Started watching your channel last year when we were looking into moving to Australia and now we're only 90 days to go until we make the move! 186PR Visas, container ordered, flights booked and temp. accomodation organised. Now got to find a job for myself and a place to rent when the AirBnB runs out! Can't wait, thanks for all your videos Ross!
I emigrated as a child with my parents. They packed all their house up into a container and brought everything with them, beds, linen, 3 piece suite etc etc. It only 'arrived' (for that read stuck in customs) 6 months after we had arrived. My parents were so excited to get their familiar things back, give back all the borrowed furniture and set up their rental home properly. Once everything was unpacked, I looked at everything, and even though I was only six years old, I could see that the furniture was TINY and did not fit in with any house in Australia because houses here are generally so much bigger, the furniture looks like doll house furniture. Artworks, antiques/heirlooms, out of print books, photographs, the precious stuff but for goodness sake, save yourselves some money and leave the tiny dinky British furniture behind
We were Brits who emigrated from Scotland to the USA in 1965 - culture shock! And then after 7 years in the USA we came to Australia - from Detroit to Mackay which in 1972 was a small country town that had radio bingo and horseracing on the local radio rather than the most exciting new music I'd ever heard, which is what it was like in Detroit. Now, all these years later, I love the place, it's home, I'd rather be here than anywhere else, and having lived in all the states and capital cities, I've chosen to live in Tasmania for the last 4 decades. It's a lovely place to be. Welcome!
My 3 children started swimming lessons at 6 months old. First off it was teaching them if they fell into a pool etc they would automatically be able to turn over and float, this could save their lives. They each could swim 25m length pool by 3 years old. It was so important to have kids who could swim as we always lived near water. 🇦🇺
I tried that with my oldest, and at 6 months she swam beautifully if you didn't mind her being on the bottom of the pool. It took until about 4 for her to gain enough buoyancy to be able to float.
All of my nieces and nephews, including the greats, were taught to float from about 6-9 months. Then to swimming lessons to learn to dog paddle as soon as possible. That we had backyard swimming pools, and live by the beach, learning to survive a fall in the pool was essential.
I think 'aye' at the end of a sentence is more common than 'but' and having lived a number of years in QLD and other States too, it's definitely just a QLD thing from my experience. The thing too about being a qualified trades person, say you're not qualified and you put a new or replace a power point and your house burns down and it's investigated that this be the cause, good luck with insurance.
I told my two daughters growing up “never struggle against a rip in the surf. Go with it and you’ll be washed in further down the beach”. Very important
Exactly my experience, 'go with the flow' saved me when I got caught in a rip (just normal flow of the water), opposite Bribie Island, on the Sunshine Coast, which created a natural channel. Landed on a sand bank.
Yep. We were taught to swim across the rip…. Don’t fight it but the rip will take you further out, so if you can try to swim toward to side…. You won’t get swept out as far. But don’t fight the rip
I love sour cream and chilli sauce for wedges. I also occasionally have a dollop of mayo and a squirt of bbq sauce with hot chips. 😋 Chicken salt on chops and wedges is a given.
@@heatherhoward2513 - no, in winter it gets down to freezing at night and some of the winter winds can keep temps down to low teens during the day. Then summer days can hit close to 50c in the shade.
My kids started swimming lessons at 3 months old……They never looked back,it was a great skill to learn but swimming at the beach (rips and swim between the flags) is completely different to a pool….
I'm a Queenslander who has lived in Melbourne for decades and I can say 'but' at the end of a sentence is a Qld thing. Also, 'aye' at the end of a sentence is a FNQ thing. It's definitely a local colloquialism and also depends on socio-economic group ... I can say that as a former market researcher interested in demographics and psychographics. When I worked in the UK I always noticed Poms who finished their sentence with an interrogative 'yeah', as though they were looking for confirmation of what they had just said. It's similar to the rising inflection of some Aussies or the 'but' and 'aye'. PS - I do not say 'but', 'aye' or 'yeah'.
I'm from Melbourne and when I met my ex husband from Queensland, I was surprised that he said but at the end of a sentence. I had never heard it before and my family have been in Australia since 1850.
I think the “but” is actually “bud” I’ve just moved to brissy and I hear it a lot , and as a Welsh person myself I say bud all the time as in sort for buddy :)
Living in London in the 1980s I had a friend from Sheffield who used to say chuck as an endearment. To my ear it sounded like chook so we called each other Chuck and Chook.
Hehe, loved that vid. I’ve lived in the A.C.T, QLD & NSW. Queenslanders definitely say ‘aye’ at the end of a sentence. NSW & ACT usually end their sentences with ‘so’….thats just my experience. I don’t say either. But if you listen intently you can generally work out where someone is from, if they’re Australian. I did notice you slipped in the ‘yeah nah’ 🤭🤭🤭🤭. You’re being aussified, Ross 😂😂😂😂. Love it.
“but” at the end of a sentence is being used as an adverb rather than a disjunct. It’s similar to using “but” at the beginning of a sentence instead of the more recognisable adverbs “however” or “though”. All three can be placed at either the beginning or end. You can find it used this way outside Queensland. I first heard it years ago in an ad campaign for a snack food called Burger Rings. The conceit of the ad was to have a young guy list a whole lot of bad things that were supposed to be in them, then add “taste good but.”
It's just to show ya can't be bothered telling the rest of the story. Like, I wanna go to the shops, I can't but. The other person either already knows what you're talking about, or they have to ask lol It's a funny little term, I'd never thought of it before.
The one thing that really struck me when I first went, was how much EVERYONE cares about the environment. Most people in the UK treat it like one big cesspit (which of course, it is).
We care about the environment because we are close to the coast and any rubbish would end up in the sea. Put it in the bin. we have an annual "Clean up Australia Day" where people spend their time to pick up rubbish (even scuba divers collect rubbish from the sea bottom)
You are kidding , right? The only thing which stops us drowning in our refuse is the amount of space we have to store it. The average young person in this country just throws their rubbish where ever they want.
we have the Harold Holt memorial swim centre(PM that drowned) so you know we take swim safety very seriously :P We had swimming classes at school every year from start to end.
On a different, no disrespect intended note, did you know they're still looking for Harold Holt in Melbourne? Just walk around busy parts of the city as office workers rush to the station and you'll hear cries of "Herald!!"
Best move my parents ever made,from Croydon Surrey to wilds of The Dandenong Ranges in Victoria back in 1958,massive Culture shock for a ten year old,no more school uniforms,20 kids in one school ,had to get a block of Ice every four days for the "Fridge".(Ice Box),deadly snakes everywhere,spiders galore,fell in love with Australia from day one,no inclination to leave what so ever.
@malcolmbindon5911 nah, it's very much a qld thing. I've lived in Vic all my life, other than 3 years in QLD and but and aye were very much part of their vernacular. When I opened my mouth at Tafe, the other blokes would say, aww you must be from Victoria, aye. Maybe because I could actually speak real good and that
yeah the "but" at the end is a QLD thing, we don't do that in Vic, I think sometimes they do it in NSW too - there's a lot of differences from state to state. The term "mate" originates from the early settlement period as you'd spend so long on a ship getting here, everybody was your ship-mate. In Victoria a convenience store is a Milk Bar, in South Oz it's a Deli, but in Vic a Deli is a butcher
I’m an Aussie living in Canada. Most places bag your groceries here. I rarely shop at the ones who don’t. But all sorts of stores are adding self check out terminals which many of us hate and refuse to use.
I always just put the goods straight into the trolley and bag them in the car, it makes life so much easier for the young one behind the till and also helps the line move quicker. They always ask if I want them to bag it but I politely decline and tell why I do so.
I've never heard of Indigenous seasons and I'm a 6th-generation Australian (ancestors originally from Germany way back in the 1830s.) I'd love to know more as I love learning about Indigenous culture. I believe the seasons change on the equinoxes and solstices, rather than the 1st of the month, but with the weather often being so strange, adding a couple extra (or even doubling them) makes a lot of sense.
The country music thing is way more a rural, NSW/Queensland thing too...in Melbourne, you wouldn't come across a festival or a song unless you actively searched out an alternative or community radio show...
Yes, in brazil is extremely common people bagging for you, even is have a profession called packaging, where you have to go to the checkout and pack people's products the people who is beeping do it too
I'm not sure about the season thing. I'm down here in Adelaide and I've decided there are only two seasons here - summer and winter, Autumn and Spring seem to flash by so quickly and before you know it you don't have anything suitable to wear! Even weirder, this weekend we have a warmer than usual Easter after a cooler than usual Christmas...🤔
its Adelaide we have 2 seasons hot or not-hot but blue sky's most days. But seriously yes was a very cool summer it even rained a for a few days weird hey!
The crime reporting on evening news is a last 15 years thing. A South African migrant said to me at a BBQ in the 90s “we had car hijacks and you have a cat stuck up a tree”.
It's the first time I've seen this show and I must commend you in your telling of australia. I moved here in '79 and have never looked back (well maybe for one more white Xmas - maybe.) For those looking to move here each state is slightly different in their terminology of some items but its all good. Welcome 💜
Hiya mate, good morning from rainy Preston, north west United Kingdom. Me and my family been watching you all quite a lot latley, we seem to be having a pull towards the Aussie lifestyle, mainly for the children. However my job has come up on a list of sponsored jobs etc, soemthing we are considering. That job is being a barber, paying 70k a year, my partner would be within the region of earning minim wage so from what I see around 55k. Would a household income of roughly 125k or so be enough for a family of 5? I mean we are moving for the purpose of nature beaches etc so cheaper days out etc. But from what can read that income may not be enough Thanks for any help!
Ross, you know we love you and you are ALMOST there. But you have to stop saying new as noo and start saying it as knew! Apart from that, you're good to go, eh
They do checkout bagging in supermarkets in the Philippines. The one I shop at even provides boxes for packing serious stuff like cans of paint, boxed and securely tied up, all done with a smile 🙂
One comment asking about how much to have a year If you grow your own vege and have fruit trees and buy at opt shops there second hand furniture and clothing And limit on takeaway food with a family of 5 Then the amount you are saying is enough Plenty as I had 5 kids and we had less than that a year Plus buy when things on good special at supermarket Now it’s just me When you work you set up what’s super and that amount adds to retirement
Just this week 3 adult people jumped into a hotel pool to save a toddler who had fallen in. Two of the adults drowned and by some miracle one adult plus the toddler survived. None of them could swim. Astounds me that they thought they could wing it at the last minute. Back in the 70’s swiming was a primary school requirement. Everyone in the school could swim. Don’t think they do it anymore. The rise up at the end of a sentence is predominantly a Queensland thing 🤠 Glad you love Australia. Won’t catch me leaving. You can see a bit of my place in most of my video intro’s 🤠
Speaking of foods to have together: You need to try; a:) Honey and Vegemite. b:) Peanut butter and Vegemite. c:) Mayo and BBQ sauce. d:) Maccas chips dipped in ice cream. e:) Tim Tam slam (best way to do this is by biting 2 opposite corners of a FROZEN TimTam sucking hot coffee through it then tilt your head back let it fall in your mouth and feel the goodness melt)
I say hey at the end of a question,eg "the avos were cheap today hey" or " next doors dog needs a kick up the khyber hey" Queenslanders always said hey, so I think but is a southern import that has taken hold..
I have never ever heard it used, unless it was tagged on the end instead of the front of a sentence. "We could go somewhere else, but" and sometimes a shrug along with it.
After 20 years of living in Australia, I finally achieved my ambition to go back to live in England, only to find that I didn't fit there and was never going to be accepted as anything but Australian, and there were so many things that made life harder in England if you weren't rich, didn't last long, been happy here since... though sometimes I still find I'm not Australian enough
I’m a Kiwi who lives in Oz and I’ve always found the “but’ thing strange. Although I have noticed that Aussies increasingly use ‘yeah nah’, which was something I used to get made fun of for when visiting Oz when I was younger. ‘Me’ instead of ‘my’ is another one too.
I notice you didn’t mention the default non-alcoholic bar drink - glorious lemon-lime-and-bitters. I didn’t realise it was Aussie until my Finnish friend commented on it.
I've had taps recently break because the plastic handle fatigues and I changed them over for new taps. I've had wall power points where the switch has gone and so I've changed them. Where the wiring goes in it's all colour coded red, black and green and you switch out the power circuit breakers before you start. You may have two or three circuit breakers for wall power points and you just find out which circuit breaker is applicable to the power point you want to change. I've never had a problem maybe because I'm more interested in how to do practical things rather than hair and skin products. If we're not allowed to do these change overs then why does Bunnings sell these things for the ordinary person to buy. In these tight financial times people need to learn how to do things like this themselves and save a lot of money. If I was going to have my whole house rewired then yes I'd call an electrician. All this you can't do this and you can't do that because we say so, well it's my house and I'll decide if I do it myself or get a tradie to do it. They will not decide for me.
"If we're not allowed to do these change overs then why does Bunnings sell these things for the ordinary person to buy." a: Because it's against the law for an unqualified person to do some of these things, not against the law to sell them. b: So that they can sell them to the plumbers and electricians. c: So that they can sell them to home owners to then have the plumbers and electricians install them, instead of being limited to what the plumbers and electricians have available. Also, they have signs around the plumbing supplies (at least) pointing out that it's illegal to do the work yourself if you're not qualified. "...well it's my house and I'll decide if I do it myself or get a tradie to do it. They will not decide for me." I often wish I was allowed to do it myself, but while it's your house, it probably won't always be your house, so if your work is shoddy or unsafe (which it may or may not be), then the next owner of the home might suffer from your shoddy or unsafe work.
@@PJRayment The power points that were renewed were done over ten years ago so I think I would have known by NOW if the workmanship was shoddy and the state will NOT decide for me.
@@AussiePom "The power points that were renewed were done over ten years ago so I think I would have known by NOW if the workmanship was shoddy..." What if a change of circumstances meant that you moved house a few months after you did the work? I'm not arguing that your work is shoddy. I'm making the point that the lawmakers choose to consider what might happen if everybody took the same attitude as you, but were not as competent as you say you are (and I'm not suggesting that you're not).
@@PJRaymentChanging a power point is not rocket science for you have three colour coded wires which are positive negative and earth which is red, green and black. There is a ring or colour where every wire has to go into on the rear of the power point and then using a small screwdriver you screw the brass screw which holds the wire in place. Now if you've screwed the wrong wire into the wrong hole then when you turn the circuit breaker in the fuse box back to "on" it will immediately switch to off. So that's how you know you've stuffed up. Most houses have more than one circuit for power points and the circuit breakers are labeled "power 1 power 2 etc and you need to find which circuit breaker is for the power point you want to change. It's the same for light switches look for the 'lights" circuit breaker and turn it off if you want to change a light switch. So when you go to turn lights on they won't turn on none of them. If you're wanting a new outside power point installed or an inside one or a complete rewire of the house then YES call a licenced electrician to do the work.
@@AussiePom "Changing a power point is not rocket science..." I didn't say it was, but still many people don't know how to do it properly, or can't. Your comment doesn't really address my point. And as you would realise, it's not just about knowing the colours, etc. It's also how well you connect the wires. A poorly-connected wire might cause a spark that could start a fire, for example. Attaching an earth wire to something that is not earthed could be fatal. There _are_ things that can go wrong, and that's what the legislators are concerned about. I'm not trying to justify the law, beyond pointing out that it at least has some basis. And remember that your question that I was answering was about why Bunnings sell the components if we're not allowed to do the work ourselves.
I went to London 10 years ago and at the local shopping center the checkout chick informed me at 9pm that I was the first person that said hello to her!
I have lived in Brisbane nearly all my life and do not ever remember someone ending a sentence with but. I have lived in 5 different areas, both northside and southside. Also, I taught in 7 different schools in very different areas.
Ive been in Oz 30 years & still get confused about what season/month it is when I stop to think about...thats weird! Wedges, sour cream & chilli sauce - yummo. A pint of Vegemite would be poured down the 'dunny' 😂 I take my time in Aldi. Not that I go there very often, no one is rushing me!
Bagging the groceries? These days, it only happens in smaller independent grocery companies like IGA. Definitely not the bigger companies. It gets really cold in Canberra!! Sometimes it snows. And today we are in Autumn, and it was 32 degrees celsius!! Huh!!
No coles or woollies have bagged groceries since the eighties. When I went on holidays to the Gold Coast and Brisbane in the eighties, they didn't either. Has that changed?
@@antheabrouwer3258 Where are you from ? Coles and Woolies have never stopped bagging your stuff in the Newcastle area You must be from stuckupsville (Melbourne Rofl)
This is so hilarious, but. All the best from the West. I actually learnt to swim at the army pool in Aldershot and the Lido also in Aldershot. Guess where I lived, Aldershot, no. Farnborough.
I myself am an Australian citizen living in Australia and did not realise any of this was different in other countries. How bad is coffee in other countries? I'm so curious now!
I did noticed you've got the yeah nuh down pat, don't worry about the but, it is something I only used in my teens and then grew out of it and I'm from Melbourne.
Ross, I’m not into Country music, but... I think you need to clarify that it is Australian Country music, not a copy of US Country music, people from O/S think that we just copy the Yanks, we don’t. There is a difference, cheers,
The ‘but’ thing is usually placed there when the speaker realises they left it from the beginning of what they said, similar to ‘still’. Ie “it was raining (but should be here) we had a great time BUT” From there ‘but’ also began to take the place of ‘though’ at the end of sentences. 😅
The ‘but’ on the end of the sentence is something that has been introduced into Australia. So is the rising voice at the end of a sentence. I am 82 years old and was taught a sentence ends with a downward emphasis at the end UNLESS it is a question, when your intonation then rises. Also, but was never added to a sentence - it didn’t appear till I was well into my 40s. Actually I don’t know anyone now who does that. If I do come across it, it now longer surprises me as it did the first time I heard it, but it is NOT all that common (not in South Australia where I lived for the first 56 years of my life, nor Broken Hill (next 22 years) or here in Victoria. Unfortunately the use of correct grammar has declined markedly over the years.
The over the top rising inflection grates on me at times. I feel like it was an occasional thing when I was growing up but now a lot of people seem to do it with every sentence. Interestingly, quite a lot of people from the United States also have this rising inflection. Another annoying one is the way gen z kids on tik tok exaggerate or say "no" as "naurrr". They do it because it gets them a lot more likes and engagement by people overseas who think it's hilarious. Then they think that everyone speaks like that. I've never said no that way and it definitely was NOT a thing until a few years ago. Most Aussies usually say no and know - essentially the same way.
What is correct Grammer but? Seriously, every country speaks differently, we're a patchwork of different aboriginal languages, Asian, European, English. It would be boring if we spoke like the English, oh, and I live in Adelaide. Also, I hear terrible English coming out of England, some of them have lost the ability to use the letters Th, that's now an F 😂
Love your post Ross.The reporting of crime and acting on crime in Australia is so much better than here in the UK, were they don't do anything about it or turn up about an hour after the crime. As for having the word but at the end of a sentence that doesn't make sense to me or sound gramatically right.That is great that they pack your groceries in the smaller supermarkets,they don't do that here in the UK. Thanks for posting from Hazel in the UK.
But.... Is a qld thing mostly. You find it occasionally elsewhere but each state has their own quirks. In Adelaide the most common is "heaps'. Where elsewhere you might say I like that alot an Adeladian will likely say I like that heaps.
That "but" thing is really weird. Definitely bogan. That rising inflection is called the Australian inflection. I've read that it came about through that dreadful TV show Neighbours.
Ay & But at the end of a sentence seem to be more a Queensland thing. You dont hear it in Tasmania, or much of it in other places I've lived like Victoria & NSW. Others may hear it more I guess.
Born and bred Aussie and have never heard the but at the end of sentence. I guess it's likely a locational thing. Same with country music - maybe where you are, but not a common thing where I am (and I work at a number of varied music festivals).
In the U.S., unless you're using the self checkout, the checker always bags your groceries and there is no extra charge for the bags. The plastic bags they use now are so flimsy I don't see how they would dare charge you.
you can still get plastic bags? only paper here or reusable carry bags, only the fish and chip guys and butcher's still give out plastic bags now I need to buy rubbishbin liners.
I don't think the but thing is uniquely Qld because my mum faced the same confusion when she immigrated to Sydney in 1969. She'd keep asking, "But what?". I was banned from using but at the end of a sentence at home because it would drive her crazy.
I think the but is a QLD thing. I’d also mention that it’s also the only place I’ve heard uptalk (the rising inflection at the end of a sentence) in the wild (in non-stressed individuals). I suspect it seems common because a lot of our actors/tv presenters are Queenslanders.
I was born in Australia and I’ve lived in two different states. I am yet to come across the, “but”, at the end of sentences! So that’s a completely new one for me!
Nobody seems to mention that the Sun goes right-to-left in Australia but the wrong way in the UK or Europe ;P Everyone bangs on about the way the water swirls in the sink but happy that their sun goes the wrong way across the sky!
I don’t necessarily want checkout staff to bag my groceries but it would be nice to actually be served by them, rather than have them standing waiting for the self checkout to go (inevitably) go wrong!
Bagging groceries, no thank you. I take great pleasure to place product on the conveyor belt in the way I want it processed. Frozen and fridge things together, then veggies and fruit, followed by pantry things, etc. what happens if gets bagged according to size 🙄 with soft fruit at the bottom. I'd much prefer a packing bench where I can pack myself.
“But” at the end of the sentence seems to be a Queensland thing. I have a number of mates from QLD and it’s only them that stick “but” on the end of the sentence. I’m from Victoria and it’s definitely not a thing here really. Craig
It's my personal hypothesis that the rising inflection IS a sort of question. It's sort of a preliminary asking of "do you know what I mean?" without actually asking it. That's my theory and I'm sticking to it, otherwise there's no actual reason and it's just annoying.
Sydney here and "but" is very common with my in-law family. My theory is that it's used like "though". Are you going to be there but? Are you going to be there though? I didn't like the food but. I didn't like the food though.
Rosco ol mate the But term is from your lingo Little Brittan character .yeah but-no but and you guys always ad yeah at the end..jamie oliver spechly lol
Born and bred in Brisbane and I’ve never heard or used but at the end of a sentence except for a kid at High School answering a teacher by saying but full stop.
That is an excellent point u make about certain crime making the news. It's not just a national issue though but generational. I'm old enough to remember much of the crime which is broadcast on the news today would never have made the news in past decades even though it definitely did occur and probably was more common.
the swimming lessons is a way to combat the number of child drownings - being such a beach pool n spa culture with dams being a regular feature in the country - it was and still is too high - it was about 33% last year over 100 children lost - so the earlier kids are taught to float water confidence the better -
I'm Welsh and some areas end a sentence with but here too, but calling you it? My 5 year old has picked it up, not sure where from because this area doesn't seem to lol
I coped with UK coffee so badly on my first visit, I forgoed it altogether 2nd time in favour of caffeine tablets. I don’t know what that says about me
Adding 'but' to the end if a sentence is essentially exchanging it for the word 'instead'. I didnt realise it wasn't used in such a way elsewhere, but its common around Aus, not just Queensland.
"But" at the end of the sentence serves the same purpose as it would at the start - hard to understand for a Pom. I notice you've started saying "yeah/nah" but...
We say "but" at the end of a sentence where you would normally say "though". "you could have gone that way though" = "you could have gone that way but"........ but you're right, the more yobbo you are, the more common this type of word use it.
Started watching your channel last year when we were looking into moving to Australia and now we're only 90 days to go until we make the move! 186PR Visas, container ordered, flights booked and temp. accomodation organised. Now got to find a job for myself and a place to rent when the AirBnB runs out! Can't wait, thanks for all your videos Ross!
Good luck on the rental. It's a tough thing to find.
Welcome in advance and don’t give up too easy! Get any rental you can to get a history and then move on later
I emigrated as a child with my parents. They packed all their house up into a container and brought everything with them, beds, linen, 3 piece suite etc etc. It only 'arrived' (for that read stuck in customs) 6 months after we had arrived. My parents were so excited to get their familiar things back, give back all the borrowed furniture and set up their rental home properly. Once everything was unpacked, I looked at everything, and even though I was only six years old, I could see that the furniture was TINY and did not fit in with any house in Australia because houses here are generally so much bigger, the furniture looks like doll house furniture. Artworks, antiques/heirlooms, out of print books, photographs, the precious stuff but for goodness sake, save yourselves some money and leave the tiny dinky British furniture behind
Good luck for your big move, hope you will be very happy here!😃
Good Luck you will not regret it in the long run.Great life style,and a better chance in life for your children.
We were Brits who emigrated from Scotland to the USA in 1965 - culture shock! And then after 7 years in the USA we came to Australia - from Detroit to Mackay which in 1972 was a small country town that had radio bingo and horseracing on the local radio rather than the most exciting new music I'd ever heard, which is what it was like in Detroit.
Now, all these years later, I love the place, it's home, I'd rather be here than anywhere else, and having lived in all the states and capital cities, I've chosen to live in Tasmania for the last 4 decades. It's a lovely place to be. Welcome!
I want to go to Tasmania to live. I hate the heat but no one will go with me .
The radio in Detroit Vs Mackay😂
My 3 children started swimming lessons at 6 months old. First off it was teaching them if they fell into a pool etc they would automatically be able to turn over and float, this could save their lives. They each could swim 25m length pool by 3 years old. It was so important to have kids who could swim as we always lived near water. 🇦🇺
I tried that with my oldest, and at 6 months she swam beautifully if you didn't mind her being on the bottom of the pool. It took until about 4 for her to gain enough buoyancy to be able to float.
All of my nieces and nephews, including the greats, were taught to float from about 6-9 months. Then to swimming lessons to learn to dog paddle as soon as possible. That we had backyard swimming pools, and live by the beach, learning to survive a fall in the pool was essential.
I think 'aye' at the end of a sentence is more common than 'but' and having lived a number of years in QLD and other States too, it's definitely just a QLD thing from my experience. The thing too about being a qualified trades person, say you're not qualified and you put a new or replace a power point and your house burns down and it's investigated that this be the cause, good luck with insurance.
Insurance companies don't need any more reasons not to pay out
"Aye" was brought to Queensland by the kiwis in the late 70s and 80s. I remember it happening. You can thank Piggy Muldoon for that one.
Yeah the "but" thing is definitely Bogan Qld only, no one else does that
Sydneysider here and it’s said in NSW too.
Urban myth about the insurance. think about it, how could insurance companies possibly establish this?
I live in Australia and you've convinced me to move to Australia!
😂😂😂
🙂🇦🇺
Well if you live in Melbourne in Sydney you DO need to move to Australia!
LMA🤣
love that you have the "yeah - nah" down pat
I said the same thing I love it
nah, yeah!
He's definitely an Aussie now. Either that or he's been watching too many sportspeople being interviewed on TV.
I told my two daughters growing up “never struggle against a rip in the surf. Go with it and you’ll be washed in further down the beach”. Very important
Exactly my experience, 'go with the flow' saved me when I got caught in a rip (just normal flow of the water), opposite Bribie Island, on the Sunshine Coast, which created a natural channel. Landed on a sand bank.
Always try to keep calm, float on your back and move parallel to the shore. Don't fight it.
@@ozzymick1431, great to hear you survived your rip.
Yep. We were taught to swim across the rip…. Don’t fight it but the rip will take you further out, so if you can try to swim toward to side…. You won’t get swept out as far. But don’t fight the rip
I love sour cream and sweet chilli sauce with the wedges. I like garlic aioli sauce for my chips!!
That's also a banger
Same, it's the best. Oh and you don't need to add garlic to the name, it's just aioli.
I love sour cream and chilli sauce for wedges. I also occasionally have a dollop of mayo and a squirt of bbq sauce with hot chips. 😋
Chicken salt on chops and wedges is a given.
Mate in Qld there is only 2 seasons, hot and humid and not so hot and a bit less humid😂
🤣🤣🤣
Yep can vouch to that😹😹😹
Yeah Qld goes from summer to less summer. if your lucky you get 2-3 weeks of turning the A/C off in June
Except in the outback part of qld.
@@heatherhoward2513 - no, in winter it gets down to freezing at night and some of the winter winds can keep temps down to low teens during the day. Then summer days can hit close to 50c in the shade.
My kids started swimming lessons at 3 months old……They never looked back,it was a great skill to learn but swimming at the beach (rips and swim between the flags) is completely different to a pool….
I'm a Queenslander who has lived in Melbourne for decades and I can say 'but' at the end of a sentence is a Qld thing. Also, 'aye' at the end of a sentence is a FNQ thing. It's definitely a local colloquialism and also depends on socio-economic group ... I can say that as a former market researcher interested in demographics and psychographics.
When I worked in the UK I always noticed Poms who finished their sentence with an interrogative 'yeah', as though they were looking for confirmation of what they had just said. It's similar to the rising inflection of some Aussies or the 'but' and 'aye'.
PS - I do not say 'but', 'aye' or 'yeah'.
Gordon Ramsay say "Yeah" at the end of sentences.
I’m from southern Sydney and both ay and but at the end of sentences occurs here a lot, you should see my group chats 😅 it’s not a Queensland thing.
I’ve lived in Brisbane my whole life, and have never heard someone use but at the end of a sentence.
I'm from Melbourne and when I met my ex husband from Queensland, I was surprised that he said but at the end of a sentence. I had never heard it before and my family have been in Australia since 1850.
Must be a QLD thing then
They are a strange mob up there.
I think the “but” is actually “bud”
I’ve just moved to brissy and I hear it a lot , and as a Welsh person myself I say bud all the time as in sort for buddy :)
Definitely not bud, definitely is but.
Living in London in the 1980s I had a friend from Sheffield who used to say chuck as an endearment. To my ear it sounded like chook so we called each other Chuck and Chook.
Hehe, loved that vid. I’ve lived in the A.C.T, QLD & NSW. Queenslanders definitely say ‘aye’ at the end of a sentence. NSW & ACT usually end their sentences with ‘so’….thats just my experience. I don’t say either. But if you listen intently you can generally work out where someone is from, if they’re Australian. I did notice you slipped in the ‘yeah nah’ 🤭🤭🤭🤭. You’re being aussified, Ross 😂😂😂😂. Love it.
“but” at the end of a sentence is being used as an adverb rather than a disjunct. It’s similar to using “but” at the beginning of a sentence instead of the more recognisable adverbs “however” or “though”. All three can be placed at either the beginning or end. You can find it used this way outside Queensland.
I first heard it years ago in an ad campaign for a snack food called Burger Rings. The conceit of the ad was to have a young guy list a whole lot of bad things that were supposed to be in them, then add “taste good but.”
But at the end of a sentence is hilarious 🤣 i think its a stand-in for the word ‘though’ it doesn’t make much sense but
Typical Aussies making though shorter
It's just to show ya can't be bothered telling the rest of the story.
Like, I wanna go to the shops, I can't but.
The other person either already knows what you're talking about, or they have to ask lol
It's a funny little term, I'd never thought of it before.
@@Power_Prawnstar
Replace "but" with "though" and you'll see it's exactly as the first commenter said.
Hey Rosko, you're a true aussie now. I heard "yeah nah" a couple of times 😂
6 degrees and pissing down here today like it has been for most of the last year. Apparently this is now Spring!
You might not be able to "but" at the end of a sentence, but you do have the classic "yeah/nah" down pat. Congratulations! 🎉
The one thing that really struck me when I first went, was how much EVERYONE cares about the environment. Most people in the UK treat it like one big cesspit (which of course, it is).
We care about the environment because we are close to the coast and any rubbish would end up in the sea. Put it in the bin. we have an annual "Clean up Australia Day" where people spend their time to pick up rubbish (even scuba divers collect rubbish from the sea bottom)
if only that was true
You are kidding , right? The only thing which stops us drowning in our refuse is the amount of space we have to store it. The average young person in this country just throws their rubbish where ever they want.
You dont seem to understand what average means @@ian7033-qj9wg
@@ian7033-qj9wg it's a state thing litter is rare in south Australia and Westen Australia at least.
we have the Harold Holt memorial swim centre(PM that drowned) so you know we take swim safety very seriously :P
We had swimming classes at school every year from start to end.
😂
On a different, no disrespect intended note, did you know they're still looking for Harold Holt in Melbourne?
Just walk around busy parts of the city as office workers rush to the station and you'll hear cries of "Herald!!"
@@ozzymick1431🤣🤣🤣
he didn't drown. the subs took him home
I live in Brisbane and I've never heard someone end a sentence with BUT however people in north Queensland frequently end a sentence with "a".
Agree with you. Never heard it in my life. I think this chap lives in Burpengary…. Might explain it.
I use it, never noticed it until now but.
I'm from the NT and live in Adelaide.
Came here from MSTV who recommended your channel = now subscribed
Best move my parents ever made,from Croydon Surrey to wilds of The Dandenong Ranges in Victoria back in 1958,massive Culture shock for a ten year old,no more school uniforms,20 kids in one school ,had to get a block of Ice every four days for the "Fridge".(Ice Box),deadly snakes everywhere,spiders galore,fell in love with Australia from day one,no inclination to leave what so ever.
❤
I think adding "but" on the end of a sentence is a queensland thing tbh
Seems that way
@@ThatJohnstonLifeVIC as well could also be generational as well 👍
@malcolmbindon5911 nah, it's very much a qld thing. I've lived in Vic all my life, other than 3 years in QLD and but and aye were very much part of their vernacular. When I opened my mouth at Tafe, the other blokes would say, aww you must be from Victoria, aye.
Maybe because I could actually speak real good and that
I never here "but" at the end of a sentence in Western Australia.
Oi but nah
yeah the "but" at the end is a QLD thing, we don't do that in Vic, I think sometimes they do it in NSW too - there's a lot of differences from state to state. The term "mate" originates from the early settlement period as you'd spend so long on a ship getting here, everybody was your ship-mate. In Victoria a convenience store is a Milk Bar, in South Oz it's a Deli, but in Vic a Deli is a butcher
I’m an Aussie living in Canada. Most places bag your groceries here. I rarely shop at the ones who don’t. But all sorts of stores are adding self check out terminals which many of us hate and refuse to use.
I always just put the goods straight into the trolley and bag them in the car, it makes life so much easier for the young one behind the till and also helps the line move quicker. They always ask if I want them to bag it but I politely decline and tell why I do so.
Indigenous seasons are way more accurate than the 4 season system. There are 6 seasons and the descriptions of each of them are exact.
I've never heard of Indigenous seasons and I'm a 6th-generation Australian (ancestors originally from Germany way back in the 1830s.) I'd love to know more as I love learning about Indigenous culture. I believe the seasons change on the equinoxes and solstices, rather than the 1st of the month, but with the weather often being so strange, adding a couple extra (or even doubling them) makes a lot of sense.
The country music thing is way more a rural, NSW/Queensland thing too...in Melbourne, you wouldn't come across a festival or a song unless you actively searched out an alternative or community radio show...
Its also surprisingly not common in WA where you think Country music would be more popular. It really is a NSW/QLD thing.
country music is definitely more of a thing in qld / northern nsw. Here in vic it's popular with some regional folk, but it isn't on the radio here
It's massive in the NT as well
Yes, in brazil is extremely common people bagging for you, even is have a profession called packaging, where you have to go to the checkout and pack people's products the people who is beeping do it too
I'm not sure about the season thing. I'm down here in Adelaide and I've decided there are only two seasons here - summer and winter, Autumn and Spring seem to flash by so quickly and before you know it you don't have anything suitable to wear! Even weirder, this weekend we have a warmer than usual Easter after a cooler than usual Christmas...🤔
its Adelaide we have 2 seasons hot or not-hot but blue sky's most days. But seriously yes was a very cool summer it even rained a for a few days weird hey!
Worksafe certification has changed the world..
Labor ❤
The crime reporting on evening news is a last 15 years thing. A South African migrant said to me at a BBQ in the 90s “we had car hijacks and you have a cat stuck up a tree”.
09:40 they're actually taught now to bag properly. Balancing weight, keeping cold stuff together, etc.
We should all go through that course
Great video, Do you need any assistance with editing and crafting eye-catching thumbnails for your future content?
It's the first time I've seen this show and I must commend you in your telling of australia. I moved here in '79 and have never looked back (well maybe for one more white Xmas - maybe.) For those looking to move here each state is slightly different in their terminology of some items but its all good. Welcome 💜
Hiya mate, good morning from rainy Preston, north west United Kingdom.
Me and my family been watching you all quite a lot latley, we seem to be having a pull towards the Aussie lifestyle, mainly for the children. However my job has come up on a list of sponsored jobs etc, soemthing we are considering. That job is being a barber, paying 70k a year, my partner would be within the region of earning minim wage so from what I see around 55k. Would a household income of roughly 125k or so be enough for a family of 5? I mean we are moving for the purpose of nature beaches etc so cheaper days out etc. But from what can read that income may not be enough
Thanks for any help!
Ross, you know we love you and you are ALMOST there. But you have to stop saying new as noo and start saying it as knew! Apart from that, you're good to go, eh
I'm still working on my pronunciation
I've lived in Australia all my life and have never heard New as Noo, I would consider that an Americanism. Maybe it depends on the state.
They do checkout bagging in supermarkets in the Philippines.
The one I shop at even provides boxes for packing serious stuff like cans of paint, boxed and securely tied up, all done with a smile 🙂
One comment asking about how much to have a year
If you grow your own vege and have fruit trees and buy at opt shops there second hand furniture and clothing
And limit on takeaway food with a family of 5
Then the amount you are saying is enough
Plenty as I had 5 kids and we had less than that a year
Plus buy when things on good special at supermarket
Now it’s just me
When you work you set up what’s super and that amount adds to retirement
Thought Queenslanders would use Hey at the end of words - its a nice day hey!
They do. So do Perth/WA folk.
I’ve been offered full sponsorship by a company in wa from Ireland,can’t wait to get out of here.
Good luck
I like the wedge and cream sweet chilli combo here in NZ
Just this week 3 adult people jumped into a hotel pool to save a toddler who had fallen in.
Two of the adults drowned and by some miracle one adult plus the toddler survived. None of them could swim.
Astounds me that they thought they could wing it at the last minute. Back in the 70’s swiming was a primary school requirement.
Everyone in the school could swim. Don’t think they do it anymore.
The rise up at the end of a sentence is predominantly a Queensland thing 🤠
Glad you love Australia. Won’t catch me leaving.
You can see a bit of my place in most of my video intro’s 🤠
Great content! Thank you!
Speaking of foods to have together: You need to try;
a:) Honey and Vegemite.
b:) Peanut butter and Vegemite.
c:) Mayo and BBQ sauce.
d:) Maccas chips dipped in ice cream.
e:) Tim Tam slam (best way to do this is by biting 2 opposite corners of a FROZEN TimTam sucking hot coffee through it then tilt your head back let it fall in your mouth and feel the goodness melt)
Not a fan of sour cream myself, but chili sauce (sweet or hot according to preference) also goes very well with cream cheese.
I say hey at the end of a question,eg "the avos were cheap today hey" or " next doors dog needs a kick up the khyber hey" Queenslanders always said hey, so I think but is a southern import that has taken hold..
I have never ever heard it used, unless it was tagged on the end instead of the front of a sentence. "We could go somewhere else, but" and sometimes a shrug along with it.
After 20 years of living in Australia, I finally achieved my ambition to go back to live in England, only to find that I didn't fit there and was never going to be accepted as anything but Australian, and there were so many things that made life harder in England if you weren't rich, didn't last long, been happy here since... though sometimes I still find I'm not Australian enough
I’m a Kiwi who lives in Oz and I’ve always found the “but’ thing strange. Although I have noticed that Aussies increasingly use ‘yeah nah’, which was something I used to get made fun of for when visiting Oz when I was younger.
‘Me’ instead of ‘my’ is another one too.
I notice you didn’t mention the default non-alcoholic bar drink - glorious lemon-lime-and-bitters. I didn’t realise it was Aussie until my Finnish friend commented on it.
Bitters is alcoholic - just uses a minute amount.
The but at the end is pure Qld. I live in WA and have only ever heard it from the Banana Benders.
Good to be a Queenslander
I've had taps recently break because the plastic handle fatigues and I changed them over for new taps. I've had wall power points where the switch has gone and so I've changed them. Where the wiring goes in it's all colour coded red, black and green and you switch out the power circuit breakers before you start. You may have two or three circuit breakers for wall power points and you just find out which circuit breaker is applicable to the power point you want to change. I've never had a problem maybe because I'm more interested in how to do practical things rather than hair and skin products. If we're not allowed to do these change overs then why does Bunnings sell these things for the ordinary person to buy. In these tight financial times people need to learn how to do things like this themselves and save a lot of money. If I was going to have my whole house rewired then yes I'd call an electrician. All this you can't do this and you can't do that because we say so, well it's my house and I'll decide if I do it myself or get a tradie to do it. They will not decide for me.
"If we're not allowed to do these change overs then why does Bunnings sell these things for the ordinary person to buy."
a: Because it's against the law for an unqualified person to do some of these things, not against the law to sell them.
b: So that they can sell them to the plumbers and electricians.
c: So that they can sell them to home owners to then have the plumbers and electricians install them, instead of being limited to what the plumbers and electricians have available.
Also, they have signs around the plumbing supplies (at least) pointing out that it's illegal to do the work yourself if you're not qualified.
"...well it's my house and I'll decide if I do it myself or get a tradie to do it. They will not decide for me."
I often wish I was allowed to do it myself, but while it's your house, it probably won't always be your house, so if your work is shoddy or unsafe (which it may or may not be), then the next owner of the home might suffer from your shoddy or unsafe work.
@@PJRayment The power points that were renewed were done over ten years ago so I think I would have known by NOW if the workmanship was shoddy and the state will NOT decide for me.
@@AussiePom
"The power points that were renewed were done over ten years ago so I think I would have known by NOW if the workmanship was shoddy..."
What if a change of circumstances meant that you moved house a few months after you did the work? I'm not arguing that your work is shoddy. I'm making the point that the lawmakers choose to consider what might happen if everybody took the same attitude as you, but were not as competent as you say you are (and I'm not suggesting that you're not).
@@PJRaymentChanging a power point is not rocket science for you have three colour coded wires which are positive negative and earth which is red, green and black. There is a ring or colour where every wire has to go into on the rear of the power point and then using a small screwdriver you screw the brass screw which holds the wire in place. Now if you've screwed the wrong wire into the wrong hole then when you turn the circuit breaker in the fuse box back to "on" it will immediately switch to off. So that's how you know you've stuffed up. Most houses have more than one circuit for power points and the circuit breakers are labeled "power 1 power 2 etc and you need to find which circuit breaker is for the power point you want to change. It's the same for light switches look for the 'lights" circuit breaker and turn it off if you want to change a light switch. So when you go to turn lights on they won't turn on none of them. If you're wanting a new outside power point installed or an inside one or a complete rewire of the house then YES call a licenced electrician to do the work.
@@AussiePom
"Changing a power point is not rocket science..."
I didn't say it was, but still many people don't know how to do it properly, or can't. Your comment doesn't really address my point.
And as you would realise, it's not just about knowing the colours, etc. It's also how well you connect the wires. A poorly-connected wire might cause a spark that could start a fire, for example. Attaching an earth wire to something that is not earthed could be fatal. There _are_ things that can go wrong, and that's what the legislators are concerned about. I'm not trying to justify the law, beyond pointing out that it at least has some basis. And remember that your question that I was answering was about why Bunnings sell the components if we're not allowed to do the work ourselves.
I went to London 10 years ago and at the local shopping center the checkout chick informed me at 9pm that I was the first person that said hello to her!
I have lived in Brisbane nearly all my life and do not ever remember someone ending a sentence with but. I have lived in 5 different areas, both northside and southside. Also, I taught in 7 different schools in very different areas.
Ive been in Oz 30 years & still get confused about what season/month it is when I stop to think about...thats weird!
Wedges, sour cream & chilli sauce - yummo. A pint of Vegemite would be poured down the 'dunny' 😂
I take my time in Aldi. Not that I go there very often, no one is rushing me!
Instead of "but" try "Yeah, nah"
ETA @4:40 you actually use that one, very naturally. So gud onya!
I don't even remember learning how to swim. My Dad ran a public pool and I was always in the pools at 3 yrs of age.
I never hear but at the end of sentence when I lived in Sydney or Act before but that's a funny video Ross
Bagging the groceries? These days, it only happens in smaller independent grocery companies like IGA. Definitely not the bigger companies. It gets really cold in Canberra!! Sometimes it snows. And today we are in Autumn, and it was 32 degrees celsius!! Huh!!
Nope. Coles and Woolies still do it.
No coles or woollies have bagged groceries since the eighties. When I went on holidays to the Gold Coast and Brisbane in the eighties, they didn't either. Has that changed?
Must be a Canberra thing?
Coles and Woolies do it, Aldi does not. Some staff at Woolies will even put the bags in your trolley for you.
@@antheabrouwer3258 Where are you from ? Coles and Woolies have never stopped bagging your stuff in the Newcastle area You must be from stuckupsville (Melbourne Rofl)
This is so hilarious, but.
All the best from the West.
I actually learnt to swim at the army pool in Aldershot and the Lido also in Aldershot. Guess where I lived, Aldershot, no. Farnborough.
😊 2:43 in North Queensland “yer but what ay “ at the the end of a sentence or it’s little brother “yer but” 2:43
I myself am an Australian citizen living in Australia and did not realise any of this was different in other countries. How bad is coffee in other countries? I'm so curious now!
Like the way you got the “yea nah “ into video
I did noticed you've got the yeah nuh down pat, don't worry about the but, it is something I only used in my teens and then grew out of it and I'm from Melbourne.
Ross, I’m not into Country music, but...
I think you need to clarify that it is Australian Country music, not a copy of US Country music, people from O/S think that we just copy the Yanks, we don’t.
There is a difference, cheers,
No, it's the same whining twang and with a fake US accent
The ‘but’ thing is usually placed there when the speaker realises they left it from the beginning of what they said, similar to ‘still’. Ie “it was raining (but should be here) we had a great time BUT” From there ‘but’ also began to take the place of ‘though’ at the end of sentences. 😅
The ‘but’ on the end of the sentence is something that has been introduced into Australia. So is the rising voice at the end of a sentence. I am 82 years old and was taught a sentence ends with a downward emphasis at the end UNLESS it is a question, when your intonation then rises. Also, but was never added to a sentence - it didn’t appear till I was well into my 40s. Actually I don’t know anyone now who does that. If I do come across it, it now longer surprises me as it did the first time I heard it, but it is NOT all that common (not in South Australia where I lived for the first 56 years of my life, nor Broken Hill (next 22 years) or here in Victoria. Unfortunately the use of correct grammar has declined markedly over the years.
The over the top rising inflection grates on me at times.
I feel like it was an occasional thing when I was growing up but now a lot of people seem to do it with every sentence.
Interestingly, quite a lot of people from the United States also have this rising inflection.
Another annoying one is the way gen z kids on tik tok exaggerate or say "no" as "naurrr". They do it because it gets them a lot more likes and engagement by people overseas who think it's hilarious. Then they think that everyone speaks like that.
I've never said no that way and it definitely was NOT a thing until a few years ago. Most Aussies usually say no and know - essentially the same way.
What is correct Grammer but?
Seriously, every country speaks differently, we're a patchwork of different aboriginal languages, Asian, European, English.
It would be boring if we spoke like the English, oh, and I live in Adelaide.
Also, I hear terrible English coming out of England, some of them have lost the ability to use the letters Th, that's now an F 😂
@@Teagirl009LOL, you should have grown up with me in the suburbs of Darwin, your head would explode, almost another language 😂
I’ve never heard of ‘But’ used where I live, but I guess it’s our version of the English ‘Innit’….?
You have really nailed the yeah nah well done. 🤣🤣🤣
Love your post Ross.The reporting of crime and acting on crime in Australia is so much better than here in the UK, were they don't do anything about it or turn up about an hour after the crime. As for having the word but at the end of a sentence that doesn't make sense to me or sound gramatically right.That is great that they pack your groceries in the smaller supermarkets,they don't do that here in the UK. Thanks for posting from Hazel in the UK.
Aldi here are around a quarter of the size of Coles and Woolworths stores.
They do it at the major supermarkets, too.
But.... Is a qld thing mostly. You find it occasionally elsewhere but each state has their own quirks. In Adelaide the most common is "heaps'. Where elsewhere you might say I like that alot an Adeladian will likely say I like that heaps.
That "but" thing is really weird. Definitely bogan. That rising inflection is called the Australian inflection. I've read that it came about through that dreadful TV show Neighbours.
Wait, checkout operators in other countries don't bag your groceries?
Ay & But at the end of a sentence seem to be more a Queensland thing. You dont hear it in Tasmania, or much of it in other places I've lived like Victoria & NSW. Others may hear it more I guess.
Born and bred Aussie and have never heard the but at the end of sentence. I guess it's likely a locational thing.
Same with country music - maybe where you are, but not a common thing where I am (and I work at a number of varied music festivals).
In the U.S., unless you're using the self checkout, the checker always bags your groceries and there is no extra charge for the bags. The plastic bags they use now are so flimsy I don't see how they would dare charge you.
you can still get plastic bags? only paper here or reusable carry bags, only the fish and chip guys and butcher's still give out plastic bags now I need to buy rubbishbin liners.
I don't think the but thing is uniquely Qld because my mum faced the same confusion when she immigrated to Sydney in 1969. She'd keep asking, "But what?". I was banned from using but at the end of a sentence at home because it would drive her crazy.
I think the but is a QLD thing. I’d also mention that it’s also the only place I’ve heard uptalk (the rising inflection at the end of a sentence) in the wild (in non-stressed individuals). I suspect it seems common because a lot of our actors/tv presenters are Queenslanders.
I was born in Australia and I’ve lived in two different states. I am yet to come across the, “but”, at the end of sentences! So that’s a completely new one for me!
Must just be the minority
@@ThatJohnstonLife maybe just QLD thing!
Nobody seems to mention that the Sun goes right-to-left in Australia but the wrong way in the UK or Europe ;P Everyone bangs on about the way the water swirls in the sink but happy that their sun goes the wrong way across the sky!
Still goes east to west
I don’t necessarily want checkout staff to bag my groceries but it would be nice to actually be served by them, rather than have them standing waiting for the self checkout to go (inevitably) go wrong!
One day it will all be self checkout
Bagging groceries, no thank you. I take great pleasure to place product on the conveyor belt in the way I want it processed. Frozen and fridge things together, then veggies and fruit, followed by pantry things, etc. what happens if gets bagged according to size 🙄 with soft fruit at the bottom. I'd much prefer a packing bench where I can pack myself.
@@ThatJohnstonLife Not if we refuse to use them.
Move to Melbourne if you want UK weather. You can have four seasons in one day.
“But” at the end of the sentence seems to be a Queensland thing. I have a number of mates from QLD and it’s only them that stick “but” on the end of the sentence. I’m from Victoria and it’s definitely not a thing here really. Craig
It's my personal hypothesis that the rising inflection IS a sort of question. It's sort of a preliminary asking of "do you know what I mean?" without actually asking it. That's my theory and I'm sticking to it, otherwise there's no actual reason and it's just annoying.
Sydney here and "but" is very common with my in-law family. My theory is that it's used like "though". Are you going to be there but? Are you going to be there though? I didn't like the food but. I didn't like the food though.
Rosco ol mate the But term is from your lingo Little Brittan character .yeah but-no but and you guys always ad yeah at the end..jamie oliver spechly lol
Born and bred in Brisbane and I’ve never heard or used but at the end of a sentence except for a kid at High School answering a teacher by saying but full stop.
That is an excellent point u make about certain crime making the news. It's not just a national issue though but generational. I'm old enough to remember much of the crime which is broadcast on the news today would never have made the news in past decades even though it definitely did occur and probably was more common.
the swimming lessons is a way to combat the number of child drownings - being such a beach pool n spa culture with dams being a regular feature in the country - it was and still is too high - it was about 33% last year over 100 children lost - so the earlier kids are taught to float water confidence the better -
I'm Welsh and some areas end a sentence with but here too, but calling you it? My 5 year old has picked it up, not sure where from because this area doesn't seem to lol
Ha ha. Multicultural
I coped with UK coffee so badly on my first visit, I forgoed it altogether 2nd time in favour of caffeine tablets. I don’t know what that says about me
My children started swimming lessons at around 9months.
I am in Perth and I have never heard anyone end a sentence with 'but'.
Adding 'but' to the end if a sentence is essentially exchanging it for the word 'instead'. I didnt realise it wasn't used in such a way elsewhere, but its common around Aus, not just Queensland.
Is it? Never hear it in 60 years of my being.
I definitely used to do it growing up in the Northern Territory
"But" at the end of the sentence serves the same purpose as it would at the start - hard to understand for a Pom. I notice you've started saying "yeah/nah" but...
A trailing 'but' must be a Queensland thing. Don't hear it here in SA, but. 😁
We say "but" at the end of a sentence where you would normally say "though". "you could have gone that way though" = "you could have gone that way but"........ but you're right, the more yobbo you are, the more common this type of word use it.
I’ve lived in the UK for four years and still can’t do a satisfying “alright?” So you’re doing better than me