The 3 Australian Accents: General, Cultivated & Broad | Australian Pronunciation

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  • Опубликовано: 26 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 3,8 тыс.

  • @nankid.7154
    @nankid.7154 5 лет назад +1637

    For all u guys saying his hair is on the wrong end, it's not, just down under

  • @CallistoTheWarriorQueen
    @CallistoTheWarriorQueen 6 лет назад +3549

    I find a lot of us speak all 3- Cultivated at work, General in public and Broad with our friends whilst drinking ;)

    • @Jimbo.05
      @Jimbo.05 6 лет назад +102

      AmuTohru agree Amu! I find even the more cultured people in Australia start talking like bogans with a few ales under the belt.....let their guards down. Hahaha!!

    • @misssass7886
      @misssass7886 6 лет назад +57

      Agreed. I get teased particularly at work for having my natural accent very much akin to Cate Blanchetts and often times get mistaken for my pronunciation for some as being British, American or Canadian for the emphasis I put on certain vowels depending on the word as I have a real love for expression through words and don't like them being butchered. However, that being said, if I drink or am surrounded in a relaxed environment by persons speaking with a broad accent, I find I can slip into more of a general accent but with a few words here and there staying from my normal accent which is just bizarre. Also found when I travelled to America I would subconsciously exaggerate my accent to be a lot stronger than it actually is which, though I love and have pride in my country, was a little embarrassing because I fully did not mean to but literally couldn't help it. Someone would start talking to me and suddenly any word ending in "ter" was "tah" instead and I'd use lazy, shorthand versions of things like "servo" and "maccas". My friend (also Australian) would do it too and than we'd get back to our hotel room and be speaking completely normally. Very strange.

    • @dontbefatuousjeffrey2494
      @dontbefatuousjeffrey2494 6 лет назад +22

      +Miss Sass I completely agree with everything you say, except I sound more posh the more I drink! (I think it's an attempt to overcompensate for slurring, lol) However I do get mistaken for English quite frequently when sober as well... my late Mum had picked up quite the RP pronunciation when living in the UK in the late sixties and that's what I heard growing up. I definitely over-do the Strine when talking to my cousins in the US though!

    • @dontbefatuousjeffrey2494
      @dontbefatuousjeffrey2494 6 лет назад +10

      +Team Nattie you're judging whether someone is Australian by an online handle and despite their country of birth?

    • @eddievan1755
      @eddievan1755 6 лет назад +13

      Miss Sass that's funny. As a southerner from the U.S. i also subconsciously do the same thing. I try to turn my accent on or off based on who I'm around.

  • @TheEverfever
    @TheEverfever 3 года назад +260

    My first English teachers were Aussies and they taught us the "posh accent". I was really shocked when our headmaster displayed his skills in the Broad accent.

    • @Starvaze
      @Starvaze 2 года назад +7

      Oh yeah huh.
      How did dat go mate?

    • @x0phia-c5w
      @x0phia-c5w 4 месяца назад

      Naur wayyy!!😂

  • @spectospartan
    @spectospartan 6 лет назад +5410

    His hair is on the wrong end of his head.

  • @ka1tIyn
    @ka1tIyn 5 лет назад +10265

    I’m Australian. Why am I watching this

    • @supertiana1000
      @supertiana1000 5 лет назад +58

      Same haha

    • @belindaweber7999
      @belindaweber7999 5 лет назад +61

      Because it's funny! And, in my case at least, Hugh Jackman

    • @robertalexander5422
      @robertalexander5422 5 лет назад +17

      I came here from "Squirrels and Electricity"

    • @TheHolyEclipse
      @TheHolyEclipse 5 лет назад +45

      I just wanted to educate my American friends who thought they knew the difference between an Australian accent and a New Zealand accent.

    • @dabunnybadass
      @dabunnybadass 5 лет назад +4

      Trying to get 6969 subscribers with no videos because being a ozzy and watching this stereotypical carp and imagiing people who believeing all australians sound like this

  • @phrayzar
    @phrayzar Год назад +186

    The Aussie accent has also changed quite a bit in the last 40 years. If you see footage from back in the 60's and 70's, the accent was very strong compared to now. Even in "Dogs In Space" the '86' film set in Melbourne, the accents are bizarrely strong. We seem to be toning down our accents for some reason.

    • @Meags90
      @Meags90 Год назад +67

      Probably a good bit to do with how much we see/hear from other countries... we have so much more foreign media with streaming and the internet, we're more familiar with American/British shows/movies than Australian.

    • @lachlanwelsh5880
      @lachlanwelsh5880 Год назад +5

      Amazing movie and soundtrack! Great work calling it out!
      “Ballaraaaaaat”

    • @Robyn-by6qt
      @Robyn-by6qt Год назад +7

      Privately educated people were taught to speak like BBC newsreaders , or the aristocracy. The other flipside being the broad Aussie 'how ya goin' mate' style of speak.

    • @kangaroogroundboy
      @kangaroogroundboy Год назад +3

      I had a mate(yeah I know, hard to believe) and she kept rolling me I should meet Ellen and we'd really get in? So one day we meet and he speaks his name Alan....though that was Melbourne in the seventies. PS don't forget if you went to Queensland back then you had to use 'but' a lot.
      Nowadays people codeswitch, my older son lived in Kyneton and he speaks proper Strane, my pommie missus thinks he's pretending😂

    • @kangaroogroundboy
      @kangaroogroundboy Год назад

      Telling me...not rolling, predictive text

  • @sparksfly5877
    @sparksfly5877 5 лет назад +2875

    I have a condition where I unconsciously adopt other people’s accents. I’m Australian, so I watch this to reset my voice. Thank you.

    • @cheekybastard1018
      @cheekybastard1018 3 года назад +125

      You are lucky. That is a talent.

    • @animdoodle
      @animdoodle 3 года назад +42

      Hey same tho! But for me, all I have to do is repeat them and then boom! It sounds very freakin thick XD

    • @MonkeyDLuffy-rr3wl
      @MonkeyDLuffy-rr3wl 3 года назад +61

      Same. In English, I can do it & in my original language (Hungarian) I speak like the people speak to me (we have different ways of speaking based on regions), however, when I'm drunk, apperantely, I speak with a strong Russian accent, even though, I can't speak Russian properly, despite learning it for 4 years😪

    • @fauxfuchsiadarling
      @fauxfuchsiadarling 3 года назад +24

      I do this as well! Depends where I am and who I'm with. I think a lot of Aussies do this.

    • @Iri77749
      @Iri77749 3 года назад +3

      Same habit

  • @TonkaGoldman-xd5iw
    @TonkaGoldman-xd5iw 6 лет назад +563

    General = middle class. New money. The majority.
    Cultivated = old money/ father and mother likely both drove imported cars. Private school. Formidable in every way.
    Broad = working class. Proletariat. The people most effected by no tariffs on chinese imports.
    Melbourne: what school you went to.
    Sydney: what family you come from.
    Brisbane: What brand of beer you drink.

    • @homieog11
      @homieog11 5 лет назад +14

      Perth weres the gear bruh

    • @goodshipkaraboudjan
      @goodshipkaraboudjan 5 лет назад +6

      Brisbane there is only one local beer. "What school did you go to?" gets asked a lot.

    • @emsaun
      @emsaun 4 года назад +2

      Formidable..

    • @Tigerland1962
      @Tigerland1962 4 года назад +2

      There are know working class in Australia just spoilt suburban kids who put on a broad accent when drunk, ARSEHOLES...

    • @Kurio71
      @Kurio71 4 года назад +7

      Pretty good. My dad has a real broad Aussie accent. My foreign friends can't understand a word his says. My mum's is cultivated as her mother an an English English teacher.

  • @issygeorge07
    @issygeorge07 Год назад +55

    as a teenage aussie living on the sunny coast i have to admit even sometime i get blown away by how cultured someone's accent is 😭 i will even say, "that is the most aussie accent i have ever heard."

    • @missyb1020
      @missyb1020 8 месяцев назад

      Didn't know Kate Blanchet or Eric Bana is Australian ❤ the cultivated accent sounds English. I love the stronger accents but not so strong that I can't understand it. Especially if they speak fast with a lot of slang. I love the way they say no.... I've tried but I just can't figure it out 😂

    • @lewisfrench7467
      @lewisfrench7467 4 месяца назад

      Yepppp

  • @BellefromOz
    @BellefromOz 3 года назад +1927

    Every Aussie gets the broad accent when they're at the "cut it out" stage of mad.

    • @B_27
      @B_27 3 года назад +67

      I can confirm this is correct 😂

    • @dandefish
      @dandefish 3 года назад +27

      I get a more ‘stereotypical British’ accent lol

    • @camblokland
      @camblokland 3 года назад +4

      OMG legit

    • @zhukie
      @zhukie 3 года назад +7

      @@dandefish Ha me too! Only just realised that lol

    • @thisisbillgates
      @thisisbillgates 3 года назад +2

      Lmao thinking of it now I think you're right

  • @williamjackson7061
    @williamjackson7061 6 лет назад +451

    As an American, I find the Australian accent sounds fun loving and a little tongue-in-cheek. I like it a lot. Thanks for explaining the cultured variant. I was always confused by Ms Fisher and Dr Blake in their respective TV shows. To me they sounded British (but not quite). This gives me a greater appreciation for the richness of Australian culture.

    • @thusspakevespasian5587
      @thusspakevespasian5587 6 лет назад +12

      William Jackson, there was a huge shift in Australian accents after the wars, to the point where they're basically unrecognisable as Australian anymore

    • @williamjackson7061
      @williamjackson7061 6 лет назад +13

      Thus Spake Vespasian : I find it interesting that you say that. I have observed that also in the USA. It seems that regional dialects and accents are becoming less noticeable here. And more people are speaking like midwest radio announcers rather than with a traditional regional accent. Also a number of expressions that I have always associated with either British or Australian are no longer uncommon here. For example, when I first heard the expression “no worries“, it was from an Australian movie. Now, my son and his friends use the expression all the time. It has been my personal observation that our common English language is becoming more globalized. I would love to see a serious scientific study on the matter.

    • @r.fairlie7186
      @r.fairlie7186 6 лет назад +8

      William Jackson - I’m interested in language in the same way as you’ve described. I’m reminded of an old comedy line that will be a good way for you to sound Australian. Just quickly say out loud “Emma Chisett” - a girl’s name. Once you’ve done so, you’ll realise you’ve actually said “How much is it” in an Australian accent!

    • @NoirL.A.
      @NoirL.A. 6 лет назад +13

      @@williamjackson7061 american regional accents are disappearing not only because of the internet and the media but also because per capita americans move more than any other nationality and they tend to also move very far distances. in the states it's not at all unusual to meet people who have clocked 5,000 miles throughout their lives in the process of changing residences.

    • @williamjackson7061
      @williamjackson7061 6 лет назад +1

      MACABRE L.A. Good point. It is likely a major contributing factor.

  • @Islas_Canarias
    @Islas_Canarias Год назад +87

    I'm homeschooling our 15 year old son. This entire past term we spent history studying only Australia. He has produced a final document that is 60 pages long. One topic we covered was Australian accents. This was one of the videos I used to teach him our 3 main accents. Thanks heaps!

    • @vulturedrawz
      @vulturedrawz Год назад +1

      That’s so cool! Has he learnt abt the gold rush? Very interesting time (and also, the stolen generation. Something every young aussie had to learn abt in primary, if you haven’t watched it I recommend watching the movie ‘rabbit proof fence’ it’s all about the stolen generation)

    • @tomelifeisjustonebig
      @tomelifeisjustonebig 4 месяца назад

      Why are you homeschooling him? That’s unaustralian.

  • @triforceofstupidity131
    @triforceofstupidity131 3 года назад +283

    As an Australian, I can confirm while most Australians have a general accent pretty much everyone can also use a broad accent, which for me accidentally slips out every now and then

    • @SpiritualAmethyst
      @SpiritualAmethyst Год назад +7

      Usually whilst road raging 😂😂

    • @zzodysseuszz
      @zzodysseuszz 11 месяцев назад +4

      Yeah we subconsciously suppress it until we’re angry, distracted, concentrating or just generally tired or something.

    • @andy2906
      @andy2906 10 месяцев назад +4

      You missed the Dandenong hogan shaza centrelink accent

    • @yannick245
      @yannick245 6 месяцев назад +1

      If people get upset/angry, they slip into a "raw version" of their language in basically everywhere.
      I think it has to do with the fact that "lower class" versions and regional dialects often contain more slurs and coarse/rough words. Which are usually avoided at general and "posh" styles of a language.
      What I always think amazing, is that the English of White Americans differ so less from each other. Except for Southerners.
      People from the East Coast (accents like that of NY/NJ are dying out), to the West Coast all kinda sound very similar. A person from Milwaukee sounds just like a person from Las Vegas.
      While for example in the UK, you'll sometimes get a different accent if you just go from one village to another.
      The results of colonialism in America is exceptional anyway. At the whole Americas, they only speak three languages. With English in the North and Spanish and Portuguese in Central and South America.
      HUNDREDS of languages died out and today you'll get around at the "new world" by just learning/knowing those three languages.
      Here in Europe, you can have a different language every couple hundred miles. Going from Poland, through Russia (Oblast Kaliningrad), Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia.
      It's the same thing in some Asian regions. But I think that only in sub-Saharan Africa and Europe do you have so many different languages on such a small territory/languages per km²/square miles.
      Well, that's it with my half-novel...

    • @thefilmrookie3099
      @thefilmrookie3099 6 месяцев назад

      @@andy2906if you have that accent you’ve inhaled petrol once in your life

  • @DeseoHair
    @DeseoHair 6 лет назад +954

    English is my second language (living in England for a third of my life) but I’m quite good at spotting accents! However, the posh Australian tricks me into thinking it’s a British accent some times! (Kate Blanchet is a great example). Cool vid! Thank u!

    • @HarekaTysiri
      @HarekaTysiri 4 года назад +17

      me too, i wonder why it's easier for second speakers to identify accents

    • @KaceyRepublic
      @KaceyRepublic 3 года назад +15

      @@marinavidenovic4343 Plenty of people speak like that, like 80% of grammar school kids. Are you from the country? no one speaks like that in the country but I run into it fairly often in Melbourne.

    • @aybrun9930
      @aybrun9930 3 года назад +10

      ​@@marinavidenovic4343 yeah its rich people where the accent comes more from the old british ruling class

    • @KaceyRepublic
      @KaceyRepublic 3 года назад +5

      @@marinavidenovic4343 I just think of it as as the Toorak accent. Malcolm Fraser is probably the best example here(which figures as he's from Toorak).

    • @KaceyRepublic
      @KaceyRepublic 3 года назад

      @@marinavidenovic4343 I agree?

  • @kennethprocak5176
    @kennethprocak5176 Год назад +30

    I have twin girls in their 30s, one had pronunciation issues when very young, and had speech therapist help for two years. She ended up with a posh accent, it is a very mechanical, thought through word delivery. Everyone else in the household has a broad accent. .

  • @Alsayid
    @Alsayid 6 лет назад +2022

    So in other words, the "broad Australian" accent is the one we Americans have come to love and feel bummed out about when we meet Aussies and don't usually hear it. Why can't every Aussie sound like Paul Hogan or Steve Erwin? :-)

    • @TonkaGoldman-xd5iw
      @TonkaGoldman-xd5iw 6 лет назад +92

      Are you sure you're not mistaking sheep shaggers for Ozzies...?

    • @ourjourneytomentalstabilit4188
      @ourjourneytomentalstabilit4188 6 лет назад +24

      Al Sayid Hahahaha no ewwww

    • @iajanus
      @iajanus 6 лет назад +232

      Because we confine those who have the Broad accents into specific areas for their and our safety.

    • @anime931aj
      @anime931aj 6 лет назад +55

      I loovveee the "broad Austalian" accent! Lol. It just sounds so cool to me.

    • @iajanus
      @iajanus 6 лет назад +57

      XxAkilaxX the general hatred for it here primarily comes about from the strong correlation between people having one and also being massive racist idiots.

  • @jumjum114
    @jumjum114 6 лет назад +279

    oh my god you need to cover asian australian accent; I went to an all boy's catholic school taken over by 80% asians - somehow as a Chinese person I actually grew to a cultivated accent while my vietnamese friend ended up with a broad australian accent LOL

    • @BrandonBaunach
      @BrandonBaunach 5 лет назад +2

      sto pet the Vietnamese have that rough quality about then

    • @jonathanaldecoa1099
      @jonathanaldecoa1099 4 года назад +1

      sto pet that’s very interesting!

    • @sharkk4281
      @sharkk4281 2 года назад +5

      my friends who are part filipino have american accents but theyre born and raised australians LOL one of them even does american english rather australian english

    • @sharkk4281
      @sharkk4281 2 года назад +1

      but other part filipino friend also has a mixed btw cultivated / general accent

    • @drbruh3567
      @drbruh3567 2 года назад

      @@sharkk4281
      Something similar here. I have 2 friends with a American accent, a acquaintance who also has a American accent, and another friend who has a STRONG British accent. All of them were born and raised in Australia, went to Australian schools, watched Australian TV, and had Aussie friends. I feel so sorry for them cause they’re gonna be bombarded with ‘Where are you from?’ for the rest of their lives.

  • @melobee9961
    @melobee9961 Год назад +78

    I’m Aussie my accent is a mix between general and broad. I grew up in a rural area but it wasn’t too far inland so I sustained a general accent too.
    My accent flips between the two depending on my emotions and who I’m talking to. If I’m in a casual setting I go bogan but if I’m in a professional setting my accent flips to general. It also flips when I’m angry I go full bogan when I’m angry.

    • @dinglebord
      @dinglebord Год назад

      Yeah, same, or all of our brains are just wired to be like that

    • @amayz111
      @amayz111 11 месяцев назад

      AHHHHHH, its always changing like that depending on the atmosphere. I change my replies to customers at work depending on how they sound and move. I always thought it was like a blending in thing my brain subconciously does when I fell insecure or unsure. I honestly think its kind of cool :)

    • @elysian7510
      @elysian7510 3 месяца назад

      Yeah same, I grew up and have lived my whole life in a major city, but both my parents are from very rural country towns, (and all my extended family still lives out there).
      I also grew up in a majority Mediterranean immigrant area, with a lot of 2nd and 3rd generation immigrants, so my accent got very influenced by them.
      It’s made my accent a weird mix of bogan/broad, general, and Mediterranean immigrant accents, which gets me asked a lot of questions from tourists or people from posher areas of the city as to where I’m from. Most of the time they do not believe I’ve lived here my whole life..

  • @ffsgfsvsvs2
    @ffsgfsvsvs2 5 лет назад +855

    Everyone just thinks the Aussie accent is just
    *G'daye Mayte! Crawykee!*

    • @powderedtoastfacekillah734
      @powderedtoastfacekillah734 4 года назад +53

      Most people are disappointed if an Aussie speaks and the accent isn’t all
      *G’daye Mayte! Crawykee!*

    • @ffsgfsvsvs2
      @ffsgfsvsvs2 4 года назад +42

      PowdaToastFace Killah exactly and it’s like “oh you can speak more then 3 words? You are clearly not Australian!”

    • @ruthrichardson9717
      @ruthrichardson9717 4 года назад +14

      YOU'RE TELLING ME IT'S NOT??! 🤣

    • @kidsauce1172
      @kidsauce1172 4 года назад +4

      Oi nah mate

    • @triarb5790
      @triarb5790 3 года назад +4

      @@ruthrichardson9717 yeah nah

  • @NicoleTunis
    @NicoleTunis 6 лет назад +750

    Cate Blanchett and Geoffrey Rush have highly trained 'theatre' accents. I'm a born and bred Adelaidean and apparently we always sound posh to people from the Eastern states :-)

    • @ColleenSymons
      @ColleenSymons 6 лет назад +41

      Apparently so, when I lived in Melbourne I was actually mistaken for a Brit a few times! haha

    • @ColleenSymons
      @ColleenSymons 6 лет назад +17

      Papus Magnus Yeah, we understand how society works. Maybe make your Adelaide specific essay clear, instead of concluding with how what the body of what you said relates to all cities. You ended up going on an unrelated tangent. What we were talking about is how people from Adelaide tend to be labelled with a 'posh' accent. I am from a very low socioeconomic area in Adelaide and still maintain a distinct accent - not because I'm from a higher social class, but because I'm just from Adelaide. I'm assuming that you are labelling our accents as region specific within Adelaide, but that is obviously true for everywhere. Adelaide on a whole retains a more crisp accent, and we don't all claim to be an 'Adelaide elite'.

    • @ColleenSymons
      @ColleenSymons 6 лет назад +5

      Papus Magnus That's obvious though. What I was actually talking about was how other people observe our accent as 'posh'. Please refer to my first comment, and, calm down. The only person here pretending to be a linguist expert is you.

    • @ColleenSymons
      @ColleenSymons 6 лет назад +6

      Papus Magnus I didn't realise they had a report option for 'discussion/disagreement'. Either way before I read that you reported me, sigh, I actually agree with you. However, you did come off with an arrogant and presumptuous tone, and assumed that we/I knew nothing of how society hierarchy works. Bare that in mind, and don't bother reporting people for a discussion unless they're being abusive. Report bullies, not people who challenge your motive or assumptions.

    • @NicoleTunis
      @NicoleTunis 6 лет назад +9

      Sorry Papus Magnus, but I too come from a working class background of mixed heritage including Greek. I regularly get paid out by Eastern staters for my 'posh' way of talking. This video and my comment were meant for a bit of fun and your pompousness has definitely taken the fun out of it.

  • @thatladydriver
    @thatladydriver Год назад +30

    Was in Perth for a year and a half, and I super fell in love with the Aussie accent(s). One thing I noticed, the Aussie accent sounds lively, casual and friendly... one thing that has stuck to me til today and has had a profound influence on me and how I like to try and speak English myself ❤

  • @tmalone2530
    @tmalone2530 6 лет назад +160

    Never understood a word Steve Irwin said growing up, but loved every minute of his TV appearances in the 90's

    • @bradmasters8491
      @bradmasters8491 5 лет назад +2

      Hehehe well, his intention was the best language

    • @midnighttrain7844
      @midnighttrain7844 3 года назад

      hhhhh same

    • @smeva26
      @smeva26 3 года назад

      fun fact: Crickey was derived from the word jesus christ lol

    • @juliecook6057
      @juliecook6057 3 года назад +1

      He IS actually speaking English !! 🙄

  • @vivienleigh4640
    @vivienleigh4640 5 лет назад +231

    Kylie Minogue once tried to explain how to get an Australian accent "Imagine that you're smiling and squinting towards the sun while talking". (Not an exact quote but something to that effect)

    • @monkeysbum999
      @monkeysbum999 3 года назад +4

      brilliant

    • @thomasroy8357
      @thomasroy8357 3 года назад

      Good evening 🌆 my precious beautiful 🤍🍷

    • @joyjoyjoyful
      @joyjoyjoyful 2 года назад +2

      That’s hilarious

    • @El-Rollio
      @El-Rollio 3 месяца назад

      And she hardly sounds Australian herself anymore… weird hybrid Aussie British. I actually really like it.

  • @SirMonkRG
    @SirMonkRG 2 года назад +58

    Love this kind of videos. As a Hispanic, I found quite interesting how English intonation (or accent) varies based on geography. I’ve always struggle to understand British accents, especially those from Ireland but with Aussie accent I can deal 99% of times. Don’t get me wrong, with the Broad I do need subtitles on :( hopefully I can mastered before visiting Australia. Much love from Puerto Rico to you all guys🇵🇷

    • @dangercat9188
      @dangercat9188 Год назад

      Weeeeppppaaaaa! Come here to the states 😢

    • @lakeline6317
      @lakeline6317 11 месяцев назад

      Is just a matter of listening. When I moved from South America to Australia back in 2005, I could barely understand the Australian Board accent. Now is perfectly normal for me. Your hearing is like a muscle.

  • @galaxydreaming
    @galaxydreaming 5 лет назад +679

    What about the honey badger? Often he sounds a bit “outbacky” 🤔

    • @galaxydreaming
      @galaxydreaming 5 лет назад +10

      Nick Cummins - the batchelor 😂

    • @Heymrk
      @Heymrk 4 года назад +5

      He don't care.

    • @jadedios
      @jadedios 4 года назад +39

      Daniel Ricciardo?

    • @mr-fishman2249
      @mr-fishman2249 4 года назад +10

      Hony badga

    • @Chans_Toast
      @Chans_Toast 4 года назад +3

      Hmm... Idk... Isn't the Broad accent mainly the one heard around the outback? I'm not Australian but I have played a game that takes place in Australia (that is surprisingly when looked up, very geographically and culturally correct)and in the Outbacks I often heard a very broad accent.... But idk... I'm just an American wishing I was Australian lol...

  • @goldminer754
    @goldminer754 5 лет назад +170

    As a German native it is so strange discovering how my personal English has evolved from so many different accents and dialects due to teachers from several countries and youtubers from the whole of the English diaspora.

    • @Swedishoutlaw
      @Swedishoutlaw Год назад

      Same

    • @vulturedrawz
      @vulturedrawz Год назад +3

      That’s pretty interesting! I remember when I was little I had a teacher from Russia and for about 3 years I pronounced some words with a Russian accent till I finally stopped lol.

    • @kangaroogroundboy
      @kangaroogroundboy 11 месяцев назад +3

      I was born in Germany, came to the UK as a child..
      got called a Nazi, went to Oz, got called a Pom.
      Years later went back to the UK for work and was asked if I'd be going home for Christmas.
      Recently learnt Italian and in Italy was asked if I was German. Back to square one 😂

  • @AJGAB
    @AJGAB 2 года назад +30

    Technically, there are more than 3 Aussie accents. Queensland sounds different to other states (broader), South Australia sounds different to other states (more cultivated), even NSW and Victoria have differences too, with different pronunciations on certain words, and every state varies when it comes to city, urban and bush.

    • @aussiesheila9495
      @aussiesheila9495 Год назад +1

      I'm from Victoria , and myself and my family members , well most have a broad accent , not as broad, as country , though, in some cases it's different to a digree just from suburb to suburb, and I lived in Qld many years ago , and most have what I call a typical Aus accent ,

  • @2eleven48
    @2eleven48 5 лет назад +624

    I'm sorry, but any Australian accent, but especially when is broad, makes me laugh uncontrollably, especially when sentences are raised as if asking a question. But it's not a nasty laugh, it's full of charmed delight.

    • @midnighttrain7844
      @midnighttrain7844 3 года назад +6

      what's broad mean? what's the difference between Broad and bogan?

    • @greghenderson6782
      @greghenderson6782 3 года назад +9

      @@midnighttrain7844 being nice or nasty.

    • @B_27
      @B_27 3 года назад +4

      @@midnighttrain7844 Just different words for the same thing.

    • @smeva26
      @smeva26 3 года назад +1

      @@midnighttrain7844 yeah ive never heard it descibed as broad before - its just bogan

    • @vikkimcdonald7980
      @vikkimcdonald7980 3 года назад

      @@midnighttrain7844 always known it as broad or ocker, but bogan came in later

  • @houselemuellan8756
    @houselemuellan8756 4 года назад +741

    The Australian accent sounds like a hybrid of British, Scottish, and Texan.

    • @datwistyman
      @datwistyman 4 года назад +29

      It depends on who you are talking with.
      For the most part I speak cultivated Australian accent.
      However I grew up in the country so I will speak in the accent that is the most related to the situation.
      With my family it is more general. Will use all 3 depending on who I'm talking to

    • @SlapstickGenius23
      @SlapstickGenius23 4 года назад +11

      A hybrid of Hiberno english, British English, Scottish English, and American Midland. Hah!

    • @rejeanlevell1391
      @rejeanlevell1391 3 года назад +12

      I always say Australian accents are alllllmost about to sound Texan

    • @billking8843
      @billking8843 3 года назад +2

      @@rejeanlevell1391 I fitted right in when I was in Austin.

    • @rejeanlevell1391
      @rejeanlevell1391 3 года назад

      @@billking8843 I’m in Austin too !

  • @meggles8971
    @meggles8971 2 года назад +13

    I grew up on a sheep station in the 'Outback' and have lived in England for 15 years. I naturally revert each of these accents depending on who I'm with and level of anger! I think the author has potentially missed a category though. First nations people and people from towns with mixed communities often speak with soft consonants and words rolled together. It's pleasant to listen to. I do love it when Aussie's need subtitles for other Aussies! Wouldn't life be boring if we all sounded the same :)

    • @charlesfraunhofer7893
      @charlesfraunhofer7893 2 года назад

      When I was an "all-Australian" man making everything Australian, buying Australian, dressing Australian, the newspaper's Australian and even the shopping bag's Australian, I was using the broad Australian accent, pretending to be a typical, swagman-type Australian from the bush.

    • @Demion83
      @Demion83 Год назад +1

      Indigenous Australians definitely have their own distinctive accent. There is also a polynesian australian accent (fob) and a mediterranean/middle east australian accent (wog).

  • @anonb4632
    @anonb4632 6 лет назад +870

    What about the "I copy Americans but am actually Aussie".

    • @Hipporider
      @Hipporider 6 лет назад +142

      I hate hearing Aussies sound like yanks. Also, saying zee instead of zed. I blame Sesame st. Lol

    • @anonb4632
      @anonb4632 6 лет назад +20

      Chris H Unfortunately these types are cropping up in every country, the worst are English learners who seem to manage to squeeze the worst out of a "Seppo" accent.

    • @tigergirl305
      @tigergirl305 6 лет назад +56

      Is this a thing? Why would an Australian want to copy our accent...I'm so confused

    • @anonb4632
      @anonb4632 6 лет назад +54

      tigergirl305 Because the USA is culturally dominant over Australia.

    • @anonb4632
      @anonb4632 6 лет назад +10

      OceanBlue Not true. Mel Gibson*, Heath Ledger, Geoffrey Rush, Toni Collette, and Holly Vallance all came to international attention after playing Australian roles.
      * Yes I'm aware of Gibson's background, but he is at least Aussie-fied.

  • @tutaalbannuta2427
    @tutaalbannuta2427 4 года назад +152

    I learned a bit of Australian accent from MasterChef Australia, and I couldn’t speak British ever since 😂💔
    My manager is Australian but she never sounds like them, but I love when she pronounce “a little bit of” this way: “a lil bytuv” 😆❤️

    • @ZeNuske22
      @ZeNuske22 Год назад +3

      Has she hit you with a "How you gahn?" (How you going?) yet?

    • @SanctusPaulus1962
      @SanctusPaulus1962 Год назад +4

      ​@@ZeNuske22 Or "scarnon" (what's going on)

  • @esantanche
    @esantanche 2 года назад +3

    You are a teacher. It's easy to understand you. You speak clearly. What you do is great!

  • @saucysven1505
    @saucysven1505 6 лет назад +155

    number 4: western sydney leb accent "cuz wallah i'll shank ya"

    • @boatasaurusrex1134
      @boatasaurusrex1134 5 лет назад +5

      ahahah oh god, i hear that phrase/accent over here in Perth! Solid gold!

    • @aidenbutcher8461
      @aidenbutcher8461 4 года назад +3

      Abos up where I am would knock on ya window and ask for a durrie

    • @Steph-sk3xb
      @Steph-sk3xb 4 года назад

      It's not just lebs that speak like that. Italians, Serbs, Greeks, lebs they all have that particular accent I've noticed.
      Maybe because we're all children of migrants from a similar area of the world.

    • @shuumo453
      @shuumo453 3 года назад

      lmaoo fr

    • @bigtomDW
      @bigtomDW 3 года назад

      @@Steph-sk3xb it’s pretty much a western Sydney accent now. Even the Australian English descent kids have it now haha

  • @areyoucryingyet4782
    @areyoucryingyet4782 6 лет назад +216

    H2O: Just add water was definitely broad

    • @delevator8755
      @delevator8755 4 года назад +11

      I remember watching it when I was 17-18 when I had mainly had exposure to American accents (and a bit of English)... and man. Half the time I couldn't understand a word of what they were saying on that show. Took me a good 25-30 hours of cumulative exposure to start being able to follow. The accent doesn't sound like a big deal to me now but back then it hardly sounded like English at all, as far as I was concerned.

    • @mm_2175
      @mm_2175 4 года назад +5

      @@delevator8755 dang when I watched I understood it more that american accent

    • @geronimo1010
      @geronimo1010 4 года назад +3

      EHHMMAAAA HELLPPPP

    • @gabrielastein13
      @gabrielastein13 4 года назад +5

      LOLL yeah as an american, that was my exposure to constantly australian accents (other than steve irwin)

    • @JOVONO
      @JOVONO 3 года назад +4

      @@geronimo1010 “sooo Coool”

  • @KenrickLeiba
    @KenrickLeiba Год назад +10

    This is a good leaping off point. Every part of Australia has these base accents, but there are definitely regional variations too that are hard to describe in writing. There is a definite Britishness to Perth and Adelaide accents. There is also regional variations on the way people say pool, school, dance, castle in different parts of Australia that can help you place a person’s background if not actual origin.
    There are also hyper local socioeconomic class based accents like the posh Balmain accent. There is also an equivalent accents for posh Melbournians (the actors from Kath and Kim do a great version of this with their other characters Prue and Trude).
    In general though accent difference is something more obvious to a local. I think our accent has been homogenised because our population isn’t that big and there is a lot of moving interstate for work. I’m from Canberra where a good chunk of the population is from interstate and I think it has the effect of averaging out our local accent.
    In addition to accent differences there are word usage differences like beer glass sizes (pot, schooner, midi etc.) and what you call a swim suit (cossie, bathers, togs, swimmers etc). But for the most part people will be able to cope with a different word usage.

    • @JaneNewAuthor
      @JaneNewAuthor Год назад +2

      The Tasmanian accent is different again. Tasmania was relatively isolated until after WW2. The accent is more English than the others.

  • @mariaeliza8894
    @mariaeliza8894 6 лет назад +70

    Alright, so this is the reason why Cate Blanchett's accent is very different than most Australian actors like Hemsworth brothers, Hugh Jackman, Joel Edgerton, Margot Robbie, or Jai Courtney. I didnt even believe at first when knowing that Blanchett is an Australian. But this video explains really well. Thank you. :)

    • @omegaman477
      @omegaman477 3 года назад +4

      Hollywood demands that for most mainstream roles use a neutral or American accent. Australian accents are consider a character role.

    • @billking8843
      @billking8843 3 года назад +5

      Cate Blanchett is from one group of posh suburbs in Melbourne (Hawthorn, Kew, Camberwell and Canterbury) where they all speak like that and all go to private schools. 'Upper middle ' is the new name for those peeps but Cate would consider herself as down to earth and with the common touch. Margot Robbie is Sydney upper middle class but probably went to a government school and really could mix with anyone.

    • @billking8843
      @billking8843 3 года назад +3

      Oops, Margot grew up in Queensland, then moved to Melbourne. In Queensland, that accent would be upper middle.

    • @kingwilliams8393
      @kingwilliams8393 3 года назад +1

      Hello how are you doing today I hope you’re having a wonderful day

    • @charlesfraunhofer7893
      @charlesfraunhofer7893 2 года назад

      Cate Blanchett is Australian, that must mean trolling on the internet is Australian (Aussie people with a stick up their arses tend to troll). It's all about where you come from.

  • @Heymrk
    @Heymrk 4 года назад +156

    My heart still hurts for Steve Irwin.

    • @iamisaid2295
      @iamisaid2295 4 года назад +3

      agreed. loved that man, dare i say.... authentic! he was unashamedly himself.

    • @keepclearofthemoors8886
      @keepclearofthemoors8886 3 года назад

      Oh my god yes me too 😢

    • @ebony3419
      @ebony3419 3 года назад +1

      TRUE AUSSIE!! miss the fella. 😢

  • @michaelbarnett2527
    @michaelbarnett2527 3 года назад +3

    The first Aussie I ever met was a young woman that was one of our customers. I would ring her doorbell and hope she would be home so I could hear her talk. She definitely had the broad accent. She called her young son her”chappie”, and said words without the R sound.
    “ There “ was “Theh”, “hear” was “ heah”. I Love Australian and Scottish accents.

  • @jjackerp7895
    @jjackerp7895 5 лет назад +420

    Don’t worry I’ll name them
    City
    Bogan
    Country
    Aboriginal
    India/Australian
    Chinese/Australian
    And British/Australian

    • @adamstryzlakyr2720
      @adamstryzlakyr2720 5 лет назад +32

      J JackerP 789 don’t forget Americans Failing Horrendously

    • @yareyare_dechi
      @yareyare_dechi 5 лет назад +22

      thankyou for making a divide between country and bogan. you mate, know your shit

    • @dabunnybadass
      @dabunnybadass 5 лет назад +1

      J JackerP 789 OR NONE OF THE ABOTH

    • @elifdemircan1061
      @elifdemircan1061 5 лет назад +5

      Australian accents sound so nice to me but i saldy have a got a american accent... wanna change it jajajajaja

    • @yareyare_dechi
      @yareyare_dechi 5 лет назад +5

      @@elifdemircan1061 nothing wrong with that.

  • @Ryuji777x
    @Ryuji777x 6 лет назад +435

    As a Canadian the general Australian just sounds like a mixture between North American and British English.

    • @changminscreamsalot
      @changminscreamsalot 5 лет назад +20

      Ryuji I agree. Except the accent from Perth. It sounds like a Newfie (with the deep Newfie accent) who spent a lot of time in the south

    • @LaraRayCanada
      @LaraRayCanada 5 лет назад +9

      That’s super interesting as I’m dual Canadian/English and so many people think my accent is Australian! X

    • @jumpy1327
      @jumpy1327 5 лет назад +7

      Aussies sound like people from east london known as cockney's.

    • @GabrielBuckMarketingDigital
      @GabrielBuckMarketingDigital 5 лет назад

      I agree

    • @roshanfey
      @roshanfey 5 лет назад

      as a british person, i agree

  • @SuiGenerisAbbie
    @SuiGenerisAbbie Год назад +2

    Great! I'm a Yank, who has a very thick standard New York accent.
    Mind you, there are MANY different New York accents, and 100's of American ones, as well.
    I can speak Australian, with the "General" Australian accent.
    I speak a bit of the broader Strine, as well.
    I know all the Aussie slang.
    The broad accent is one one hears a lot in the outback, and other places we call "the sticks", of course.
    I could listen to ALL of them ALLLL DAY.

  • @Davez621
    @Davez621 6 лет назад +122

    Now that Steve Irwin has passed away, Howard/Keating/Gillard/Hawke are all gone, and Paul Hogan has lived in the US for decades, you rarely hear the broad accent in the media anymore. However, one of the most popular celebrities who speaks with this accent, and it's arguably the strongest broad Australian accent you will ever hear, is Sophie Monk. It's so strong that to me it's unbearable listening to her talk. Ray Meagher (Alf Stewart on Home and Away) also speaks with a similar accent.

    • @Saint_nobody
      @Saint_nobody 6 лет назад +3

      Well, there's always controversal RUclipsr, *Bearing* ...

    • @anavybluemystery3486
      @anavybluemystery3486 6 лет назад +7

      or you could just get an american to try to do and australian accent and there you have the most broad of all aussie accents

    • @shegocrazy
      @shegocrazy 6 лет назад

      El Dae. You're not wrong. You could count the Americans who can do a convincing Aussie accent with one hand (and not use all the fingers).

    • @Tanzadog1
      @Tanzadog1 5 лет назад +3

      @CheesyTV ... Sophie Monk is not broad, it is pure bogan and she is proud of the fact .... Ray Meagher though is quintessential broad

    • @dabunnybadass
      @dabunnybadass 5 лет назад

      El Dae no it wouldn’t it probably sound like a cringy to year old swering and yelling

  • @onyourface207
    @onyourface207 6 лет назад +35

    I love how you bought the personality to each accent.

  • @nashd8005
    @nashd8005 Год назад +4

    Growing up in the 70s and 80s we were encouraged to use a cultivated accent, at least in formal situations. It was certainly the “newsreader accent” of the time. I noticed this slipping away by the mid-90s. Although I can happily use and listen to the other accents in real life, TV news and radio broadcasts grate on my ears.

  • @Necaradan666
    @Necaradan666 5 лет назад +322

    Cultivated = remnants from the old English colonies
    Broad = the Australian accent we developed here
    General = degeneration by exposure to American TV

    • @SlapstickGenius23
      @SlapstickGenius23 4 года назад +1

      Prime Yeetimus Argh that’s crazy true!

    • @a.a677
      @a.a677 4 года назад +24

      General makes no sense, it does not sound at all like American. All Australian accents are derived from British English.

    • @ironbutterfly12
      @ironbutterfly12 3 года назад

      Exactly!

    • @OhKnow379
      @OhKnow379 3 года назад

      @@a.a677 no cultivated is turning in

    • @uncle7162
      @uncle7162 3 года назад +3

      Mate I’m 15 and my family’s rural but we live in the city and most of the kids never heard an accent like mine before mind you. The accent was that thick my teacher barely understood

  • @MrAnperm
    @MrAnperm 6 лет назад +18

    My accent takes a journey through all 3 depending on the environment. My Dad was raised middle class and spoke with a cultivated accent at all times. Everyone else I grew up around spoke with the other 2 accents.
    I grew up in the Northern Territory and you’ll find that a lot of non-aboriginal people speak with some level of aboriginal accent here too. Especially if you grew up playing a lot of sports. At the very least a few aboriginal words thrown in.

  • @Tizdizwiz
    @Tizdizwiz 2 года назад +3

    This was so super interesting! I realise that growing up (from primary school to middle of highschool) I spoke with with a super cultivated accent (due to family upbringing) I remember people saying I had a vague "english" accent which confused me.
    Then when my mum remarried we moved to the mornington peninsula (and trust me the OCCA is super strong there). So now my normal voice is very general (bordering broad), when im home its extremely BROAD, if im in a meeting or work call its super cultivated.

  • @angeramirez25
    @angeramirez25 5 лет назад +88

    I loved all of them. Australian accents so beautiful 😍😍😍

  • @Mogamishu
    @Mogamishu 6 лет назад +16

    As someone who has never been to Australia and only met very few Aussies in person, I would say the stereotypical broad accent portrayed here is the one that I associate the most with Australia. Meaning, when I try to imagine what a typical Australian accent is like, the broad one is the first that comes to mind.

    • @rach3601
      @rach3601 3 года назад

      Spot on mate

  • @tennisfancaz22
    @tennisfancaz22 Год назад +4

    I did hear recently that the Aussie accent developed from a combination of the Irish, Scottish & British accent, particularly the Irish and Scottish. Makes sense, as that's where most of our ancestors came from!
    I travelled to the US a few years ago and was chatting with a man in New York who commented that he liked my Irish accent. I laughed and said, "oh no, not Irish .. I'm Australian". A few minutea later as we finished talking, he said "I really loved your Irish accent" 😂 ... Actually, I think you can hear a lot of Irish in the New York accent also, as they had many Irish settlers 😊 🇦🇺🇮🇪🇺🇲

    • @BarbaraMacDonald-bq1lb
      @BarbaraMacDonald-bq1lb Год назад

      I would also say that we have been influenced by the indigenous accent as well😊

    • @greasylimpet3323
      @greasylimpet3323 Год назад +1

      There's also a theory that our fast disappearing accent has a lot to do with the Cockney one. Our rhyming slang does; by the bit of Cockney I've heard, there are a lot of similarities, particularly in pronunciation.

  • @monogramadikt5971
    @monogramadikt5971 6 лет назад +204

    you didnt seem to even tap into the deep feral aussie styles

    • @dabunnybadass
      @dabunnybadass 5 лет назад

      Mono gram adikt you have no idea what real ozzy feel is

    • @KyrstOak
      @KyrstOak 5 лет назад

      @@dabunnybadass Huh????????

    • @lewis8325
      @lewis8325 5 лет назад +1

      yeah nah there are other entire rabbit holes to go down with re to broad Australian accents.

    • @missbeaussie
      @missbeaussie 5 лет назад

      charming

    • @smeva26
      @smeva26 3 года назад +1

      The Big Lez show will forever and always be my favourite example of the bogan accent lmao (plus NZ)

  • @robinhodgkinson
    @robinhodgkinson 5 лет назад +8

    As a 60 yo Australian and speaker with a “general” Australian accent similar to yours, I’ve noticed over the last 20-30 years a distinct swing of the accent amongst young general accent speakers towards a “posher” tone with the A and E vowels, particularly among city dwellers. The funny thing is that unlike your examples of Rush and Blanchett, they just sound like they’re faking it! Lol. But that of course is just to my ear I’m sure. What I’m actually hearing is no doubt the natural evolution of an accent which from my extended perspective just sounds funny.

    • @chooseyourpoison5105
      @chooseyourpoison5105 5 лет назад +3

      I think it's just that Rush and Blanchett are classically trained theatre actors, and have been trained to enunciate clearly enough to be heard in the very back theatre rows. To some people this may come across as 'posh' when they're really just speaking very, very clearly.

  • @marthanewsome6375
    @marthanewsome6375 2 года назад +4

    I speak a cross between general and cultivated. Not wealthy, just grew up in Balmain in Sydney. My first accent was North West American. I acquired an Australian accent at school here, as it was just after Vietnam War. For a kid in a school full of fatherless children my friends helped me change the way I talk to stop the bullying.

  • @jezza523
    @jezza523 6 лет назад +147

    I'm Australian, mixed between Broad/General, but to me most of them sounded the exact same.

    • @jezza523
      @jezza523 6 лет назад +3

      Good Old, Victoria

    • @amyj4106
      @amyj4106 6 лет назад

      Jezza A

    • @sell3100
      @sell3100 4 года назад

      Queenslander here and I apparently have a mixture of general and cultivated 😂

    • @Starvaze
      @Starvaze 2 года назад

      @@jezza523 I'm a state above you js

  • @ayestar005
    @ayestar005 6 лет назад +30

    I’m here just to hear the accent
    It’s mesmerizing

  • @Epyon2007
    @Epyon2007 Год назад +2

    I am Australian, I grew up in Sydney and for the most part, I reckoned I would be boxed in the cultivated accent. However, I did my undergraduate at Imperial in London and for grad and post in the USA. I've been out of Australia for a little longer than 20 years and my accent has most certainly changed. A form of adaptation I supposed, speaking to Americans for the most part I have found myself flattening my accent so Americans and non-English speakers can understand me better. One funny thing however is that if I go home my accent reverts back to what it was. I don't do it intentionally, it just happens. I am not even aware of what I am doing until I get back to the USA and talk to my mates and they look at me with a weird look immediately followed by you went home didn't you. One more thing I've met people back home who switch their accents depending on what the situation demands too. My Dad is a good example he is a lawyer and for 90% of the time he speaks with a very cultivated accent but occasionally I have heard him speak like a total bogan ha ha.

  • @AntASledd
    @AntASledd 5 лет назад +8

    I like the Australian accent, because it does sound fun-loving and caring to me. So, I like it. And, I like the Australian folks I have ever met. I live in Mississippi, USA...and I agree that the Australian Accent seems a little more American than the British accent...but it still is closer to the British accent than it is to the American accent. So, sometimes, I cannot actually tell the difference between an Australian accent and a British accent. I am sure that Australian and British folks can definitely tell the difference--but Americans sometimes have a hard time telling the difference. But, it does seem that Australians are a bit more "country" and "laid back" and "down home" than British folks--and I mean no disrespect to my British friends who seem really smart and elegant. I do recognize one thing: that Austalians apparently use the word "mate" alot! Good day, mates! From a friend in USA.

    • @thomasroy8357
      @thomasroy8357 3 года назад

      Hi ☺️ friend it would be better to know you more better because I've no bad intentions towards us

  • @CoolAsFreya
    @CoolAsFreya 4 года назад +17

    I finally realised why I sometimes don't notice immediately when some actors have Australian accents, because if they have a General Australian accent it's the accent I'm used to speaking and hearing (down in Melbourne), but more cultivated and more broad Australian accents, or fake accents by actors, stand out like a sore thumb

  • @rach3601
    @rach3601 3 года назад +8

    This is gold ! I’m Aussie and it 100% depends on who you’re talking to and what situation you’re in for example at work I speak “posh” with my family it’d be “genera” and with my friends after a few at the local it’s pretty bogan hahahahahha brilliant ! X

  • @MrMrMuhummad
    @MrMrMuhummad 6 лет назад +133

    My Nan speaks the Aboriginal version of the board accent at home. Then with the cultivated accent on the phone

    • @MrMrMuhummad
      @MrMrMuhummad 6 лет назад +12

      On the phone I meant to say then even when she goes onto the aboriginal missions to meet mob her broad accent comes out and intensifies

    • @TheNulligravida
      @TheNulligravida 6 лет назад +11

      Blackfella English is another dialect that should be added to this list.

    • @TokeTiger
      @TokeTiger 6 лет назад +2

      The Purple Helicopter my mum does too

    • @thusspakevespasian5587
      @thusspakevespasian5587 6 лет назад +3

      Not just aboriginals, I've had people in Sydney tell me the way I talk to my boss (another more rural aussie) is basically unintelligible, but then I'll pick up the phone and my speech will be as clear as glass

    • @calebschultink4505
      @calebschultink4505 5 лет назад

      They even did a complete Bible in Aboriginal Kriol (Like a pidgin English)
      aboriginalbibles.org.au/Kriol/Conc/root.htm
      Is it English?

  • @blackphoenix_02
    @blackphoenix_02 6 лет назад +42

    I love Cate Blanchett xD I could listen to her talking the whole day 😅

  • @Stewi1014
    @Stewi1014 3 года назад +3

    Every time I hear Steve Irwin's voice it's like a knife through my heart. Good god do I miss that man.

  • @robbiewales3007
    @robbiewales3007 5 лет назад +8

    I'm an Aussie that speaks with a general Aussie accent. I can do the broad accent too but only on requests or if the threatre production requires it.
    The broad accent is an offshoot of the old cockney accent common in East London and in Kent

    • @carlh429
      @carlh429 4 года назад +1

      Old Cockney definately but also mixed with Irish. Even now there are some words which sound very similar coming from Aussies and East Londoners.

  • @adifferentangle7064
    @adifferentangle7064 5 лет назад +73

    You need to distinguish between Victorian, Adelaide and Queensland accents as well.

    • @missbeaussie
      @missbeaussie 5 лет назад +5

      I'm from WA and I can distinguish Queensland, Sydney and Melbourne

    • @charlaville7658
      @charlaville7658 4 года назад +2

      Hey, what about Territorian, Western Australian, & Tasmanian accents?

    • @st-zc3le
      @st-zc3le 4 года назад +1

      I am in NSW. When I go to Queensland, I couldn’t understand anything.

    • @eskaylarezzy8530
      @eskaylarezzy8530 4 года назад

      @Scout The dog That is so true! haha

    • @omegaman477
      @omegaman477 3 года назад

      And Sydney West

  • @michelepascoe6068
    @michelepascoe6068 Год назад +5

    Funny video. Thanks for explaining.

  • @tfsheahan2265
    @tfsheahan2265 6 лет назад +23

    I think it would be helpful if all three could be demonstrated by reading the same sentence, or better yet, the same paragraph. Then go back to each reading to point out specific differences.

  • @scarlady558
    @scarlady558 6 лет назад +51

    me, a non-native English speaker: yes... they're all different... yes... not at all the same

  • @jaydubbelyoo
    @jaydubbelyoo Год назад +1

    I spoke fluent Ngarrindjeri and Kuarna before I was placed in my family at the age of three. I always thought I only spoke English, until I completed a certificate in Aboriginal cultural education and contact tracing. I now know I speak/use a few dialects. I speak Oxford English, Aussie English, AbE and Ngarrindjeri English. It automatically translates in my head and I will sometimes go through 3 different terms for the most accurate translation. Literal translation’s can sometimes be hilarious or just downright wrong; pink lipstick comes to mind 😂.

  • @myatun9715
    @myatun9715 5 лет назад +6

    Great guy !!! I am impressed with his words "I am simply an English teacher". All the best. I am from Yangon, the Union of Myanmar. Tuesday 30 July 2019.

  • @TheNubimusic
    @TheNubimusic 5 лет назад +5

    Each capital city/ regional area has its own accent and dialect. The categories here are more the styles we speak and most people use all of them at different times, but it's where they are from that determines accent.

  • @boigercat
    @boigercat Год назад +12

    Interesting hearing the 3 base accents broken up. If you haven't already I would love to see you cover state accents

    • @SanctusPaulus1962
      @SanctusPaulus1962 Год назад

      There's not really that much of a difference in accents between different states in Australia. Other than maybe South Australians saying "dance" as "dahnce" like the british

    • @boigercat
      @boigercat Год назад

      @SanctusPaulus1962 Mate I'm from SA and I know for a fact there is a big difference. It's why when someone from Queensland comes to SA it's extremely noticeable where they came from. And they will often receive some healthy banter for it lol

    • @boigercat
      @boigercat Год назад

      @SanctusPaulus1962 And SA in particular and especially middle to upper class are known for sounding pompous as we articulate and pronounce our words more than the rest of Australia.

  • @bladez479
    @bladez479 6 лет назад +13

    I grew up in regional SA, I received a decent education but still naturally developed a really broad Aussie accent. Moved to Adelaide for university and found that I stuck out like a sore thumb amongst the more cultivated urban accents. Doesn't take people long to figure out that I'm not from around here hahaha

    • @jimmyoakeslift4374
      @jimmyoakeslift4374 6 лет назад

      Bladez I did the opposite, moved from the adelaide hills to rural sa, everyone thought I was English 😂

    • @thatfelladownunder9396
      @thatfelladownunder9396 2 года назад

      @@jimmyoakeslift4374 funny that. I was going to write something similar. When I joined the Army I was often asked if I was from England. I’m a product of the Adelaide Hills too. I think SA has a much more rounded dialect than the eastern staters. I always found most of them spoke much more nasally than I did.
      I know a lot of it had to do with my mother always correcting us with our enunciation too. Maybe they grew up with it part of their education. But we were never allowed to speak broad Aussie.

  • @ABACUStoPC
    @ABACUStoPC 6 лет назад +5

    English is not my mother language but I really like board Aussie accent though it’s usually harder for me to catch, to me it sounds more “native” which I find fascinating. I think we should all be proud of our own native accent regardless where we live.

  • @ashk5400
    @ashk5400 3 года назад +21

    Loved that you mention the indigenous ‘accent’, it’s nice to be included.

    • @freecountry3544
      @freecountry3544 Год назад +3

      The indigenous accent varies a whole lot too. Aboriginal Australians in inner city Sydney....compared to Barkantji Mob in Wilcannia....where they pronounce V as a Semi B...an " il" like "ohl" etc.....
      Its so interesting.

  • @leifharmsen
    @leifharmsen 5 лет назад +47

    You forgot #4: Scotch College.
    It's a step up from cultivated.

    • @omegaman477
      @omegaman477 3 года назад

      Cranbrook

    • @billking8843
      @billking8843 3 года назад

      That's raiiight. Especially if they are from Braiiiighton and spend their weekends yachting.

  • @KeikoKeepSmiling
    @KeikoKeepSmiling 5 лет назад +22

    I caught the feels hearing Steve’s voice 😓💙

  • @broodingelm2216
    @broodingelm2216 2 года назад +1

    I tend speak with a general accent, but with hints of English, italian, Māori and indigenous (4 people/cultures I’ve grown up in). I think also you slight regional variants as well with pronunciation of certain words.

  • @laneb1512
    @laneb1512 5 лет назад +26

    I’m a simple person. I see Cate Blanchett (my favorite actress) and I click.

    • @kingwilliams8393
      @kingwilliams8393 3 года назад

      Hello how are you doing today I hope you’re having a wonderful day

  • @bacchusendo9032
    @bacchusendo9032 6 лет назад +7

    As an American, I can tell you that when I think of an Australian accent, I think of the Steve Irwin accent. Steve Irwin, more than anyone else from the country, helped define this perception of the country as this joyful, happy people with a funny accent and super-dangerous scary animals. and I know I'm not alone in that feeling.

    • @skippy8696
      @skippy8696 6 лет назад +4

      It's definitely not the most common though. The bulk of Australia live in urban areas. I think nearly half the population live in either Melbourne or Sydney and don't speak like that at all. There are bogan accents in places like the west and north of Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane etc but they defs sound different to Steve Irwin.

    • @Diggles67
      @Diggles67 5 лет назад

      Skippy 40% live in Sydney and Melbourne - 10 million out of 25 million.

  • @Ivielynn123
    @Ivielynn123 3 года назад +2

    The way Steve Irwin spoke was amazing. I grew up watching him and I loved his accent.

    • @thomasroy8357
      @thomasroy8357 3 года назад

      Hi ☺️ friend it would be better to know you more better because I've no bad intentions towards us✨

  • @tonygumbrell22
    @tonygumbrell22 6 лет назад +10

    I'm an American who spent a week in Sydney nearly 50 years ago. The general accent is very easy for an American to understand, and easy on our ear. The "broad" is one we enjoy and instantly recognize as quintessential Aussie accent (or Strine). The posh "cultivated" one makes me a bit uneasy, as if I were hobnobbing with the Bligh family.

  • @DanteVelasquez
    @DanteVelasquez 6 лет назад +96

    Yep we have those equivalents​ in the US lol It's so funny.

    • @kingwilliams8393
      @kingwilliams8393 3 года назад

      Hi how are you doing today I hope you’re having a wonderful day

  • @perrydowd9285
    @perrydowd9285 Год назад +1

    I sent this to a friend in the US who finds everything about Australia fascinating.
    Thanks for uploading this vid.
    I subbed so I'll be sure to see you soon.👍👍

  • @samuan001
    @samuan001 6 лет назад +4

    I had a teacher from Perth, whose pronunciation was, to me, more British-like because it was non-rhotic. And what was extraordinary for me, was the difference in pronunciation among Minouge sisters: Kylie had a strong "R" everywhere, whereas Danni spoke in a non-rhotic way. I guess that Nicole Kidman doesn't pronunce final "r", as well.

  • @spoony8232
    @spoony8232 6 лет назад +8

    "Don't be a hero mate" has to be the best news interview of all time.

  • @shauninthebody
    @shauninthebody Год назад +5

    There's another one. The aussie w#g accent. People from European, middle-eastern and I've even heard it from some Chinese and Vietnamese people though they seem to have their own distinct sound.
    I think these should definently have their own classifications.

  • @louiseasmr7732
    @louiseasmr7732 5 лет назад +4

    I'm Ozzie I'm between broad, cultivated, general... Depends what I'm saying and my emotions/temper... More on the cultivated side (my mum was from England) she didn't have much of an Accent..
    Most people to me sound the same as me between the 2...
    But you made the cultivated one sound a bit more British I think, especially compared to the examples you had. .
    But legit this was gold.

  • @janaorjenna690
    @janaorjenna690 6 лет назад +8

    I'm broad:)
    Even though I am not Australian I am Arab but when when I was young , my Australian aunt taught that accent

  • @meiong5206
    @meiong5206 2 года назад +1

    I'm looking for Australian accent audio books. Do you have any recommendations?

  • @summerbreeze8987
    @summerbreeze8987 4 года назад +4

    Hi Pete! I was inspired to look up videos on RUclips about different Australian accents after recently watching an Australian reality TV show called “Instant Hotel”.
    One of the women (Babe Scott) spoke with a specific Australian accent that I recognized as also most prevalent among women on the reality TV show “The Real Housewives of Melbourne”. As prime examples, anyone familiar with cast members Gina Liano and Chyka Keebaugh may know what I’m referring to. There is a part of their accent in the way these ladies’ Australian accent pronounce the letter T, especially when at the end of a word. Words like “sport” or “cat” or “smart” or “taught” or “fight”, etc.
    Instead of words pronounced with the familiar, sharp “t” sound, it sounds more like a soft “tch”; it’s the same sound one would hear at the end of the word “ostrich”. Their words come across as “sportch”, “catch”, “smartch”, “taughtch” or “fightch”. (It’s hard to represent sounds when typing on a keyboard!!). I was intrigued, because it’s not something I find with other Australians’ accents. In “The Real Housewives of Melbourne” the ladies have boasted about their lives in the wealthy city of Toorak, so I wondered if this “tch” is common by upperclass women in that area.
    At the start of your video you said, “...we’re not going to cover every variant in today’s video”, and maybe I should check all your videos. But, I’m wondering if you know what I am referring to. As I said, I’m fascinated. Thanks for the cool video!!!

    • @manicwitchydreamgirl8946
      @manicwitchydreamgirl8946 Год назад +1

      i know this is a 2 year old comment but i'm from melbourne and i think i know what you mean, i think the characters Trude and Prue from the show Kath and Kim might be examples of a send up of this accent you're describing :)

    • @НектоНеизвестный-в1р
      @НектоНеизвестный-в1р 9 месяцев назад

      @@manicwitchydreamgirl8946 Have you ever heard the word “disco” pronounced as “diskoshh”?

  • @CLMcLeary9
    @CLMcLeary9 5 лет назад +44

    I’m southern American, and Northern US girls ask me all the time if I’m Australian Bc of my accent 🤨

    • @agoogleuser4443
      @agoogleuser4443 4 года назад +4

      Dizniga3- that's funny cause I'm a southerner also (North Carolina), I'm 56, and I've never had anyone ask me that. Which state are you from?

    • @Sky-ht6tv
      @Sky-ht6tv 4 года назад

      I would not do that

    • @Steph-sk3xb
      @Steph-sk3xb 4 года назад +2

      My uncle was in America's south on a road trip through America. He was in a gas station in kuntcky when a man said to him "that's an interesting accent, where are you from?"
      He replied with "Australia" and the guy said "What state is that in?"
      Just a funny story since were talking about Australian accents and America's south. 😂

    • @plodimsocks
      @plodimsocks 3 года назад

      Its weird because to me they sound nothing alike

  • @kittylumps
    @kittylumps 2 года назад +2

    Heh. I just asked my husband which accent I have, and without skipping a beat he said definitely cultivated.
    There’s another subgroup of people who have a cultivated accent. People whose parents speak another language at home, or who came to Australia as children. I was born in Australia, but I couldn’t speak English when I went to kindergarten because I had only spoken another language at home.

  • @DanTheCaptain
    @DanTheCaptain 6 лет назад +6

    I like the General and Broad Aussie accent. They are the accents I think of when I think of an Aussie accent. The coltivated accent is... Well... Too cultivated. It doesn't sound Australian, or it is very hard to point out. When I here a General or Broad Aussie accent I can usually recognize it as such is a few seconds, but the cultivated accent kinda just sounds like normal American/Canadian (I'm Canadian) with a little hint of Australian in the mix. Its harder to pick up but It much less recognizable at Australian than the others.

    • @stevestruthers6180
      @stevestruthers6180 2 года назад

      Daniel K says: " 'but the cultivated accent kinda just sounds like normal American/Canadian (I'm Canadian) with a little hint of Australian in the mix.' " I'm Canadian too, and that's also what I hear - an accent that is not too far removed from a standard Canadian accent in many parts, with a bit of Australian mixed in.
      Because of technology, globalization and exposure to American culture through popular media, many Commonwealth accents seem to be flattening out a bit. In many videos on RUclips and in TV shows, I am starting to hear Received Pronunciation and other English dialects flattening out a bit and becoming less distinctive and recognizable. The same thing seems to be happening in parts of Scotland as well. New Zealanders and South Africans seem to be a bit behind this trend, probably because of their greater geographic isolation (and this is particularly true for New Zealanders).
      Canadian accents outside of the Maritime provinces are already flattened and they are the end result of all the United Empire Loyalists who fled the Revolutionary War in America, brought their 'American' accents with them, and settled in what is now Southwestern Ontario, before eventually branching out into the western provinces. I say 'American' accents, because they are fairly close to the accents that people in England had before the arrival of Received Pronunciation in the early 1800s.

  • @MrZnarffy
    @MrZnarffy 6 лет назад +4

    Love to hear these different accents.. Remember when I had been in Australia for a week, and met a miner from the outback... I could hardly understand a word, not only the accent, but the way he cut words and the speed he talked with. I noticed you seemed to pronounce things very well and not speak so fast. :)

  • @HaifengZhu-pn3uq
    @HaifengZhu-pn3uq Год назад

    I am from China, I did not hear Australian English very frequently, so I m curious about this, thanks for this great content

  • @MichaelZieschang
    @MichaelZieschang 6 лет назад +4

    I met an Australian in the Bus from Berlin to Rostock (Germany). I couldn’t tell what accent it was but some phrases where hard to understand to be honest.
    I think I will come your channel more often I think.
    👍🏻

    • @charlaville7658
      @charlaville7658 4 года назад

      LOL - it was probably my mate Johnny Rainbow - he likes to travel to Berlin etc to impress all the girlies with his Aussie accent & whip cracking skills - mind you, even I find it hard to understand him & I'm an Aussie LOL

  • @yanarroyyan7329
    @yanarroyyan7329 6 лет назад +120

    To me, as an Indonesian person who learn English as my second language, to figure out these three Aussie accents is difficult. Which one the easiest to learn?

    • @dominicsteele8932
      @dominicsteele8932 6 лет назад +34

      Eek... None

    • @chinogambino9375
      @chinogambino9375 6 лет назад +10

      General, Its strange but I think the west Australians speak an older English accent closer to the UK than Eastern states people. Unless you are using a lot of slang it shouldn't matter that much, the less slang the better.

    • @jester5ify
      @jester5ify 6 лет назад +7

      None. Just learn English, none of this pigeon English bollox.

    • @mr.mysteriousspyman4016
      @mr.mysteriousspyman4016 6 лет назад +18

      Hello, my Indonesian friend!
      Australian English is VERY similar to "England" English. Even Scottish, Irish, Welsh, Canadian, New Zealand, and American English (as well as others) aren't so different. All of these accents are mutually intelligible, which means that each accent can easily be understood by people who possess the other accents listed.
      Unlike Chinese, for example, English does not really have any dialects. All English speakers basically speak the same language, with minor variations in pronunciation (and spelling, which doesn't affect speech). An accent just refers to the ways that words are pronounced; it doesn't mean people are using entirely new words. People say that Australians say "mate" all the time, for example, but British and American people also use that word.
      Having learned English as a second language, you can function in any English-speaking society by learning how to speak English from a teacher who originated from a different English-speaking country.
      Australian English is NOT a language and it's NOT even a dialect. This channel teaches you the Australian accent and Australian mannerisms, but that's essentially it. Australians don't speak a language so different from other English-speaking countries that you're basically going to have to go to a new English school just to learn the Australian variant.
      Learning an accent is not entirely necessary. There are Aboriginal Australian, Anglo-Australian, Indian Australian, Chinese Australian, Greek Australian, Lebanese Australian, Serbian Australian, Vietnamese Australian, and Italian Australian accents, for example. Why do these different accents exist? It's because very few people go out of their way to mimic the accents of people from different social classes and ethnic groups. Most of these people just learn how to speak English as a general language, and then develop their own unique accents based on their social class and ethnic origins (often due to living in communities dominated by their ethnic group, or due to picking up the accent from their parents).
      As an Indonesian, you'll most likely pick up on the general Indonesian Australian accent. If you want to learn the "true" Australian accent, that's not entirely necessary but you can do it for fun, I guess.

    • @yanarroyyan7329
      @yanarroyyan7329 6 лет назад +5

      Mr Mysterious Spyman
      Well, thank you very much for your clear explanation about how and what to learn..
      Learning and understanding English until I am able to communicate in English is more important as you said, than to have a specific accent.

  • @scattysafari7742
    @scattysafari7742 3 года назад +1

    This is the main three, but there are others.Aboriginal English has a distinct accent. Also, Italian/Greek Australians have a mix of their old homeland & a broad accent from the era when migrants would start their Aussie life working along side working class Aussies in factories & on the Wivenhoe Dam. Santo Cilauro &John Barilaro illustrate this & this kind of accent was parodied on Fat Pizza & Wogs Out of Work.
    Then there are West Australians who pronounce 'pool' as 'pull.' One of the few regional markers of Aussie speech.
    Aussie language is fascinating.

  • @tomasbyrom3954
    @tomasbyrom3954 6 лет назад +129

    Your broad accent is still heaps posh mate. ;)

    • @tomasbyrom3954
      @tomasbyrom3954 6 лет назад +8

      It is a hard topic though and you did well. The "three accent model" in Australia has be debunked and has actually been replaced by about 20 or 30 different dialects spoken by different groups all around the country. The 3 that you mentioned aren't considered accurate anymore. Julia's accent for example wouldn't be considered "broad" but a lower middle class dialect of urban South Australia. Steve Irwin's accent was a part of his character and so impossible to pin down to a location (it's fake).
      There are some awesome resources on more accurate forms of the Australian dialects online.
      Still really enjoyed your video. :)

    • @mr.mysteriousspyman4016
      @mr.mysteriousspyman4016 6 лет назад

      Accurate.

    • @lewis8325
      @lewis8325 5 лет назад +1

      @@tomasbyrom3954 hate to shit on your plate but Gillard's accent is fake as shit too. she's a lawyer, and nobody in this country talks like that while still pronouncing the 't' in 'negotiate' like an 's'. can you link to the resources? I'm pretty interested in regional accents here myself.

    • @JohnSmith-rk6jy
      @JohnSmith-rk6jy 5 лет назад

      Obviously has never been rural/outback/drill rig.