Reaction To 26 Things Only Australians Say

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 101

  • @MelodyMan69
    @MelodyMan69 14 дней назад +21

    Doggy Bag was originally to take the left overs Home for your Dog.
    Back in the day, many Dogs were feed with table leftovers instead of tinned Dog Food.

    • @nolaj114
      @nolaj114 14 дней назад +1

      I used to feel embarrassed as a kid if my parents asked for a doggy bag when we didn't have a dog..lol.

  • @raymondhardy8468
    @raymondhardy8468 14 дней назад +9

    You are right. A hot dog is the red skin sausage ( a frankfurt) that is boiled , snags are pork, beef etc sausages that are grilled bbq or fried in a pan..

  • @brianreilly1033
    @brianreilly1033 14 дней назад +25

    Ranga (red haired person) is abbreviation for Orang-utan.

    • @ariadnepyanfar1048
      @ariadnepyanfar1048 14 дней назад

      Not a very nice word in the school yard

    • @utha2665
      @utha2665 13 дней назад +2

      @@ariadnepyanfar1048 It you're a ranger, haha jks.

  • @nolaj114
    @nolaj114 14 дней назад +8

    I think"won't be a minute" is more like, in customer service for example, when you are occupied doing something but will give the other person your attention shortly, so you say that to acknowledge you've seen they are waiting .

  • @patrickwells8349
    @patrickwells8349 13 дней назад +8

    In regards to "it's alright", I think many of us still say "no worries" as well. I also say "it's all good" sometimes.

    • @utha2665
      @utha2665 13 дней назад

      or, sorright mate. :)

    • @Nat-dx3vp
      @Nat-dx3vp 9 дней назад +1

      @@utha2665 yeah Im more of a no worries or alls good or even no wuckkas

    • @utha2665
      @utha2665 9 дней назад +1

      @@Nat-dx3vp or no wukken furries. she'll be right, so many different ways to uniquely express reassurance.

  • @nolaj114
    @nolaj114 14 дней назад +7

    Your thoughts on most of these are spot on 😊

  • @Danger_Mouse3619
    @Danger_Mouse3619 14 дней назад +8

    Snag is a sausage. A hotdog is a Frankfurt in a long bun and that becomes a hotdog.

  • @stevenmccloskey4866
    @stevenmccloskey4866 14 дней назад +9

    I was a bit disappointed that " we're not here to f*** spiders" wasn't mentioned.

    • @shaneb4612
      @shaneb4612 13 дней назад +2

      It's not a thing said in every day life. Yes it's common & us Aussies love to use it at the appropriate time.

  • @michaelfink64
    @michaelfink64 14 дней назад +11

    I have some favourite Aussie sayings but they are a bit old fashioned and rarely said. These include: "Flat out like a lizard drinking" (meaning very busy - flat out - you can imagine how flat a lizard is when it is drinking), another term for the same thing - "As busy as a one armed paper hanger" (presumably hanging wallpaper), "Dry as a dead dingo's donger" (donger means penis), "Butcher's canary" (blow fly), "Mad as a cut snake" (This one is a bit of a play on the term "mad" meaning either angry - which a cut snake would be - or crazy, which the saying actually refers to) or "Mad as a meat axe" (this one is interesting because it is attributing the madness to the weapon that the mad person would be wielding) and "Pissed as a newt" (unlike in America, where it would mean angry, in Australia pissed means drunk - not sure why a newt is the epitome of drunkenness).

    • @mort8143
      @mort8143 14 дней назад +2

      Yep. That was my era too. Sticking your thumb up at someone was like giving the middle finger today.

    • @michaelfink64
      @michaelfink64 13 дней назад +1

      @@mort8143 I remember if you put your index and middle finger together and flexed your elbow, it meant "get stuffed". Haven't seen or heard of that one for a while.

  • @JohnHollands
    @JohnHollands 14 дней назад +10

    "Doggie bag" is when we ask for the leftovers at a restaurant and WE PRETEND it's to feed our dog back home because we wouldn't want it to seem like we're poor.

    • @Fiona-zc6oz
      @Fiona-zc6oz 14 дней назад

      Yes but that was the original reason

    • @Dr_KAP
      @Dr_KAP 12 дней назад +1

      Surprisingly the story is a little more intricate.. The doggie bag originated in the USA during world war 2 when food shortages were a thing. People were struggling to feed their pets and were encouraged to give their pets table scraps. Restaurants and hotels developed paper bags “Bones for bowser” which they gave to people so they could take scraps home to their pets. Over time people started to request the bags so that they could take leftovers home for themselves too. Hence they became known as doggie bags!! 😊😂

  • @Roddrummer
    @Roddrummer 14 дней назад +5

    A few points: I call anyone I like a 'legend'; I call a meal a 'feed' more than I call it a meal, and sometimes it's even a 'scoff' - 'let's go get a scoff'; I even use 'doggy bag' as a verb - "Can you doggy bag that for me?"

    • @nolaj114
      @nolaj114 14 дней назад +2

      Never heard 'scoff' as a noun, just a verb..as in "he scoffed all the biscuits" but legend, yeah..all the time.

  • @ninitech6230
    @ninitech6230 14 дней назад +7

    She'll be right, mate.

  • @jaccilowe3842
    @jaccilowe3842 13 дней назад +2

    When I first came to Oz in the 80s, I would often hear No Wuckin' Furries as a spoonerism, which then, in true Ozzie style, was shortened to No Wuckers.

  • @FenrirWolfTV
    @FenrirWolfTV 14 дней назад +1

    Great video as always man, I'm slowly making my way through all of your other content!
    Most of these details in the video are pretty spot on, I was expecting to see some misinformation but I think she has a firm grasp on the Aussie lingo. I'm awaiting your next video

  • @taniaPBear
    @taniaPBear 14 дней назад +7

    Snag is a sausage, as you would probably know, but Americans don't have those kind of sausages, they call hotdogs, sausages. We put hotdogs in buns, but often have a sausage on a piece of bread at a barbeque or whatever. A 'stubbie' is a small, squat bottle with little to no neck, not every bottle as she thought.✌❤

    • @Fiona-zc6oz
      @Fiona-zc6oz 14 дней назад

      She is Canadian but I am sure there are sausages in America lol

    • @Dr_KAP
      @Dr_KAP 12 дней назад

      @@Fiona-zc6ozyou can get sausage links which are small frozen breakfast sausages in links. As for sausages like ours, nope not a thing in the U.S. but yeh obviously if you looked hard enough you could find anything in some boutique butcher in New York etc. But generally sausages as well know them aren’t a thing culturally over there 😊❤

  • @tonym7012
    @tonym7012 12 дней назад +2

    A bottle-o was once a Stepoe and Son like character who came around to collect empty bottles - predominately beer bottles that in the 1950s carried a deposit of a halfpenny.

  • @aussieswatching3135
    @aussieswatching3135 13 дней назад +4

    “We’re not here to put socks on centipedes”

  • @mawguwerr
    @mawguwerr 15 минут назад

    In Australia, in some parts we still use "Cockney slang" such as, if you came to me, I might say "You got any Bugs Bunny in your Skyrocket!?" and I would be saying, "Do you have any money in your pocket?" or "Would you like a Dogs eye with some dead horse!?" ( a meat pie with sauce) lol

  • @Fiona-zc6oz
    @Fiona-zc6oz 14 дней назад +4

    Hot dogs are different...long, white, soft roll with a frankfurt sausage. The other one is just sausage in bread from a sausage sizzle event. We do say Just a sec or second

  • @redwarpy
    @redwarpy 4 часа назад

    Frankfurters are put in Rolls, Sausage Sizzles are sausages on bread with onions and sauce.

  • @helenvann3506
    @helenvann3506 7 дней назад +1

    A stubby is a small bottle of beer as opposed to the old school large bottles - which I don’t know if they even still exist - which were known as tallies or long necks

  • @Jeni10
    @Jeni10 2 дня назад

    Stubby originally was a short beer bottle with a short neck from a specific brewery. Bundaberg Brewed Soft Drinks are also in stubby bottles.

  • @jparko4944
    @jparko4944 День назад

    With the sausage sanga on a slice of white bread, It's all about the bread and sausage ratio. Gotta have grilled onions and BBQ sauce on top obviously.... Take a bite out of one end, of which the sausage overhangs a fair bit, so more sausage. Then flip and repeat on the other end, more sausage. Then rip off the top triangle of bread that's left and throw it to the Magpie standing next to you. And you're left with the bread making a small comeback in the mini 'hotdog', but the onions and sauce are now squashed into the middle, crescendoing the flavours. Three bites...... I'm off to Bunnings right now:P

  • @lync8884
    @lync8884 14 дней назад +2

    Too easy is used the same as no problem. Not everyone uses “the c word”. We don’t say “it’s alright” we say “you’re right” shortened from “you’re alright mate”. Never heard anyone say “thanking you” and yes a snag is specifically a sausage, served in bread not a hotdog (which is served in a hotdog roll).

  • @martyjones1413
    @martyjones1413 14 дней назад +3

    G'day is, spoken as a greeting to everyone!

  • @livertic
    @livertic 8 дней назад +1

    She did a good job !

  • @celesteklose4903
    @celesteklose4903 12 дней назад +2

    I feel like she has been hanging around young guys on the Eastern Coast, judging from the language. It’s not typical everywhere.

  • @Jeni10
    @Jeni10 2 дня назад

    The doggy bag is easy. Decades ago, people took their leftovers home to give to their dog. The name has stuck even if you’re not feeding it to your dog.

  • @TheNakedWombat
    @TheNakedWombat День назад

    Snag for thin sausage. Banger for thick sausage - bangers and mash.

  • @HoratioIsHere
    @HoratioIsHere 6 дней назад

    Yep snags are sausages, hot dogs are hot dogs. Stubbies are small bottles of beer something around 385ml pr so but more rare now days is the long neck a 750ml beer but I haven't seen them in years. Bottlo is a bit of a regional thing, common in the north, not as much in the south in my experience.

  • @djgrant8761
    @djgrant8761 13 дней назад

    The doggy bag originated in the US. Steakhouses would often serve steaks on the bone and after people would eat they’d ask the bones to be bagged up so they could take them home for their dogs. Today the term is used for leftovers so any uneaten edible food can be consumed at a later date.

  • @slamminbanquets
    @slamminbanquets 13 дней назад +2

    She forgot “old mate”. What we call someone when we don’t know their name

  • @garrymuir1442
    @garrymuir1442 9 дней назад

    Hot dogs(frankfurt on a long bread bun) are different to sausages(snags). Yep Ranga or Bluey, Ranga are both used as slang for someone that is redheaded, ranga is probably more commonly used these days. G'day is used far more in regional areas than cities.

  • @Hope-sf3dk
    @Hope-sf3dk 22 часа назад +1

    bottle of beer is called a 'long neck'

  • @shaneb4612
    @shaneb4612 13 дней назад +1

    I'm an old boy now, I use darl all the time, especially at work. A women you don't know, instantly becomes darl. For the old ducks, I tend to use sweat-heart. We don't use love or pet as much, but they're interchangeable. Guys are dude, mate, fella or man. A few of the common phrases said are "Are you sh!tting me" or "I sh!t you not". Translation Are you lying to me, I'm not lying.

  • @jvvoid
    @jvvoid 14 дней назад +2

    We don't even say "how are you going", it's "how ya goin'?".
    We don't call chocolate 'lollies". I know the N.Americans call chocolate 'candy'. We don't even use the word ''candy'', we say lollies or sweets for things like mints or jelly beans, that sort of thing.
    I haven't heard anyone say ''swag'' since I was in the army reserves, she somehow knows someone in the .01% of the population that would use that word in general conversation. "Thanking you" means they're happy to see the back of you.
    I thought doggy bag was N.American.
    Out of all that she left out the one phrase said the most: ''No worries''.
    And I say g'day all the time, like everytime I greet a stranger, talk to a shop attendant etc.

    • @utha2665
      @utha2665 13 дней назад

      The 4WD community use swag quite a bit, and they are sold as swags in camping stores.

  • @raymondhardy8468
    @raymondhardy8468 14 дней назад +1

    A swag is a one man tent and mattress built in one

  • @LeanneAnderson-e5c
    @LeanneAnderson-e5c 14 дней назад +3

    Not weird to us 😂

  • @suebooth2431
    @suebooth2431 13 дней назад

    I think 'doggy bag' originated that if someone couldn't finish their meal, they'd get a doggy bag to take the scraps home for their dog.. whereas now, it's just going home and the person will probably eat it later themselves.

  • @Fiona-zc6oz
    @Fiona-zc6oz 14 дней назад +5

    I actually don't know anyone who says the C word and Darl is pretty rare as well. Also few of my friends say F and family never. Not sure who she mixes with lol but it is mainly younger people swearing. Used to be fined for it on public transport.

    • @Dr_KAP
      @Dr_KAP 12 дней назад +2

      So glad you said this Fiona - I’m so sick of all this RUclips stuff suggesting we all use the c word casually. I don’t know anyone who says it either !!

    • @lyncanning4849
      @lyncanning4849 3 дня назад

      Not used in my world.. & work places frown on swearing. Some, not all of the younger generation use these swear words more casually. Doesn't mean we all do.

    • @PeterMoir-r7d
      @PeterMoir-r7d 2 дня назад

      In a shearing shed when a woman appears they say ducks on the pond to let the men know not to swear as for the c word and f word not said in mixed company considered very bad manners.

  • @andrewhowie6646
    @andrewhowie6646 13 дней назад

    I feel the reaction to Australian slang and language culture shock is giving a platform to people who generally feel entitled to think their narrow experience has some value and insight. Of course anyone from one English speaking country to another, or even within Britain is going to find differences. Just be aware that you are saying more about yourself having narrow view of world cultures if you find this surprising.
    I do appreciate the MSTV channel as you do a good job at calling out the specifics that have similarities between Australian and British idioms.

    • @margaretbamford7176
      @margaretbamford7176 12 дней назад

      They are in a different country and things are different. Who knew?

  • @lucyblazebright6339
    @lucyblazebright6339 8 дней назад

    Read C.J Dennis poetry “The Songs of a Sentimental Bloke” (not the film) especially the fifth one in the series called “The Play”. The main character is taking his girlfriend to watch stage performance of Romeo and Juliet play. I find it so much fun to see if Australian kids today can even read the Aussie lingo. It was written in 1915. I have to channel my best Kath and Kim to read it to them - then they understand it 🤣 Mostly…🤣

  • @debugin1227
    @debugin1227 3 дня назад

    Watching this was more fun than chewin the leg of a chocolate frog

  • @goaway2803
    @goaway2803 14 дней назад +1

    I use Thanking you, only at the bottom of a letter, like Sincerely yours. What's funny, is the UK, Ireland and Australians can use the C word and it doesn't sound shocking but with some of countries, it just sounds weird (I'm saying it's a 'nice' word) or wrong XD Ta as you know can be for asking a wee one to give you something, or as a thank you and of course as goodbye. Thick as bricks, (stupid) As useful as tits on a bull (useless) is couple my Dad used and Shitting bricks (being very worried). Thank you for yet another classic vid, Mate.

    • @BigGen222
      @BigGen222 14 дней назад

      Or as useful as an ashtray on a motorbike.

    • @ellefitzpatrick6339
      @ellefitzpatrick6339 13 дней назад

      Thanking you is something I have never heard in my 40 years of written business communication.

  • @56music64
    @56music64 6 дней назад

    We do say g'day mate. When walking towards a stranger, you could smile, nod your head OR more likely say "g'day mate" also another time you may say it would be, if you were standing in a shop waiting for your order or to be served and someone you know comes in unexpectedly or taps you on your shoulder you would say 'g'day mate!"

  • @timrozitis961
    @timrozitis961 14 дней назад

    Might be wrong (and quite pedantic), but I think the " 'ts alright" as a response to "thank you" is not actually "it's alright", but "that's alright" - maybe it's same, I can't explain the difference, but I feel there is one (also I think my response to "thanks" would be "no worries").
    "Ranga" for redhead comes from "Orangutan"

  • @utha2665
    @utha2665 13 дней назад

    We say g'day far more than we say g'day mate. "G'day, owyagoin". :)

  • @Danger_Mouse3619
    @Danger_Mouse3619 14 дней назад

    We use words and terms etc both from the UK and the US. That's why people are so confused. Some are a universal thing but for some reason we just picked and chose what we wanted to call it.

  • @Jeni10
    @Jeni10 2 дня назад

    No one in my circle of family and friends uses the c word, I’ve only heard it mentioned by visitors on RUclips and they see, to all be in Queensland. I’m in NSW and I’m aware that each state has its own slang with some overlap.

  • @livertic
    @livertic 8 дней назад

    If you bump into someone, we say sorry, the other bloke says your right mate. !

  • @philllynch3265
    @philllynch3265 14 дней назад +11

    I'm a Aussie who thinks that the C word is an awful word, and I'm disappointed it's being used as normal language.

    • @goaway2803
      @goaway2803 14 дней назад

      It is an awful word, but I told my nurse after my Neurosurgery that I can say the word (in relation to my ex at least) and not feel mortified. She thought that was priceless XD Take care, Mate.

    • @Bellas1717
      @Bellas1717 14 дней назад

      @@goaway2803Strange that neurosurgery did that for you.

    • @Bellas1717
      @Bellas1717 14 дней назад +3

      Totally agree. It’s certainly not used in my family or circle of friends.

    • @datwistyman
      @datwistyman 13 дней назад

      Don't move out of the city then. Because we all use it.

    • @Bellas1717
      @Bellas1717 13 дней назад +3

      @ You and the people you know might, many others don’t.

  • @lowcostiqchasm3226
    @lowcostiqchasm3226 13 дней назад

    Complimenting somebody by calling them 'A good egg'

  • @stevendean2999
    @stevendean2999 9 дней назад

    I'm a red haired Aussie.

  • @TheCaptainbeefylog
    @TheCaptainbeefylog 10 дней назад

    HOw are you going? - is often pronounced owya garn?
    A stubby is a beer bottle with a short, or stubby, neck.

  • @Nat-dx3vp
    @Nat-dx3vp 9 дней назад

    I think some of the younger generation may use the "c" word but I dont hear it much at all. the "f" word is much more prevalent. "cheers mate" for thank you is pretty common, Thanking you never heard. She missed "old mate", could be used for someone you dont know, or someone not well liked.

  • @datwistyman
    @datwistyman 13 дней назад +1

    I've almost never heard anyone say thanking you. Or won't be a minute.
    But I'm from Qld.
    Won't be a minute is,
    More likely to be
    Hang on a sec. Second.
    Be back in a sec.
    Sec or minute are interchangeable.
    Lol we use hot dog buns if we are making a hot-dog 😂

    • @utha2665
      @utha2665 13 дней назад

      Older folks say Back in a jiffy.

  • @alwynemcintyre2184
    @alwynemcintyre2184 8 дней назад

    Hot dogs and sausages are 2 different things

  • @paulabbott7620
    @paulabbott7620 8 дней назад

    I am 67 year old Australian and I hate the c word and I hardly ever hear it.

  • @antheabrouwer3258
    @antheabrouwer3258 14 дней назад +1

    Some of her explanations are not correct. She has misunderstood many of the sayings.. ..and very few people say C***T. Only Bogans say this..Hot Dogs are different from sausages..they are like big Frankfurts..Many of the sayings we say are British!!

  • @martinfinn674
    @martinfinn674 14 дней назад

    Djavagoodweeken?

  • @stevendean2999
    @stevendean2999 9 дней назад

    Say how are u going mate.