’s gravestone reads “Let er rip”.

    • @aereilly5818
      @aereilly5818 4 года назад +2

      Can be painful, if not executed perfectly!

    • @ROBYNMARKOW
      @ROBYNMARKOW 4 года назад +1

      😅 Good on him!👍

    • @spiffyspits3605
      @spiffyspits3605 4 года назад

      😂😂😂😂

    • @Preview43
      @Preview43 3 года назад

      Same in Australia... good and loud. A ripper is usually accompanied moments later by simultaneous laughter and disgust and the phrase "Who dropped their guts?"

  • @Reigngoddess23
    @Reigngoddess23 4 года назад +36

    We do the "yeahno" and "noyeah" in midwest USA

    • @LlyleHunter
      @LlyleHunter 4 года назад +4

      We did it in NY too and everyone does it i Florida. They had me laughing acting it out.

    • @tanyamckinnon5376
      @tanyamckinnon5376 4 года назад +4

      @@LlyleHunter and in CA

    • @tarynriver
      @tarynriver 4 года назад +3

      Bruce Solomon I was about to say deff do that in Florida lol

    • @Lt.BunnyGirl
      @Lt.BunnyGirl 4 года назад

      Nah yeah nah, they kind of buggered that one up.

    • @joeyderosa8494
      @joeyderosa8494 4 года назад

      Everywhere in USA I’m pretty sure!
      Edit: I’m in North Carolina

  • @kanehardy9065
    @kanehardy9065 4 года назад +21

    When I would visit my bogan family around Christmas I distinctly remember hearing the phrase "sooky la la" thrown around on a daily basis.

    • @JustinThomas7
      @JustinThomas7 4 года назад +1

      Yep, that’s definitely a thing.

    • @dronevisionaus9242
      @dronevisionaus9242 2 года назад

      Hahhahaa was so gonna say that, "dont worry, old mates havin a sooky la la" i find a lot of aussies are larrikins and most of the slang is in form of joking around... tradies (construction workers) start alot of it "she'll be right mate, looks good from my house, she's a bit on the piss, whens smoko, looks a bit 'how ya goin', old mate..." the list goes on eternally

  • @felicity3985
    @felicity3985 4 года назад +26

    As an Australian, this kills me! A lot of Aussies do the ie/y ending on words like choccy Biccy and exy. O endings are common too like many male nicknames (Tommo)
    Most of these only the 'bogan' Australians say (equivalent to the British Chav) or the older generations. You'll hardly hear these in city Sydney or Melbourne... absolutely love this vid 10/10 😂

    • @andrelommerse
      @andrelommerse 4 года назад +6

      Felicity I think it’s because we’re loosing our Aussie way and being Yankified.😟😭

    • @Liamshavingfun
      @Liamshavingfun 4 года назад

      Go USA USA USA lol

    • @MaryMary-pr4iu
      @MaryMary-pr4iu 4 года назад +2

      Andre Lommerse say it isn’t so😫..... don’t become Yankified! 😢 love the Badass Aussie spirit 😃💥💕

    • @felicity3985
      @felicity3985 4 года назад +1

      @@andrelommerse so true and its devastating 😞

    • @rebelrob9637
      @rebelrob9637 4 года назад +2

      Hey! I'm a bogan through and through. I'm also highly educated. We can be both

  • @teknekon
    @teknekon 4 года назад +17

    Very entertaining indeed! Watching this vid with a true Aussie and we're cracking up! On Bobby Burns night. Too much fun! Thanks mates for such a good time! L&C 👍 ♥️😘 🇬🇧🇦🇺🐨

    • @supergran62
      @supergran62 4 года назад

      teknekon na Mate! It’s Australia Day 🙃

  • @purpletygertube
    @purpletygertube 4 года назад +8

    We say ‘yeah, no’ and ‘no, yeah’ and ‘yeah, no. For sure’ (definitely) in California.

  • @MichaelScheele
    @MichaelScheele 4 года назад +8

    When you say "chockie," I think of Monty Python's "Crunchy Frog" sketch from Flying Circus.

  • @Gr8man4sex
    @Gr8man4sex 4 года назад +7

    My Legends have done it again. I can't help but watch your videos. Nothing I can comment on today except to say that this video was hilarious. I can't wait for the next one.

  • @Opx958r
    @Opx958r 4 года назад +2

    Every time you two get tickled I just 🤣😂🤣😂 with you. You are contagious!

  • @Charlierose214
    @Charlierose214 4 года назад +6

    Not going to lie watching Joel and Lia is the greatest and 2x speed is even funnier lol

  • @paulaj72
    @paulaj72 4 года назад +13

    Oh I needed a good laugh today! Thank you for this! Cheers!

  • @MaryMary-pr4iu
    @MaryMary-pr4iu 4 года назад +10

    So cutesy-wootsy, ity bity boo! You guys are the best! Very funny 😄💕💥🐿🐧💥

  • @ashleybellofsydney
    @ashleybellofsydney 4 года назад +2

    "Fair dinkum" basically means "honest" or authentic.

  • @jessicaburkett2196
    @jessicaburkett2196 4 года назад

    I just subscribed a couple weeks ago you guys are so adorably endearing with each other. Even when you're cursing at each other I love it. I feel like I'm sitting across from you on a couch laughing as well. Very fun.💞

  • @karenpinson759
    @karenpinson759 4 года назад +1

    You guys are a hoot! Had me in tears with laughter. You made my day.

  • @florianbates614
    @florianbates614 4 года назад +3

    I was laughing so hard this entire video. I swear the neighbors are wondering if I am high😂

  • @micahottaway8455
    @micahottaway8455 4 года назад +5

    In the U.S. that sort of happens too, we get it. (yeahnah vs. nahyeah)

  • @kimberlyk2295
    @kimberlyk2295 4 года назад +8

    Our beautiful Lia is glowing!😊

  • @XxShade_FrostxX
    @XxShade_FrostxX 2 года назад

    This is AMAZING. I'm Aussie and new to this channel but all these vids are so funny. I personally don't use alot of slang like Fair dinkim and ripper. I use more basic ones and these vids just make me want to use more slang to just annoy my friends.

  • @jasthe3rd
    @jasthe3rd 4 года назад

    You guys are so silly, I love it when you crack each other up, it makes me laugh :)

  • @Tijuanabill
    @Tijuanabill 4 года назад +1

    I love how they use the word cunt, practically as a term of endearment, rather than as the worst insult you could ever give to an American woman.

  • @jillclarke782
    @jillclarke782 4 года назад

    Thank you for finally doing a clip on Australian Slang. Bloody loved it 🇦🇺

  • @kellyhartford776
    @kellyhartford776 4 года назад +11

    I always end up laughing 🤣🤣😊

  • @AnneMB955
    @AnneMB955 4 года назад +4

    Please viewers, those thinking of using any of this slang on your next Australian visit you’ll look uncouth and uncultured. This is the stereotype language we see on TV that tries to show the character is Australian and we just cringe. That being said, you both are clever and probably know this. You are having so much fun and I do love your videos. A dedicated subscriber from, Melbourne.

    • @felicity3985
      @felicity3985 4 года назад

      So true Anne! Hi from Tassie 😊

    • @AnneMB955
      @AnneMB955 4 года назад

      Yay Felicity, fellow Aussie. 🇦🇺

    • @FionaEm
      @FionaEm 4 года назад

      Thanks Anne for telling it like it is 😊

  • @elaineturcotte1043
    @elaineturcotte1043 4 года назад +2

    Nahyeah! Hand fart...sure. This vidy's crackin'! Love watching you two rif off on another! 😂

  • @kimberlyk2295
    @kimberlyk2295 4 года назад +4

    I think how Lia says breakfast is so cute! Maybe annoying to others, but knowing me, I'll probably start saying breakfast like that too! It's crazy how many things I've picked up on & say differently since watching Joel & Lia in 2018.

  • @kennethcoe2511
    @kennethcoe2511 4 года назад +3

    I’m Australian. I like your channel and you are both great.

  • @robertsutton4107
    @robertsutton4107 3 года назад

    Gday As a half British and a half Aussie who was born in Australia i found this video funny and its my first time watching a video of urs so keep up the good work as for covid19 its rooted a lot of things for everyone so we all need a laugh or everyone would go to the bottle o for beer or wine

  • @jamesalberg3243
    @jamesalberg3243 4 года назад

    Watching you two laughing at each other (and yourselves) is hilarious! Love you two! A great vid mates. Keep bringing the cray! ;-P

  • @seandesmond5560
    @seandesmond5560 4 года назад +8

    As an Australian I absolutely loved this video Joel and Lia!!! ❤🤣 I have got mistaken for being English by Americans, I think to the American ear the accents sound similar!

    • @monember2722
      @monember2722 4 года назад +1

      As an American, yes they can often sound similar but Aussies' sound more extreme. Lol.

    • @nanvolentine9110
      @nanvolentine9110 4 года назад +2

      I'm American and I don't think they sound alike at all!

    • @mloftin6472
      @mloftin6472 3 года назад

      I usually have to hear a few sentences to be sure of the difference. It depends on the speaker though because some are obviously English or Australian immediately.

  • @lindacollins4336
    @lindacollins4336 4 года назад

    Enjoyed the video. It made me laugh. Thanks for sharing.

  • @TexasMixedMediaArtist
    @TexasMixedMediaArtist 4 года назад +2

    I'm a Yank married to an Aussie, and nawyeah, this is pretty funny 🙂

  • @christineallocca7307
    @christineallocca7307 4 года назад +2

    OMG! Could you imagine how this video would have been if you were drinking prosecco instead of water? Absolutely loved this! ❤❤❤👏👏👏🐨🐨🐨

  • @jamespeters3507
    @jamespeters3507 4 года назад

    I'm at home sick, just feeling awful, and you guys have me laughing so hard!
    Thanks a lot for all your wonderful content.
    This video was really funny

  • @mloftin6472
    @mloftin6472 3 года назад +1

    I learned all my Australian slang at Outback Steakhouse 30 years ago.

  • @britishaussie22
    @britishaussie22 4 года назад +1

    My Grandmother once told me after she'd had a few bottles of wine (normal) that "you can beat an egg but you can't beet-a-root." She's now 83, still a pisshead, and continues to spew out filthy food-based puns like that that at opportune moments, Bless.

  • @waywardstitch8604
    @waywardstitch8604 4 года назад +2

    As an American I've always been jealous of the Brtish abbreviations, (like telly and ciggy, so cute!). So I especially enjoyed that one. If you two did a whole vid speaking only in abbreviations I'd love it. 😁

  • @marshafranklin
    @marshafranklin 4 года назад +1

    Loved it! So funny

  • @Trifler500
    @Trifler500 4 года назад +1

    Adding a "Y" to the end of everything sounds like the baby talk we use with our cats. :)

  • @kurtislovett
    @kurtislovett 4 года назад +1

    Laughed so hard when she said getting a tinny little does she know we do call a can of piss a tinny

  • @kevmagill5163
    @kevmagill5163 4 года назад

    Aussie slang and Brit slang are always entertaining...love Aussies and Brits...great fun video..laughed the whole time...now to sign up for Squarespace...❤ 2 U both!...and prayers to Australia during this crazy time..🙏

  • @clumsymumsy2283
    @clumsymumsy2283 4 года назад

    Love you both and your impersonations ! Hugs to you and thank you for thinking about the Aussie wildlife so people can donate to a reputable site without hesitation. Good on ya mates. 🐝😊💕xx

  • @janresendez7991
    @janresendez7991 4 года назад +1

    I’m obsessed with Australia too!! I ❤️ their accents :)

  • @brucewilliams8714
    @brucewilliams8714 4 года назад +1

    The diminutive, casual y, ie. Footy, cossie (swimming costume), walkies (dog walks), vegies, ciggy, pollie (politician), chippie (carpenter), sparkie (electrician), firey (firefighter) etc. I'm adding these as I watch, so there could be more. It's Australia Day holiday today, commemorating the 26 January, 1788 landing led by Governor Phillip, with shiploads of convicts, troops and some settlers.

  • @childericoalencastro
    @childericoalencastro 3 года назад

    I loved your painted nails. They were beautiful!

  • @christinakav5029
    @christinakav5029 4 года назад +1

    I am so excited to see a video on Australia coz I m Australian!!

  • @crinkle2649
    @crinkle2649 4 года назад +2

    I watched Neighbors back in the late 80s when I lived in Berlin.

  • @maureenboyle1926
    @maureenboyle1926 4 года назад

    Lol needed this today.

  • @sozeverbal
    @sozeverbal 4 года назад +1

    Very similar to California. No yeah= yes; Yeah no= no; Yeah, no for sure= definitely.

  • @andrelommerse
    @andrelommerse 4 года назад +1

    We pronounce route as root too. 🐨

  • @jamibowman4880
    @jamibowman4880 4 года назад

    Still haven't came to NAPLES,FLORIDA- USA, OR SOUTHERN INDIANA..... waiting for the email! Love you both!!

  • @andreadehoyos9910
    @andreadehoyos9910 4 года назад +2

    In Spanish we say, "No, pues si. Si, pues no." LOL
    Also, my ex put y at the end of everything. He'd tell the kids, with a stern look, "Do you want a spanky? No? then go seepy." It was ridiculous! LOL

  • @JoaquinPhi
    @JoaquinPhi 4 года назад

    She is so alike to a friend from the University, even her gestures and smile.

  • @harpsi8
    @harpsi8 4 года назад +1

    Definitely enjoyed it !
    Love all the happy fun in every video. love the laughs and giggles.
    Australians are well admired and loved in the US. The cultural differences are spice and the pleasures of the internet , now that we can talk around the world instantly.
    RICH&2 carnivorous kitties LA.CALIF USA.

  • @matthewcharles5867
    @matthewcharles5867 2 года назад

    A lot of our slang from the convict days was used to confuse the traps (guards) in charge and used a lot of gealic, welsh and Scottish words just to make it harder.

  • @badguy1481
    @badguy1481 4 года назад +16

    In Hong Kong the locals used to make fun of Australians when they'd say : "I came to Hong Kong to die" ( I came to Hong Kong today)

    • @louiseclifford5184
      @louiseclifford5184 4 года назад +1

      I think you are thinking of New Zealanders

    • @joeyderosa8494
      @joeyderosa8494 4 года назад

      Lolololololololol

    • @peterphiong6724
      @peterphiong6724 3 года назад

      😆

    • @zichaozhou1916
      @zichaozhou1916 3 года назад +1

      I hear most OZs say today, but instead ei sound it is ia sound

    • @TombstoneHeart
      @TombstoneHeart 3 года назад

      There is a couple of lines in one of the old Goon Shows where Neddy Seagoon ( Harry Secombe ) is lead out into the desert by an Australian guide, ( Peter Sellars ). Neddy asks the guide, "Have you lead me out into the desert to die?" To which the guide replies,
      "Arrgh, yeah, mate - to die or termorra."

  • @IsabellaL82
    @IsabellaL82 4 года назад

    Omgosh I loved this video. Very funny. I didn't realise us Aussies had so many slang words uniquely Australian. I know we have some the same as Britain. You make me proud to be an Aussie 😊

  • @terencemccarthy8615
    @terencemccarthy8615 4 года назад

    Aussie here...you guys are hilarious ..love it....cheers!

  • @richardrejmer8721
    @richardrejmer8721 4 года назад +2

    3:03. . . Fair Dinkum. . . . The closest translation would be "Real" or "genuine" or "really" or "true"
    As in "My mate swallowed a live fish! Fair dinkum!". . . (My mate swallowed a live fish! Really!")
    Or. . . "This is a fair dinkum Rolex!". . . . (This is a genuine Rolex!")
    Or. . . . "I'm going to France next month" Friend replies "Fair dinkum?". . . . ("Really?")
    Or. . . "I fair dinkum told the boss to shove the job up his arse". . . (I genuinely told my boss to shove the job up his arse)
    I don't know if this is fair dinkum or not. . . But the story I heard of the origins of this expression were from the goldfields of Australia in the 1800's. .
    There apparently was an expression that went something like "Fair trading and fair drinking". . . Meaning fair business practices and fair social interaction (??)
    In other words . . a person who was genuine or real in their actions and conduct. .
    Anyway, it is said that the Chinese immigrants who had come to find their fortune on the goldfields incorrectly pronounced "Fair drinking" as "Fair dinkum"
    Others say it was perhaps the Aborigines who mispronounced "Fair drinking" as "Fair dinkum"
    So then the other goldfield people made fun of it and copied the mispronounced version as "Fair dinkum" to mean "Real, genuine or true". . and it's this version that has stuck until today.

  • @bmeetze
    @bmeetze 4 года назад

    The Yellow Tail wine advert was quite timely with this video. 🤣

  • @czar4960
    @czar4960 4 года назад

    Fair dinkum really means that a person is genuinely ,sincerely and honestly telling the truth (to the best that they know) and are not trying to lie or decieve to get their own way...

  • @debbycassidy5993
    @debbycassidy5993 4 года назад

    You two and your clever phrases. LOL!

  • @ElleS572
    @ElleS572 4 года назад

    You two are hilarious! 😄 love you both 💞

  • @gidget639
    @gidget639 4 года назад

    This is gold ..... Takin the piss out of us. Love it.....
    Eating a tinnie .... Good luck with that 😂

  • @ScottEDawg
    @ScottEDawg 4 года назад +1

    You'll probably notice that quite a lot of our slang is very similar to the Cockney rhyming slang in some parts. Other parts are convenience or necessity.
    The word "Root"... I find it rather strange that American's don't understand it... I mean, it's used in a very old rock song from the 1950's - Little Richard's 'Tutti Frutti'!
    My whole family is from South Australia and, according to my dad, when he and my step-mother went to Sydney, some Sydney locals thought they were English because we have a more refined accent. (Adelaide was the first non-convict settlement in Australia.)

  • @WhiteTiger333
    @WhiteTiger333 4 года назад

    Chuck a sickie. I love that one. :D Oooh, now I can add Starry Bee's to my lexicon, to go with Mickey Dee's. Haha - the Aussie's always laugh at us Yanks because we root for our favorite teams. *snort*.

  • @RavenclawStudent123
    @RavenclawStudent123 4 года назад +6

    This is a good video. I love Australia

    • @ThoseTwoBrits1
      @ThoseTwoBrits1  4 года назад

      Thanks so much! We do too!

    • @RavenclawStudent123
      @RavenclawStudent123 4 года назад +1

      @@ThoseTwoBrits1 I was over there in August 2016 - January 2017 and the first time my uncle said "Pommy" and "Barbie" I was like "What?" I automatically thought of a barbie doll on a BBQ and damn. It was because I always took my jacket everywhere I was called a pom by my uncle
      Do you have any memories of Australia?

  • @ProfessorChaosKitty
    @ProfessorChaosKitty 4 года назад

    Love you two! Yeah nah, we don't say Facey. But we do abbreviate a lot of words and stick a Y on the end, although some times we add an O. Petrol (or service) station is shortened to servo, the liquor store (or bottle shop) is the bottle-o. Fair dinkum means genuine or real, and is quite old fashioned. It's usually only said by politicians trying to sound cool. Ripper is a bit old fashioned but I've always liked it and root is definitely crass.

    • @FionaEm
      @FionaEm 4 года назад

      This ^ 👏👏

  • @Trifler500
    @Trifler500 4 года назад +1

    In regards to "rooting", I can only guess that it's somehow related to the olden times phrase, "I want to plow your field" which was a farming metaphor for sex.

  • @ximalas
    @ximalas 4 года назад

    Hah! I was wearing one of my How Ridiculous Ripper t-shirts while watching this. Does that make me a ripper, in the Australian sense?

  • @vamsiampolu8438
    @vamsiampolu8438 4 года назад

    I took a sickie, had avo toast for my brekkie, had a sanga at the chippies in the arvo and headed to the bottle-o to buy some exy cab sav.
    If you were buying or selling stuff online, people use a site called Gumtree and they're called gummies (by the site).
    Also, Maccas, not Mickey D's or McD for MacDonalds
    Aussies have a specific set of skills acquired over a century of living down under

  • @elanavantonder8163
    @elanavantonder8163 4 года назад

    Afrikaans also does that "yeahnah" thing, we say "janee" which is basically just a way of placing emphasis on how much we agree. We won't use it to say "yes", we'll use it to say sort of "I completely agree".

  • @rozstitt4659
    @rozstitt4659 2 года назад

    Gidday Joel and Lia, I am from Australia, and I had to laugh because some of those slang words aren't really used much anymore, but again, it all depends on who you are speaking to. I can think of a couple more for you to use e.g. beauty, but say it "bewty" means fantastic, or "you little bottler" means you did great. Sandwich is "sanga", bottle shop for alcohol is called the "the bottlo". I laughed when you said root, haven't heard that for ages, but it is true, another saying for sex is "getting your end in" lmao :-) For tomato sauce, I don't know how many other people call it, but I call it "blood", BBQ is a "barbie".
    As you both love Australia, I love England, even though I haven't been there. I absolutely LOOOOOOOOOOOVE the cockney accent and I think it's very sexy. I would love to live in England, and I'm thinking of moving there, but don't really know where to begin in researching it, but I have plenty of time, so I'll just take my time and look up stuff on it.
    Love your channel. Later aligator xx

  • @brismiles8062
    @brismiles8062 4 года назад +2

    We do struggle with Ausie vs. British accents here in Texas...I can usually figure it out but it takes a bit!!! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @TXKafir
      @TXKafir 4 года назад

      I find British accents are a bit more refined. Smoother on the ear.

  • @LeoTheShortGuy
    @LeoTheShortGuy 4 года назад +5

    Aussies are way cool 😎. Love the slang.

  • @david14Herbie
    @david14Herbie 4 года назад +1

    I also love doing Aussie accents. I’ve been asked if I’m an Aussie and I have to explain that I’m not and why I do it

  • @kevinraney2935
    @kevinraney2935 4 года назад +2

    I love Australia. I want to go so bad. I have a very old mate that lives in Melbourne. We used to play in a band at University here in Tennessee together. He got me addicted to Vegemite. I just made a cheesecake with it. Lol!

    • @meesa8468
      @meesa8468 4 года назад +1

      Vegemite may just be top of the list of the worst creation ever to be imposed on innocent hungry folks. It's right up there with the time I was in England and given a sandwich using deli meat and they used peanut butter on the bread first. I remember taking a bite and thinking "omg I'm here for a month! I'm going to starve to death" lol

    • @kevinraney2935
      @kevinraney2935 4 года назад

      @@meesa8468 It's definitely an acquired taste. I thought it was Nutella the first time it was served to me. Now I love it. It grosses my wife and kids out. Lol

    • @FionaEm
      @FionaEm 4 года назад +2

      A Vegemite cheesecake? Sacrilege 😂

    • @kevinraney2935
      @kevinraney2935 4 года назад +1

      @@FionaEm 😂😉

    • @kevinraney2935
      @kevinraney2935 3 года назад

      @sovereignty rules 🤣👍No. I get it by the case at World Market. The first time I tried it I spit it right out. Horrible! But I came home one night after a show really drunk and ate the whole jar. Now I put that stuff on everything.

  • @donaldinnewmexico
    @donaldinnewmexico 4 года назад

    Hi J&L. I can't understand Aussies or Brits. LOL *TYU* (Thumb You Up)

  • @TheManuel012009
    @TheManuel012009 2 года назад

    Chuck a youie, chuck a sickie, dunny, chrissy, a sippy, a wocka, 😂😂

  • @paulaquiroz4837
    @paulaquiroz4837 4 года назад +1

    Never a dull moment. =) Thank you =)

  • @Japanican269
    @Japanican269 4 года назад

    The "nahyeh" and "yehnah" reminds me of when I was in high school (50 years ago). I had a friend called Nick, and whenever we were together, friends to come to me and say "Nick ... er ... Nat!", or to him "Nat .. er ... Nick!" Finally I would say "Look! He's 'Natnick' and I'm 'Nicknat!'"
    In the US, "ripper" is a hot dog, which is fried in a deep fryer until it rips open. These are common in New Jersey.
    I also love Australia and have been doing research to go there, hopefully within the next three or four years.

  • @czar4960
    @czar4960 4 года назад

    Also with relation to expense, instead of saying its a bit exy if somthing is expensive, you can also say "its a bit rich"
    There are 2 books availible from the ABC shop called lost for words and words fail me, which goes through the historical use of aussie slang from the early years till today...the books are written in the form of a story with explanations at the end of every chapter for the slang n their origin nmeanings....

  • @JenniferLevi6
    @JenniferLevi6 4 года назад +3

    America’s do the “yeah no” so much. “Yeah no” means no. “No yeah” means yeah.

  • @shakes307
    @shakes307 2 года назад

    Aussie ere Oi Oi Oi. You guys got me cracking up. I've never said or heard the word, exi here b4.

  • @imogenmiddlebrook8499
    @imogenmiddlebrook8499 4 года назад

    You are 100% correct. We add a "y" to sook. Even my uncle's dog's name is Sooky 😂

  • @lunch2102
    @lunch2102 4 года назад +1

    Pick up line that only works in Australia:
    Ever tripped over a tree?
    How bout a root?

  • @spagoz2136
    @spagoz2136 4 года назад

    The word "root" for having sex has been around for decades. In the US that word is used a lot to describe how someone is cheering/backing/favoring a particular sporting team. That is why when we hear someone comment at a football match that the all girls cheerleaders are "rooting for the team" we are all in stitches. Crude? to you, but somehow it entered our dictionary of aussie slang.
    The shortening of words is something we have been good at since the country was colonized & probably originated from cockney slang. The classic phrase is "jeet yair dew" which translates to "Did you eat? Yair, did you" Say it fast & all will be revealed.

  • @solarfunction1847
    @solarfunction1847 2 года назад

    Fair Dinkum can be used in many ways from expressing exasperation at some fools antics in front of you as you shake your head, much like saying "you've got to be kidding, seriously" Fair Dinkum can also be used to express that a certain thing that you are talking about is straight up & serious, no joke.

  • @DanTuber
    @DanTuber 3 года назад

    i'm aussie and laughing along with you.

  • @dorothypaul4642
    @dorothypaul4642 4 года назад +4

    Yeah! My favorite legends ❤❤❤