26 weird things australians say 🦘

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  • Опубликовано: 9 ноя 2024
  • a video where i share all the weird things i've heard australians say since getting here !
    enjoy :))
    xo,
    gab
    watch more australian videos here: / @itsdustinandgabi

Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @prussiaaero1802
    @prussiaaero1802 Месяц назад +1061

    5 seconds in and there’s a problem already. It’s not raining, it’s pissin’ down.

  • @andrew051968
    @andrew051968 Месяц назад +647

    Also:
    Yeah-nah = no
    nah yeah = yes
    Nah yeah nah = no
    Yeah nah yeah = yes
    yeah yeah nah = "I agree with you / understand your position, but no"

    • @grol094
      @grol094 Месяц назад +8

      Ha ha - nice one sport

    • @JoTheSnoop
      @JoTheSnoop Месяц назад +4

      'Yeah no' is common in Canada. I have heard it being used in interviews after NHL games, mainly by Canadian players.

    • @joolzmac1
      @joolzmac1 Месяц назад +9

      Of all our sayings, this one always makes me laugh! 😂

    • @LegendOfMoonDragons
      @LegendOfMoonDragons Месяц назад +15

      😂 I never realised how instinctual it was that I completely understood all of that

    • @hamishalker-jones9157
      @hamishalker-jones9157 Месяц назад +1

      yeah, right.....

  • @crystalgriffiths
    @crystalgriffiths Месяц назад +564

    Typical Aussie conversation:
    “How ya goin’?”
    “Yeah, not bad. Yaself?”
    “Yeah, alright, mate. Can’t complain”
    “That’s the way”

    • @harleyquinn3589
      @harleyquinn3589 Месяц назад +22

      Nope... I call out your inaccuracy! There's was no C bomb in this conversation 😂

    • @kerryjones7718
      @kerryjones7718 Месяц назад +32

      And they missed the perfect opportunity to say “oh, you know, living the dream”

    • @ronnycook3569
      @ronnycook3569 Месяц назад +25

      The answer is ALWAYS some variation on "not bad" or "'salright" even if you're on your death bed. If your dog died, you lost your job and you've broken both legs you MIGHT stretch it to "could be better, mate."

    • @marke4663
      @marke4663 Месяц назад +17

      Flat out like a lizard drinking.

    • @bradleyedwards9244
      @bradleyedwards9244 Месяц назад +7

      No one listens😂

  • @MomoSimone22
    @MomoSimone22 Месяц назад +403

    Aussie here 👋🏼
    We don't say "too easy" to mean "right on", "awesome" or even "thank you". We say it to mean that the request made of us isn't a problem, and we're happy to do it. It's like say "no worries"... Although, that might also be an Aussie thing.

    • @johnphaceas7434
      @johnphaceas7434 24 дня назад +11

      like all good...

    • @craigmcmanus4530
      @craigmcmanus4530 23 дня назад +18

      I agree.
      “Any chance you can chuck this in the post box when you’re at the shops?”
      “Too easy, mate”

    • @KarynMP
      @KarynMP 22 дня назад

      No wucking furries

    • @Cheepchipsable
      @Cheepchipsable 20 дней назад +9

      Yes, "Your request is so easy it's already done"

    • @lulairenoroub3869
      @lulairenoroub3869 19 дней назад +10

      It's like the opposite of thankyou
      It's like "Your gratitude is not required, as I consider this the least I could do for one as special as you"
      Basically, it's the same as de nada

  • @dorothyedwards6170
    @dorothyedwards6170 Месяц назад +163

    A friend of mine was invited to a barbeque and was asked to "bring a plate", meaning he should bring something to share with others, such as a salad, or a cake, etc. Poor guy turned up with a plate! Just a plate with nothing on it. That was 30 years ago and he still tells the story!.🤣

    • @sonyavincent7450
      @sonyavincent7450 20 дней назад +2

      That's happened here in nz too! Must be so embarrassing.

    • @GoodGolly.MissLolly
      @GoodGolly.MissLolly 9 дней назад +2

      I’ve heard that same story from many foreigners that I know here in Australia. They only do it once lol

    • @jkkroch
      @jkkroch 8 дней назад

      😅😅😅 Aussie here, got me cackling to myself

    • @chloehart3969
      @chloehart3969 4 дня назад

      oh my gosh, I remember that happening to new Aussies. Also, we say 'barby' instead of BBQ (barbecue)

    • @skan9434
      @skan9434 3 дня назад

      Yes sadly I know a newly arrived family who sent all 3 kids to school with empty plates. The poor little things were so embarrassed and the parents were beside themselves apologising. The school staff were apologising to the family and said they will remember to elaborate in the future by writing “Bring a plate of food to share” so that new families don’t get caught out…

  • @loosegoose9647
    @loosegoose9647 Месяц назад +1897

    We definitely do NOT put hot dogs in white bread. Hot dog sausages go in hot dog buns. Regular sausages (snags) go in white bread at ya sausage sizzle with onion and tomato sauce.

    • @lucasroe2878
      @lucasroe2878 Месяц назад +97

      Absolutely correct 💯

    • @FromTheGong
      @FromTheGong Месяц назад +59

      At home they always go on white bread and heaps of tommaty sauce.

    • @kindrayvette4573
      @kindrayvette4573 Месяц назад +51

      As AtTheGong said, we do put hot dogs on bread at home
      Hot dog buns are over priced 😂

    • @loosegoose9647
      @loosegoose9647 Месяц назад +22

      @@kindrayvette4573 nah that fuck, sounds like some weird east coast behaviour to me.

    • @amaxwell6989
      @amaxwell6989 Месяц назад

      Hot dog buns suck, dry as a dead dingos donger!

  • @DazzaBo
    @DazzaBo Месяц назад +239

    Australians call McDonald's "Maccas" so much (almost exclusively) that McDonald's trademarked the word and McDonald's Australia now uses it a lot in branding

    • @craigmacdonald8140
      @craigmacdonald8140 Месяц назад

      They can't trademark my nickname, fck them

    • @kaitymarie8358
      @kaitymarie8358 Месяц назад +36

      Literally have the “My Maccas” app on my phone lol wonder what it’s call else where

    • @martykath4427
      @martykath4427 16 дней назад +1

      Also called 'golden arches ' .

    • @zAngus
      @zAngus 15 дней назад +5

      No one has time to say McDonalds. Rest of the world is crazy.

    • @SUMMER_101EDITS
      @SUMMER_101EDITS 15 дней назад +1

      @@martykath4427 never heard anyone say that bruh

  • @debmccudden242
    @debmccudden242 Месяц назад +546

    Snags are sausages not hot dogs

    • @smurfette_blues7922
      @smurfette_blues7922 Месяц назад +5

      I believe they call sausages hotdogs
      Edit: I think I'm confusing people replying. I'm just guessing that Americans call sausages hotdogs. Like as a catch all. Like how we call 'French fries' and 'crisps' both chips.

    • @davelloyd-
      @davelloyd- Месяц назад +33

      @@smurfette_blues7922 except hotdogs normally mean those frankfurt things that come in a tin and are boiled to heat rather than cooked on a barbie

    • @tosgem
      @tosgem Месяц назад +23

      @@smurfette_blues7922 I just looked it up and what we call sausages, Americans call "breakfast sausage".
      Personally hotdogs strike me something preserved, pre-cooked, finely ground meat which doesn't even really need a skin.
      Sausages are fresh, minced meat with a few herbs and spices put into a skin.

    • @fistovuzi
      @fistovuzi Месяц назад +10

      the Australian word for a hot dog frankfurt sausage is "saveloy", or "sav" for short.
      eg, "fair suck of the sav", meaning, to get one's fair share.

    • @JoTheSnoop
      @JoTheSnoop Месяц назад +11

      ​​@@fistovuziI'm a Sydneysider and I have only called frankfurt sausages frankfurts - not saveloys.

  • @jaffawaffle8517
    @jaffawaffle8517 Месяц назад +114

    Here's a fun Australia phrase that you won't hear often:
    "I'm not here to f*ck spiders."
    It has the same meaning as "I don't have all day."

    • @billking8843
      @billking8843 Месяц назад +2

      No it means we are at the pub to get drunk.

    • @ziggybadans
      @ziggybadans Месяц назад +8

      The way I hear it used is more like "C'mon let's get serious now about this"

    • @monalisadiva
      @monalisadiva 16 дней назад

      Never heard that one!

    • @sharonwebb945
      @sharonwebb945 15 дней назад

      Never heard of that

    • @donperegrine922
      @donperegrine922 15 дней назад +2

      I've heard that one! It's used to mean more than "I don't have all day".
      For sure it also means "I'm not fucking around. I'm serious."

  • @GregoryBamber
    @GregoryBamber Месяц назад +68

    If someone thinks they are telling you something new but you already know it you can say " No shit Sherlock".

    • @monicakult8519
      @monicakult8519 15 дней назад

      That's one of my favourite things to say lol

    • @elliebrunt2149
      @elliebrunt2149 8 дней назад

      So funny! My brother uses it all the time and it gets me every time 😂

  • @TheEditor-03030
    @TheEditor-03030 Месяц назад +587

    The most stereotypical thing you can say to an Aussie is shrimp on the barbie because we don’t even call them shrimp. They are prawns.

    • @Bellas1717
      @Bellas1717 Месяц назад +16

      We mainly eat prawns, which are a very different animal to shrimp.

    • @legibletiger839
      @legibletiger839 Месяц назад +17

      Yup, and it’s super annoying

    • @kr0kon
      @kr0kon Месяц назад +36

      and also who the fuck barbeques prawns 😭
      Edit: or shrimp?? 😭

    • @davegoldspink5354
      @davegoldspink5354 Месяц назад +12

      Don’t have many triggers but calling prawns shrimp is on one them. When I was a kid many decades ago shrimp were marketed as sea monkeys in aquarium kits and were absolutely tiny.

    • @legibletiger839
      @legibletiger839 Месяц назад +8

      @@kr0kon oh I do barbie prawns, it tastes pretty good too. But it’s only when I get green prawns.

  • @kerriemccoy1647
    @kerriemccoy1647 Месяц назад +322

    Servo is also called petrol station. UTE is an Australian invention but strangely Americans think they're trucks.

    • @jublywubly
      @jublywubly Месяц назад +35

      Yep. It's like how they call bum bags (another Australian invention) "fanny packs". Fanny being a British name for a woman's lady parts. Those silly sausages in the U.S.A. really aren't the brightest sparks when it comes to language skills.

    • @kerriemccoy1647
      @kerriemccoy1647 Месяц назад +16

      @@jublywubly Fanny means the same thing in Australia as in Britian. America did slaughter the English language, including spelling when they won the war for Independence against England

    • @ataraxigrace822
      @ataraxigrace822 Месяц назад +23

      Exactly. A truck is a truck. A Ute is a Ute.

    • @redroo689
      @redroo689 Месяц назад +31

      Ute is short for Utility Vehicle. It isn't what we'd call a truck. Trucks are bigger.

    • @turnman02
      @turnman02 28 дней назад +18

      For the benefit of our international readers, they're called a service station because they used to have a mechanic workshop attached where you could get repairs done, useful when you're on a long trip & break down in the middle of nowhere...

  • @vacri54
    @vacri54 Месяц назад +547

    "Doggy bag" predates the practice of picking up your dog's poo while walking by decades, at least - carrying a bag while walking is a recent thing. "Doggy bag" comes from "I'll take the leftovers of my meal for the dog to eat", and isn't meant literally. Also - "stubby" is for a small bottle of alcohol, usually beer. The normal-sized bottle is called a "longneck" in comparison.

    • @jaearnell
      @jaearnell Месяц назад +20

      We also have a stubbie holder, to avoid condensation getting on your hands, which can be used for tinnies and longnecks too. lol

    • @rossevans1774
      @rossevans1774 Месяц назад +14

      And be careful, very careful when and how you use that 4-letter word.

    • @paolozuanich1641
      @paolozuanich1641 Месяц назад +4

      "a few longies"

    • @Helliconia54
      @Helliconia54 Месяц назад +1

      beat me to it

    • @michaelh6551
      @michaelh6551 Месяц назад +17

      In central Queensland they call long necks "tallies".

  • @cabdude2
    @cabdude2 20 дней назад +29

    It's not "it's alright", it's "you're right". If a Canadian accidently bumps into an Australian and says "sooory," and Australian will reply "you're right". We don't like the idea of having made someone else feel sorry for an innocent mistake.

    • @Stones_022
      @Stones_022 День назад +1

      its also an abbriviation of "You're alright" to say that what they did was no biggie and they're fine

  • @TotalMK
    @TotalMK 20 дней назад +40

    I'm Aussie never heard anyone say "Thanking You" weird. All the rest check out

    • @edwardt1941
      @edwardt1941 15 дней назад +3

      I have heard it used a bit. Maybe used when a person wants to add emphasis to their thanks.

    • @faykelz1073
      @faykelz1073 15 дней назад +2

      I'm an Aussie and I hear it all the time

    • @jkkroch
      @jkkroch 8 дней назад +2

      I see people write it but not say out loud 🤷‍♀️

    • @TotalMK
      @TotalMK 8 дней назад

      @@edwardt1941 Must be a state by state use VIC here

    • @DPM666
      @DPM666 5 дней назад

      Yeah nah it's not common but it's a thing

  • @drfill9210
    @drfill9210 Месяц назад +366

    Back in the day, it was shameful to ask for the rest of the meal. It implied you didn't have enough to eat. People got around that by asking for the rest so they could feed their dog.

    • @jparko4944
      @jparko4944 Месяц назад +4

      Oh yeah. I forgot that. Thanks for pushing that marble back into the front of the garden hose:)

    • @SoniaH-m4g
      @SoniaH-m4g Месяц назад +6

      I’ve worked in the hospitality industry for 30 years (over a few different states) and until about 10 years ago doggy bag’s were mostly bones etc most people if they didn’t want something big just ordered a half serve which pretty much was available as a regular thing on most menus but you don’t find half serves as an option very often now.

    • @Besssavage
      @Besssavage Месяц назад +1

      Perfectly explained

    • @drfill9210
      @drfill9210 Месяц назад +1

      @@Besssavage thank you!

    • @kappy-nf6uh
      @kappy-nf6uh Месяц назад +3

      Growing up in the 60s and you had leftovers on your plate at a restaurant, just asked for a doggy bag. Why would you let good food go to waste. Just pretend you want to give the leftovers to your dog. But if you wanted bones, go to the butcher and they usually gave it to you for free. Don't know how it is now as I don't have a dog.

  • @godfreysanter1565
    @godfreysanter1565 Месяц назад +337

    Re the C word, here's a great exchange in the Australian Federal Parliament a few years ago between the then Prime Minister (Gough Whitlam) and an opposition politician who got on his feet and said: " I'm a country member!". To which Gough immediately replied: "Yes, we remember".

    • @davidhoward4715
      @davidhoward4715 Месяц назад +28

      Ah, Gough!

    • @troglokev
      @troglokev Месяц назад +7

      Ah yes, the late great Sir Winton Turnbull, country member for Wimmera.

    • @threestumps7560
      @threestumps7560 Месяц назад +31

      a few years ago, we mean 50 years ago! 😆😆

    • @wonsworld61
      @wonsworld61 Месяц назад +1

    • @SomeYouTubeGuy
      @SomeYouTubeGuy Месяц назад +14

      A few years ago and Gough Whitlam, really? Stretching the time frame just a smidge there mate.

  • @joletapetty6706
    @joletapetty6706 Месяц назад +170

    "ta" is usually specifically in response to being given something or if you're in a hurry. Also, it's one of the first words we teach a baby, it's a simple word for them to learn when we want them to give something to us or we want to give something to them, eg "ooops, those keys aren't for you. Ta?"

    • @Kleigh8484
      @Kleigh8484 Месяц назад +2

      Or to my dog when i want him to give me something back that he has run off with..."taaaaaaa"

    • @bodybalanceU2
      @bodybalanceU2 Месяц назад +10

      "Ta" is a british slang for thank you which australia and nz adopted

  • @DragonFae16
    @DragonFae16 Месяц назад +60

    Okay, as an Aussie, I am honour bound to say that 'too easy' is usually not said to thank someone but to say that the thing they asked for, for instance, a takeaway meal, is easily done and will be finished quickly, but not as fast as something that gets a 'won't be a minute'. An example if someone orders some fish and chips or a burger or even a drink at the bar, the server will likely say 'Too easy mate'.
    Other common terms:
    Chips are used for both the thin crispy potato chips, French fries and thick-cut ones (which I think Americans might call steak chips?) here.
    All fizzy drinks aside from things like mineral water are called soft drinks here. If you ask an Aussie for a soda, they'll think you want mineral water.

  • @jasminbrett7367
    @jasminbrett7367 Месяц назад +15

    Always saying 'There's ya mate' when you see someone your friend doesn't like...

    • @skan9434
      @skan9434 3 дня назад

      Haha yes, and when they look up to see who it is you get a thump on the arm and a ‘f@&$ off’

  • @lizzieglasswings
    @lizzieglasswings Месяц назад +285

    I am Australian and didn't realise until I moved overseas that the Aus usage of "far out" is not universal. LOL. We use it as an expression of surprise or shock - like if someone told me something awful had happened to them I might say "far out!". Similar in usage to "bloody hell"

    • @leddivah
      @leddivah Месяц назад +17

      far out brussell sprout. I thought "far out" was American? ya know, like "far out dude, that was gnarly". Don't really use "far out" much tbh.

    • @PhilipShand
      @PhilipShand Месяц назад +3

      John Denver was often heard to say "far out".

    • @TheEditor-03030
      @TheEditor-03030 Месяц назад +11

      Far out isn’t universal?!?!?

    • @mattlivingston2192
      @mattlivingston2192 Месяц назад +19

      I always thought "far out" was a way of sanitising your speech for polite company. You might start as if you're gonna drop the F-bomb, but then realise you're about to get a clip around the ear if you finish that thought, so it comes out as "Fuu-aar out!" The same goes for "Sugar!", "Shut the fffront door!", and similar expressions.

    • @bilezy1159
      @bilezy1159 Месяц назад

      I used it when I was young for that exact reason 😊​@@mattlivingston2192

  • @breathewithlilla
    @breathewithlilla Месяц назад +362

    When I moved here my new boss asked me during our shift how I am "travelling"?! I told him all about how sometimes I take the tram, but love to ride my bike more as I like the views etc. It was a 5 minute story. Turns out he wanted to know how I am getting along with my shift. If everything is ok. I was embarrassed but we laughed it off 😂. This question still confuses me after almost 10 years here.

    • @joletapetty6706
      @joletapetty6706 Месяц назад +37

      It's just an extension of "how are you going" - when you're going, you're travelling somewhere

    • @hubey
      @hubey Месяц назад +18

      Because life is a journey, and we travel it's passage of time; even during work we're traveling through the human experience on Earth.

    • @izaak24
      @izaak24 Месяц назад +8

      ​@@joletapetty6706Was literally just about to say this. Just treat it as how're you.

    • @SomeYouTubeGuy
      @SomeYouTubeGuy Месяц назад +6

      When I was at boarding school here in Australia one of the boys asked the male dorm leader "how's it hanging" it meant how's things or how are you getting on?

    • @Siberius-
      @Siberius- Месяц назад +1

      ​@@SomeRUclipsGuy - "Hey, the Big M! How's it hanging, McFly?"
      -Needles to Marty McFly

  • @PeterThompson-qj2lm
    @PeterThompson-qj2lm Месяц назад +132

    Most of them are correct but it also depends on where you are. I'm a country bloke and we use slang all the time. Use G'day everyday all day. Amazed you haven't heard, No worries or No probs. Another old one I use at work is that we go for Smoko ( morning tea.) or Tie on the nosebag (What they use to feed horses) Unfortunately a lot of our slang has died out in the cities and with youngsters adopting American slang.

    • @novamorgan8549
      @novamorgan8549 Месяц назад +1

      what about "no wukkers" ?

    • @wendymortimer6862
      @wendymortimer6862 Месяц назад

      I hate that!

    • @McOwnage
      @McOwnage Месяц назад +5

      No wucking forries

    • @ettaplace800
      @ettaplace800 24 дня назад

      Bloody Oath

    • @Thornsawawa
      @Thornsawawa 20 дней назад

      I live in the urban area of perth and i use a ton of this slang n stuff without even realising it was slang xD

  • @fionaorton7076
    @fionaorton7076 Месяц назад +22

    Youve done really well with this list. I've watched lots of similar videos but you really picked up the vibe. Love your natural curiosity 😊

    • @ghegypt
      @ghegypt День назад

      I agree 👍🏼

  • @GregoryBamber
    @GregoryBamber Месяц назад +13

    If someone wants a fight they say " Have a go ya mug".

  • @StephenAngelico
    @StephenAngelico Месяц назад +253

    "Ute" is short for utility vehicle. A ute is not a truck, because "truck" in NA can mean anything from a ute, a small truck that's still the size of a car, up to a big rig. The ute is an Australian innovation that America has adopted (in the case of the F150, to a ridiculous degree) which was originally designed on request by a farmer's wife who wanted one vehicle which could "Take the kids to church on Sunday and the pigs to market on Monday". The ute has somewhat evolved since then but it's still generally a car cabin (even if it's 2-seat) with a flatbed rear.

    • @chriswatson1698
      @chriswatson1698 Месяц назад +12

      Yes. The Holden car came in various versions with the same front cab and engine. There was a sedan, a station wagon, a van and a ute.

    • @tomasz89g
      @tomasz89g Месяц назад +3

      And the boot/trunk one still awaiting discovery..

    • @MelanieK-winencheeze
      @MelanieK-winencheeze Месяц назад +6

      And you’re not allowed to transport your kids in the back of the ute these days! 😂

    • @techbio
      @techbio Месяц назад +3

      A style side rear originally not a flatbed.

    • @Dave-Rough-Diamond-Dunn
      @Dave-Rough-Diamond-Dunn Месяц назад

      My grandfather called them "buckboards" after the horse drawn version.

  • @ljtb
    @ljtb Месяц назад +139

    Doggie bag, because you are taking the leftovers home for 'the dog to eat'. But, you are really going to eat it later.

  • @Sani440
    @Sani440 Месяц назад +122

    I’m Aussie. Haven’t heard of a few of those examples, but every State has its idiosyncrasies. Also the older Aussies have different terms that they use, than younger Aussies.

    • @stevesheppard7116
      @stevesheppard7116 Месяц назад +7

      Yes, some words like cobber, dinkum, blue (for a ranga) gradually seem to be disappearing.

    • @bluewren65
      @bluewren65 Месяц назад +5

      @@stevesheppard7116 Cobber is still firmly in use in Tassie.

    • @Nonie_Jay
      @Nonie_Jay Месяц назад +11

      When we moved from Victoria to Queensland years ago, at work I kept hearing people talking about some bloke called old mate. I keep wondering who this person was. It took me weeks to realise that they referred to almost everyone as old mate 😂

    • @intothenight756d47
      @intothenight756d47 Месяц назад

      ​@@stevesheppard7116lefties use cobber etc disparagingly to mock the Australians they hate. You'll see it written bit not spoken.

    • @resourcedragon
      @resourcedragon Месяц назад +2

      @@Nonie_Jay: Ah, yes! Old Mate and Old Love. Old Mate is the person that puts the empty bottle of milk back in the refrigerator. Old Mate is the forklift operator that manages to prang into the lintel. Old Mate is the person that doesn't tighten the bolts properly when they change a tyre. Old Love is the feminine form of Old Mate.

  • @diggerdug6247
    @diggerdug6247 20 дней назад +5

    A stubby is typically 375ml and a bottle is normally 750ml.

  • @3thenet
    @3thenet 23 дня назад +9

    Tinnie can also be used to refer to a small metal motorboat, one you'd typically fish from on a lake/river. You can enjoy a tinnie in your tinnie and you're drinking beer on a boat

  • @JohnHollands
    @JohnHollands Месяц назад +180

    Some expressions go through a kind of evolution. Like no worries becomes no f*cking worries which becomes (reverse the letters) no wukking furries and that becomes no wukkers. So if someone says no wukkers they mean no worries.

    • @dark3031
      @dark3031 Месяц назад +3

      I would think they use "no worries" the same way as "you're welcome".

    • @georgescott6967
      @georgescott6967 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@dark3031"no worries" is very like "no problem" - I was happy to do it, it didn't cause me any problems (or worries). Yes, similar to "you are welcome" (certainly used in the same context), but for some reason feels different.

    • @SomeYouTubeGuy
      @SomeYouTubeGuy Месяц назад +4

      Yeah I use no wukkers all the time.,

    • @Siberius-
      @Siberius- Месяц назад +2

      That sounds like a very specific region of Australia... I don't get out much though

    • @georgescott6967
      @georgescott6967 Месяц назад

      I have a vague memory that this spoonerism came from a comedy routine in the 80's - no idea if they invented it or not, but would have popularised it. I want to say Monty Python but my memory is nowhere near that good!

  • @samwoods58
    @samwoods58 Месяц назад +256

    We do not say "how are you going?" we say "howyagarn?"

  • @Willoism
    @Willoism Месяц назад +264

    I love that you use the word cun£, but refrain from saying dog shit.

    • @imoverthetop44
      @imoverthetop44 Месяц назад +5

      People who have limited vocabulary do use the C word a lot.

    • @reinerdykeman
      @reinerdykeman Месяц назад +1

      @@imoverthetop44 hahahaha also the person being called a c*unt is usually limited in their vocabulary lol

    • @hoodyboody
      @hoodyboody Месяц назад

      @@imoverthetop44 What a load of shit. Fuck off with this idea that swear words are for stupid people. Swearing has a huge place in Australian culture, and they're great expressive words. It also doesn't make you a better person for having a larger vocab. It's a classist perspective set out by the people enforcing it. Its your own rule that only you play by, and if you think knowing more words than someone makes you a better person than them, someone with even more words will treat YOU like the dumbass, so shut the fuck up with this rhetoric that swear words are for people with a low vocabulary.

    • @spinnymathingy3149
      @spinnymathingy3149 Месяц назад +19

      @@imoverthetop44not so, every culture, every local dialect has a vastly different vocabulary. Don’t assume that your version of language is the only one.

    • @kimjong-un8543
      @kimjong-un8543 Месяц назад +8

      @@spinnymathingy3149 I do think its true that most australians who regularly use the c word are probably not very well educated or are in a low socioeconomic situation

  • @rebzeb5814
    @rebzeb5814 Месяц назад +7

    As an Aussie, enjoyed it! Hope you enjoy your time here

  • @Penny-16
    @Penny-16 20 дней назад +5

    1:43 actually most people don’t say it all the time. It’s considered the strongest of the swear words and very impolite. There are some people who think it’s ok, but they are few and far between.

    • @matty623
      @matty623 20 дней назад +3

      You must have a posh upbringing. In parts of Australia, it is quite common.

    • @Penny-16
      @Penny-16 20 дней назад

      @@matty623 my mum was on the widows pension. No posh upbringing here. Maybe it’s because I’m in my 40s. Different generation. I had some mates that would say it a bit. They were guys between 17-23 and tradies.

    • @DedMan516
      @DedMan516 19 дней назад +2

      Definitely generational difference ​@@Penny-16

    • @matthiasdotb
      @matthiasdotb 15 дней назад +2

      It's absolutely endemic, in my circles. Not criticising, we all have different experiences, but it truly is common in Australia.

    • @nicoletteralfe733
      @nicoletteralfe733 3 дня назад

      Not posh here, but I don’t hear it unless it’s out of a really bogan mouth.

  • @b0o0dlesn0o0dles
    @b0o0dlesn0o0dles Месяц назад +246

    Can’t believe you didn’t talk about the yeah nah nah yeah but like yeah nah

  • @marksmart9754
    @marksmart9754 Месяц назад +64

    Tinnie is also used for a small Aluminium boat. Stubbiest are also shorts. You forgot we wear our thongs on our feet.

  • @andrew051968
    @andrew051968 Месяц назад +73

    Some clarifications.
    Snags are sausages - not hot dogs. We have hot dogs in buns & sausages in bread.
    "Stubby" also means "Short/thick" - Stubbies are (usually) 375ml and shorter and fatter than a "tallie" or "longneck" (tall 750ml bottle) of beer.
    A lot words (like lollies / sweets / sweeties / bathers / chips / tomato sauce / service station etc) come from England.
    Also, a lot of Australian words come from dropping the last syllable and adding a vowel to the end. So Bottle shop becomes bottle-o, Service station becomes serv-o,, underpands become undies.
    Then you also get some rhyming slang - like undies become reg-grundies etc.
    Names can also vary between states too. In QLD they have "potato scallops" in Victoria they're "potato cakes".

    • @ianmynard431
      @ianmynard431 Месяц назад +7

      a Tinny is can of beer, or small runnabout boat. Stubbies are also bogan shorts traditionally worn with a darkblue faded singlet with holes (LOL)!!!

    • @221BBakerStreet
      @221BBakerStreet Месяц назад +3

      I seriously doubt that anyone outside of Australia and Aussies below a certain age, are gonna know who Reg Grundie is.

    • @andrew051968
      @andrew051968 Месяц назад

      @@221BBakerStreetprobably but they can look it up.
      He died a few days sgo.

    • @gravyz2cute4u
      @gravyz2cute4u Месяц назад +4

      Also togs for swimmers/bathers. I didn't realise togs was a Qld thing until I moved to SA >_

    • @221BBakerStreet
      @221BBakerStreet Месяц назад

      @@andrew051968 Wow, he must have been a pretty good age then. He was an Aussie icon. Thank you for a lifetime of entertainment Reg. RIP.

  • @susanmiles5895
    @susanmiles5895 20 дней назад +5

    My hubby asks me ‘what do you want for tea?’ Threw me for a while, it’s supper/dinner.

    • @marymarlow3646
      @marymarlow3646 18 дней назад

      Ah! You’re a queenslander? Or just rural?

    • @susanmiles5895
      @susanmiles5895 18 дней назад

      @@marymarlow3646 My hubby is from Victoria. Echuca area.

    • @caretakerfochr3834
      @caretakerfochr3834 10 дней назад

      Yes tea time was the evening meal but dinner was often casually used to refer to lunch.

    • @catinthehat1486
      @catinthehat1486 6 дней назад

      Very kiwi.

  • @DPM666
    @DPM666 5 дней назад +2

    Sgarnon is one of our underrated greats. It can be a friendly start to any convo ("sgarnon cobber?") it can be pitched a bit different in like a cheeky way if someone is indulging in something or another and you want to get involved ("oh ho, sgarnon over here then!") or it can be the start of a strong reprimand if someone is doing something they shouldn't ("Fucks garnon over here?")

  • @SH-ib5nn
    @SH-ib5nn Месяц назад +96

    Struth that sheila forgot the "She'll be right, mate. " :)

    • @lillywildflower
      @lillywildflower Месяц назад +3

      Onya mate 😂

    • @edjavas
      @edjavas Месяц назад +1

      No woz...

    • @jublywubly
      @jublywubly Месяц назад +3

      That's fair dinkum.

    • @zazita7333
      @zazita7333 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@edjavas or " no wuckers " in this little corner of Tassie.

    • @edjavas
      @edjavas Месяц назад

      @@zazita7333 I love that

  • @vickersonp
    @vickersonp Месяц назад +105

    Here’s one for you…..”spit the dummy”. If someone spits the dummy it means they are having a temper tantrum .

    • @SlimjimMK11
      @SlimjimMK11 Месяц назад

      You forgot to mention that the DUMMY is a substitute for a nipple..
      Called a SOOTHER in many countries..
      Good call to bring that one up ..

    • @richardthomson4693
      @richardthomson4693 Месяц назад +3

      heard dummy spit fairly regularly when I was in the US. Think its a worldwide thing

    • @disaster_chief
      @disaster_chief Месяц назад +7

      Or they're chuckin a tanty

    • @doshwhop
      @doshwhop Месяц назад +5

      Along those lines, is "crack the s**ts" a strictly Australian one? I feel like it is but I'm genuinely not sure.

    • @Siberius-
      @Siberius- Месяц назад +8

      ​@@doshwhop - From memory, Americans are very perplexed by "I've got the shits", In Australia meaning that you're quite cranky. Since in America that means you are frequently visiting the toilet. Now, in Australia I think people would generally understand both meanings, it would just depend on how the line is delivered and the context

  • @rickymoore7520
    @rickymoore7520 Месяц назад +68

    Deadset = I'm serious. Or, are you serious?.

  • @Camouflage2770
    @Camouflage2770 29 дней назад +3

    Aussies have a lot of funny sayings like “dryer than a dead dingoes donga” or my personal favourite “happy as a dog with 2 tails”

  • @lauriedmills7581
    @lauriedmills7581 Месяц назад +41

    Australia is a very big country and each state/territory has its unique characteristics including different accents and slang. It also depends on if you’re in a capital city, big town or out bush. I don’t know who you’re interacting with who says “c$nt” all the time but in many groups of people that is foul-mouthed and unacceptable so be careful where you say it (if you do). Enjoy your time here :).

    • @bevbarry9637
      @bevbarry9637 Месяц назад +1

      In the way that my generation started throwing "f*ck" around like it was an everyday word, the younger generations do that now with "c*nt". I spent a lot of my time in my 30s in pubs and it was just another word with that crowd.

    • @Walleyedwosaik
      @Walleyedwosaik 20 дней назад +4

      QUEEEEENSLANDEEERRRS or anywhere that's rural and full of bogans like parts of WA northern NSW (probably in the Northern Territory and SA too but I havan't spent much time there) all of these places are where you'll hear it the most in my experience also from teenagers/young adults

    • @Thornsawawa
      @Thornsawawa 20 дней назад +3

      LMAO i live in perth and literally nobody cares about swearing here (its still seen as cringe if you obsessively swear more than is reasonable without trying to swear cuz. just use it as a normal word)

    • @marymarlow3646
      @marymarlow3646 18 дней назад

      Loosen up. I never use the word. But I don’t of anyone including myself who finds it unacceptable. Are you a church goer?

    • @lauriedmills7581
      @lauriedmills7581 18 дней назад +1

      @@marymarlow3646 I’m not worried about it so don’t need to loosen up ;). Was just saying that some parts of our society don’t appreciate such language so just be aware of it. I am a Believer, yes, but don’t impose my beliefs on those who aren’t. I don’t really see how my personal beliefs account for the variation in accepted language in our society? Is letting her know to be aware of these differences such an issue if it helps her avoid an embarrassing situation?

  • @Bodkin_Ye_Pointy
    @Bodkin_Ye_Pointy Месяц назад +52

    You didn't mention, "No worries".

  • @Tasoq
    @Tasoq Месяц назад +26

    I've never heard someone say "thanking you" so that one was weird to me

    • @Dharma_Bum
      @Dharma_Bum Месяц назад +4

      I hear it all the time 🤷‍♂️

    • @rachelkillcare5203
      @rachelkillcare5203 19 дней назад +2

      I say it maybe it varies state to state?

  • @anthonya7066
    @anthonya7066 Месяц назад +36

    "No kidding". "Pull the other one". "Mad as a cut snake". "Few Roos loose in the top paddock".

    • @mikeyhau
      @mikeyhau Месяц назад

      A sandwich short of a picnic, as much use as a knitted condom, he's the reason for warning labels.

    • @kipplewitz
      @kipplewitz Месяц назад +3

      "Went off like a frog in a sock"

    • @barbaragare9518
      @barbaragare9518 26 дней назад

      A sausage short of a barbie :-)

    • @barbaragare9518
      @barbaragare9518 3 дня назад

      (Alternatively, a banger short of a barbie)

  • @kappy-nf6uh
    @kappy-nf6uh Месяц назад +8

    Lived in California five years and certainly raised a few eyebrows with the Aussie lingo, one in particular is "spat the dummy." Thought the expression was universal.

    • @donperegrine922
      @donperegrine922 15 дней назад +1

      Spat the dummy is so evocative!

    • @kappy-nf6uh
      @kappy-nf6uh 15 дней назад +1

      @@donperegrine922 Americans call a dummy pacifier. It doesn't sound so evocative when you say, "Spat the pacifier."

    • @donperegrine922
      @donperegrine922 15 дней назад +1

      @@kappy-nf6uh spat the paccy?!

    • @kappy-nf6uh
      @kappy-nf6uh 14 дней назад

      @@donperegrine922 Good one 😂

  • @katetucker1452
    @katetucker1452 Месяц назад +32

    One of the differences I notice most is, in Australia, we say "I couldn't care less" versus in the US/Canada they say "I COULD care less" (both meaning the same thing).

    • @Nonie_Jay
      @Nonie_Jay Месяц назад +10

      Only the people who get the saying wrong say could instead of couldn't. A lot of Americans I've heard do use it correctly.

    • @resourcedragon
      @resourcedragon Месяц назад +17

      One makes logical sense "I couldn't care less," the other does not, because if you could care less then you must care at least a little bit.

    • @jublywubly
      @jublywubly Месяц назад

      That's because Americans are a bit dimwitted, when it comes to language skills. People in the U.S.A. also say "I lucked out" meaning they were lucky, but they also say it if they were unlucky. (I presume it's a gambling term from using poker machines where the money comes out.)
      A few more new nonsensical phrases from the U.S.A. are:
      Demonstrable - The real word is Demonstrative
      Incentivize - The real word is Entice
      Longevity - The real word is Durability
      U.S.A: Polluting the English language since 1776.

    • @twodogswalking840
      @twodogswalking840 24 дня назад +1

      @@resourcedragon Exactly!

    • @twodogswalking840
      @twodogswalking840 24 дня назад +1

      Both are supposed to mean the same thing but one is definitely incorrect. If one couldn't care less then that means you don't care at all. Not in the slightest but if you could care less then you still care. There's still a way to go to not care at all. The Americans just got used to saying it the wrong way even though it doesn't make any sense. Not unlike the word nuclear. Most Americans know how it's spelled and know how it should be pronounced but they still choose to say what the majority say. NEW-Q-LA.

  • @paulbenj1277
    @paulbenj1277 Месяц назад +33

    "Go for your life!" meaning 'you are allowed to...(do whatever you were asking permission to do)'.
    I've seen Americans turn and leave with a worried look on their faces when I've responded in this way to their request.😅

  • @kindrayvette4573
    @kindrayvette4573 Месяц назад +101

    Im australian and I've never heard "thanking you"
    A bbq sausage is completely different to a hot dog
    Stubbies, as in the beer, not to be confused with stubby shorts

    • @davidhoward4715
      @davidhoward4715 Месяц назад +10

      My parents used "Thanking you" all the time.

    • @sabbathguy1
      @sabbathguy1 Месяц назад +4

      Usually those in customer service saying something like "thanking you kindly" upon payment or whatever, I hear it pretty often

    • @MseeBMe
      @MseeBMe Месяц назад +2

      I’ve heard “thanking you” heaps, it’s usually in a retail transaction setting though. Don’t think I’ve ever heard it used in a friendly personal conversation.

    • @TheProteanGeek
      @TheProteanGeek Месяц назад +1

      I say "thanking you" but mostly in a really stupid voice and completely because of I R Baboon. It was an inside joke with my sister after we both saw the bit.

    • @KarnageGaming
      @KarnageGaming Месяц назад +3

      isnt there version of a hotdog isnt that what we call frankfurts?

  • @tejmar
    @tejmar Месяц назад +3

    "You right mate?" gets used a lot..... inquiring if someone needs help or is in trouble

  • @RetroBackslash
    @RetroBackslash Месяц назад +5

    Never heard fellow Australians use "It's alright" in that way - always, always, "No worries" or "No problem"

    • @jim6038
      @jim6038 21 день назад

      Nah, definitely correct. When someone might screw something up and they might be a bit down on themselves, it proper to say "its alright". Same as 'it's alright, mate", never mind, mate, she'll be right".
      Same for when you pay for someone for something, and they offer to repay as a courtesy, but you weren't thinking about them needing to repay ya, so you say, "it's alright, mate." Maybe i've got this" or "i've got it covered", or it's sorted, no wuckers".
      Very common

    • @depepf3514
      @depepf3514 20 дней назад

      yeah definitely less common, but also I'm pretty sure it's "all right" not "alright", essentially the same as "all good" or "all goods"

  • @bunniebie
    @bunniebie Месяц назад +64

    i'm aussie and work remotely with a bunch of translators based throughout south east asia. imagine my surprise when i was talking about spruiking something and everyone looked at me like i had two heads. went my entire life until that point not knowing that spruik was an australianism.

    • @HughCStevenson1
      @HughCStevenson1 Месяц назад +3

      It is Afrikaans I think. Pronounced spraking? Who can confirm??

    • @richardrejmer8721
      @richardrejmer8721 Месяц назад +13

      A 'spruiker' was a person who worked at the fairgrounds. They stood outside the sideshow tent, loudly proclaiming the wonderous things to be experienced inside if you just pay the small price of admission. . Talking things up and promoting themselves or the business . . What the Americans might call a huckster or pitchman.
      The origin of the word is probably from Dutch - for example 'spraak' (meaning “speech”), 'spreek' (to “speak”), or the Dutch word 'spreuk' (“saying”)
      So in Australian slang to 'spruik' something is to talk it up/promote or advertise something

    • @neilcaldwell8313
      @neilcaldwell8313 Месяц назад +1

      @@richardrejmer8721 I think it may be Germanic in origin as "speak" is sprechen in German, and spruik may have been borrowed from the German Sprüche meaning “patter, spiel,”. Gotta say that the Dutch word is more closely aligned to Spruik from a letter perspective.

    • @tosgem
      @tosgem Месяц назад

      @@HughCStevenson1 regarding the prononciation, no, we don't say "spraking", we say it closer to how it is written. "Sproo-ick-ah"

    • @bunniebie
      @bunniebie Месяц назад +1

      @@HughCStevenson1 pronounced sproo-ick

  • @__Beant__
    @__Beant__ Месяц назад +39

    Australians, Kiwis and Scottish people have a much more nuanced grasp of the c-bomb that most other cultures. When I hear an American use it, I cringe. It sounds so offensive. But Aussies use as both as an insult or a term of endearment.
    Also got to check out "get a dog up ya"

    • @blackletter2591
      @blackletter2591 Месяц назад +3

      That last one derives from the 'hair of the dog' expression. Ie, have another drink.

    • @johnphaceas7434
      @johnphaceas7434 22 дня назад

      totally agree on c**t. It's a very flexible term. I'd argue that the most disparaging name you can call someone here is actually D**khead. It's what you call someone when they are so lacking in substance, of so little relevance to your life, that they are not even worth calling c**t.

  • @michaelgrantham125
    @michaelgrantham125 Месяц назад +44

    In South Australia we use the word "Heaps" alot. As in "thats heaps good". Thats very good.

    • @MseeBMe
      @MseeBMe Месяц назад +3

      We use that here in VIC as well.

    • @GarnetDart
      @GarnetDart Месяц назад

      @@MseeBMe Stop saying it. Leave that silliness to the crow eaters

    • @burger_roo
      @burger_roo Месяц назад +1

      that's a kiwi thing too 🤣🇳🇿🥝

    • @crystalgriffiths
      @crystalgriffiths Месяц назад

      Canadians apparently say “heaps” heaps. According to people from USA

    • @kylieh3329
      @kylieh3329 Месяц назад

      And NSW. I use it lots, especially when I'm extra grateful... thanks heaps.

  • @classydays43
    @classydays43 20 дней назад +2

    Another one you might hear is "I'm keen" which can be extended to "keen as mustard". Keen is a term expressing interest, and "Keens" is a brand of mustard powder, so it became a running joke that mustard powder was the ultimate form of expressing interest or excitement.

  • @ettaplace800
    @ettaplace800 24 дня назад +1

    I said “let’s have a sticky beak in this shop” and my Scottish friend who had migrated to Australia had no idea what i was talking about. I thought everyone used that expression. My other favourite are ‘hoo roo” and “strewth”

  • @c0oldug273
    @c0oldug273 Месяц назад +30

    My friend from america was hysterical about me saying “what are you on about”(basically what are you saying/ rambling on about) also alot of people instead of yall or youse its “you lot”

    • @caram3llaxoxo
      @caram3llaxoxo Месяц назад +4

      I say this all the time lol I never realised only Australians say that😭

    • @davidhoward4715
      @davidhoward4715 Месяц назад +1

      @@caram3llaxoxo Same here. I'm shocked!

    • @Thornsawawa
      @Thornsawawa 20 дней назад +1

      what are you on about is SLANG/1/!/!?!

    • @BoogieManSince1977
      @BoogieManSince1977 13 дней назад

      @@Thornsawawa no... "Wot are you on c**t" is tho :D

  • @tsumikrin4364
    @tsumikrin4364 Месяц назад +18

    "A blue" or "Having a blue" meaning a fight, or argument. "Had a bit of a blue with the missus, did ya?"

    • @petersabolewsky4983
      @petersabolewsky4983 29 дней назад

      A blue is also called a Donnybrook but not so much these days

    • @caretakerfochr3834
      @caretakerfochr3834 10 дней назад

      That's military jargon. An accidental fight between units of the same side (thinking they were enemy) is called "blue on blue". A LOT of casualties in war occur because of these blue on blue events.

  • @christopheryoung3850
    @christopheryoung3850 Месяц назад +31

    Also as generally an Australian if we call you Pal, Buddy or Sport you are not our mate/friend, but if we swear at you, you probably are our mate/friend...loll...😜

    • @zizhiqu
      @zizhiqu Месяц назад

      Some Australians have the knack of saying "mate" with the same menacing threat as "cunt". If it's at the start of the sentence it's probably fine, but at at the end it can be a sign of extreme contempt.

    • @davidhoward4715
      @davidhoward4715 Месяц назад +5

      I have only called someone "Buddy" once. I was shouting at him. I also called him other things.

    • @bluewren65
      @bluewren65 Месяц назад +5

      If someone called me Sport I'd be very, very afraid.

    • @kylieh3329
      @kylieh3329 Месяц назад +2

      Yes, if we hear "look pal" we know things aren't going to be friendly.

  • @silverstreettalks343
    @silverstreettalks343 Месяц назад +1

    Interestingly, "bottle-o" is a fairly new term.
    Before most liquid and posters came in plastic containers, they came in glass bottles and jars.
    There were so many, they became a nuisance to deal with. In fact, my father put a small, sheltered extension onto our backyard shed, just to hold washed, empty bottles.
    Every few months, the bottle-o came around to collect empty bottles. He or she (I met a couple who both did the rounds) would sort and sell the bottles. Companies like Coca Cola of course wanted their own burgers back to refill.
    It was a backyard business that could support someone with a "ute" and a shed to work in.

  • @tonehome1
    @tonehome1 24 дня назад +2

    The most obvious one she misses, except for “ yeah, it’s pissin down”, is “you’re right” for ‘your good’, or ’no worries’, or ‘not a problem’ and “are you right?”, for ‘are you ok?’, or ‘have you had enough?’..

  • @gnawman62
    @gnawman62 Месяц назад +13

    My wife and I were discussing a few Australian-isms the other day, and how a foreigner might interpret them. (We're Australian, by the way.) One I thought would be more than a bit confusing is 'chuck a you-ie,' which means to perform a U turn.

  • @punkrockzoologist9449
    @punkrockzoologist9449 Месяц назад +42

    I'm learning we have a lot of different words for "no problem".
    "Ranga" is derived from Orang-Utan, because they have orange fur.

    • @SK-zi3sr
      @SK-zi3sr Месяц назад +1

      Even tho we pronounce it orang-atang

    • @PineappleSkip
      @PineappleSkip Месяц назад

      Thank you. Boomer here who has never heard it. Mentioned it to the missus and she was dumbstruck. I need to get out more.

    • @punkrockzoologist9449
      @punkrockzoologist9449 Месяц назад +2

      @@PineappleSkip It probably came about in the 2000s. I remember a lot of people saying it at high school back then. Summer Heights High definitely popularised it.

    • @petersabolewsky4983
      @petersabolewsky4983 29 дней назад

      For awhile, I thought the Ford Ranger was built for red heads, and before all youse boof heads get ya knickers in a knot, I am a ranger😂

    • @johnphaceas7434
      @johnphaceas7434 24 дня назад +2

      @@punkrockzoologist9449 nah, we called Gingas Rangas and vice versa when I was at school in the '70s and' 80s. (yep Gingas ...)

  • @thermitebanana
    @thermitebanana Месяц назад +14

    Australians actually do say "G'day mate"....I started saying it ironically but now sometimes it just comes out naturally and I can't help it

    • @bluewren65
      @bluewren65 Месяц назад +2

      Very common usage in Victoria and Tassie.

  • @barsixful
    @barsixful 18 дней назад +1

    We often say SWEET… means it’s ok. No probs….my daughter just came back from Calgary after few years. Misses it

  • @misseagle39
    @misseagle39 24 дня назад +1

    A term I use a lot is “hold ya horses” which means be patient, wait, hold on

  • @vincegrant3450
    @vincegrant3450 Месяц назад +18

    Dunny = Toilet
    Hit the frog and toad = To drive away (Road)
    Dead horse = Sauce

    • @maximillianford9301
      @maximillianford9301 Месяц назад +2

      Not that commonly used anymore, though. Dunny probably gets some use out in the country but the others are basically more symbolic at this point. Like we used to say them and we're hanging onto them for grim life even though they've gone out of circulation

    • @EmEm78
      @EmEm78 Месяц назад +1

      I think you'll find those last two are Cockney rhyming slang, although it was used a fair bit here in Aus in former years too.

    • @lincstuff
      @lincstuff 28 дней назад

      Crashing out hey. Gonna hit the Fart Sack.

    • @BoogieManSince1977
      @BoogieManSince1977 13 дней назад

      @@EmEm78 hahaha of course it is, that's how it ended up here ^_^ ... they weren't sending Aristocrats here mate :D

  • @Rockhopper1163
    @Rockhopper1163 Месяц назад +11

    Getting pissed = getting drunk (as opposed to getting angry)

    • @gavanwhatever8196
      @gavanwhatever8196 Месяц назад +1

      Getting pissed off = getting angry (as opposed to getting drunk)...

    • @aarono3548
      @aarono3548 23 дня назад

      Whereas taking a piss is taking a "slash"

  • @buriedtoodeep6800
    @buriedtoodeep6800 Месяц назад +10

    My favourite one to use is “ she’ll be right mate”
    Oh and don’t forget context of the word mate changes a lot here too.

  • @heatherwoods5469
    @heatherwoods5469 28 дней назад +1

    I arrived in Australia 1976. The first expression I heard was “I feel crook” it means “ I feel sick (or ill)”. I was a nurse in a hospital so I heard this expression a lot. I am now retired living with my family in Melbourne.

  • @ssj2gohan48
    @ssj2gohan48 Месяц назад +5

    Alcohol comes in 3 sizes. Tinny, Stubby (small bottle) and long neck (big bottle). Those are from bottle shops.

    • @rayniebee
      @rayniebee Месяц назад +1

      My dad calls long necks "tallies", but I don't hear it very often elsewhere.

    • @teatowel11
      @teatowel11 Месяц назад

      A true tallie is bigger than a longneck.

    • @timjude
      @timjude 28 дней назад

      Also the Darwin Stubby. Bigger than a long neck.

  • @shawnduddridge
    @shawnduddridge Месяц назад +28

    "No worries" is one of the most common expressions of all time in Australia. In fact you had 2 opportunities to say it in this video but instead chose much less common expressions of the same meaning, like 'its allright'..
    Most of the ones you brought up are spot on, but there was a few there that are not very common or very modern or localised.
    Australia these days is actually in a bit of an identity crisis.. because we are unfortunately so Americanised these days, much of the younger generations in the cities dont really have that much of a connection to the legit old aussie culture, most of which you find only outside of the cities.. its being constantly diluted by American influence, obcession with social media etc..

    • @mrmagoo2255
      @mrmagoo2255 Месяц назад +3

      Shityeah.

    • @Evelyn-rb1zj
      @Evelyn-rb1zj Месяц назад

      Yeah It's interesting to hear the difference in the way my younger brother and I talk, I use more Aussie and English slang but he's way more American (we all teased him relentlessly about his "Toosday" and "Noo(s)" pronunciations "It's Tuesday/New(s) mate" "You better not start saying 'mom' too" he is growing out of it though)

    • @rayniebee
      @rayniebee Месяц назад +1

      I don't think it's inherently good or bad, it's just how it is. Language isn't static, and is always changing. The way younger generations speak is legit to them, and will seem old-fashioned to their kids or grandkids too.

    • @shawnduddridge
      @shawnduddridge Месяц назад +3

      @rayniebee My 5 year old niece speaks with an American accent half the time because she's so addicted to her tablet... Now that's a pretty extreme example i know, but i think there is definitely such a thing as too much foreign influence.
      Especially if its coming from an unhealthy obcession with technology and entertainment.
      And its not just language im referring to, unfortunately we've picked up a lot of bad habits and attitudes from the US as well, and lost a lot of national pride as a result. Its not healthy to emulate another culture too much, and especially a culture that is so unhealthy itself!

    • @EmEm78
      @EmEm78 Месяц назад +6

      ​@@Evelyn-rb1zjomg, I gave my kids so much shit about pronouncing tomato "tomayto" like an American, until they finally started saying it properly now. They both picked that shit up online, along with calling the letter "z" zee instead of zed. For some reason, it always horrifies me to hear them default to Americanisms, like I've somehow failed as an Australian parent 😂

  • @ReformedBaptist.1689
    @ReformedBaptist.1689 Месяц назад +13

    When we were kids, and we gave a lift to a friend on a bicycle, we would call it a "dink" or a "double". And if somebody stole something, we would say they "taxed it". But that depends on whether you're in Queensland or Victoria or somewhere else.

  • @sigmaoctantis1892
    @sigmaoctantis1892 Месяц назад +37

    Both "far out" and "doggy bag" come from the US. I remember first hearing the term "doggy bag" spoken in American TV programs when I was a kid (I'm talking black and white TV here). I recall Maxwell Smart (Don Adams) saying it in 'Get Smart' (1965-70). 'Far out' is a hippy era expression which I used a lot in my university days.

    • @snuscaboose1942
      @snuscaboose1942 Месяц назад +2

      Far out man...

    • @tomasz89g
      @tomasz89g Месяц назад

      Back to the Future 3 - the Frisbee. Maybe as she is from Canada..

    • @sigmaoctantis1892
      @sigmaoctantis1892 Месяц назад

      @@tomasz89g In the Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers comic, Frisbee was a cat that got run over by a road roller. Frisbee's remains, when peeled off the road, served as the origin of the game!

    • @tomasz89g
      @tomasz89g Месяц назад

      @@sigmaoctantis1892 Indeed, learned something new. I was referring to "far out" - Marty McFly said it in response to the frisbee and the folks in 1885 were also confused because "it was right there in front of him".

    • @sigmaoctantis1892
      @sigmaoctantis1892 Месяц назад +1

      @@tomasz89g I was continuing with my memories from 1970. Just checked, the spinning disc toy dates from the late 1930s but was not called a "frisbee" until 1957.
      Although, "Heavy!"
      "Is there a problem with gravity in the future?" did amuse me.

  • @youraveragefan6953
    @youraveragefan6953 20 дней назад +2

    I don’t know the origin of “ta” but it’s usually what we get taught to say when “thank you” is too hard as little childers, some people stop using it as they get older while other continue to use it, probably because it’s quicker.
    Edit: also, a “sanga” is just any sandwich

  • @LynGoulding-sx6hb
    @LynGoulding-sx6hb Месяц назад +1

    When I am in a shop and someone asks if I need help, I have a habit of replying " I just having a squiz" meaning I am just looking

  • @SteelYoG1rl
    @SteelYoG1rl Месяц назад +12

    "tell your story walking" as take a hike / get out of here
    always makes me laugh

    • @FromTheGong
      @FromTheGong Месяц назад +3

      ???

    • @leechgully
      @leechgully Месяц назад +2

      ????

    • @bilezy1159
      @bilezy1159 Месяц назад +1

      Great saying use it always some youngsters might not have heard it ,but it's a classic

    • @claremiller9979
      @claremiller9979 Месяц назад +1

      I say that to my kids all the damn time, mostly because i need them to go somewhere and they won't stop talking 😂

    • @leechgully
      @leechgully Месяц назад +1

      @bilezy1159 I'm 64 . Lived in Australia all my life and it's news to me.

  • @sallycurrie2718
    @sallycurrie2718 Месяц назад +36

    In semi rural towns in Tasmania, they call Coke, Pepsi, Fanta, etc, Cordial.
    As in, how about a 1.25L cordial with your pizza.
    I moved from Canberra to Tasmania, and when I first noticed '1.25L Cordial' written on a menu, I asked my Tasmanian friend "if you call fizzy/soft drinks cordial then what do you call cordial?"
    Lol he said..
    "Mix up".
    Fuck I laughed.

    • @xsveron1287
      @xsveron1287 Месяц назад +1

      well they are to close to nz

    • @loosegoose9647
      @loosegoose9647 Месяц назад +8

      let's be real, that's nowhere near the weirdest thing that goes on in Tasmania.

    • @jamescollins8397
      @jamescollins8397 Месяц назад

      @@loosegoose9647 Yeah, but it's mainly from visitors to the isle.... we have become accustomed to their 'weird' tho.

    • @bradmcmahon3156
      @bradmcmahon3156 Месяц назад +1

      It's becoming less common now. I hardly ever hear someone ask for a can of cordial as much anymore.

    • @grahampescod1487
      @grahampescod1487 Месяц назад

      In Victoria a cordial is a fruit based drink that you add water to, like Cottees or Golden Circle. Coke, Fanta and other fizzy drinks are called soft drinks.

  • @topologyrob
    @topologyrob Месяц назад +7

    I remember in Canada people were clueless when I said “good on you”

    • @EmEm78
      @EmEm78 Месяц назад +1

      That's definitely another one where the meaning changes completely based on the tone used 😂

  • @rlpupdates
    @rlpupdates 20 дней назад +2

    Doggy bag came from when people felt it meant they were poor if they asked to take their leftovers home. So instead of asking for a container to take their left overs home in they would ask for a doggy bag as that way people thought they were just being nice and taking there leftovers home for there dog. However the stigma is now gone but it is now known as a doggy bag.

  • @kenoathiog1156
    @kenoathiog1156 24 дня назад

    Carl Barron (comic) nails it when he says we always say what we’re not or things aren’t… ie “how are you”… “yeah, not bad”- or “how much was it?”… “wasn’t cheap”.

  • @SomeYouTubeGuy
    @SomeYouTubeGuy Месяц назад +8

    Here's a great Australia saying and a story to go with it. A few years back now a woman was held on an international flight for swearing at a flight attendant. When the plane landed she was arrested at the plane. She had asked for something and been told the stock had sold out and then replied with "Fair dinkum" she could have said "Are you serious?" or "Are you having a laugh?"
    Anyway, after this was in our daily newspapers I noticed that both the candidates for Prime Minister in the upcoming election that year both used Fair Dinkum in their campaigning, proving just how Australian the phrase actually is.
    Also a quick google will reveal companies using it in their name for example "Fair Dinkum Sheds", "Fair Dinkum Builds" and even just "Fair Dinkum" which makes aussie clothes.

    • @marymarlow3646
      @marymarlow3646 18 дней назад

      I believe the origin is Chinese from the days of the gold rushes. And it’s a bastardised version of what the Chinese word is for genuine as in real - referring to gold.

  • @threestumps7560
    @threestumps7560 Месяц назад +20

    Here's some more for your list:
    - passing the pub test
    - cool bananas
    - a sandwich short of a picnic
    - having a pash

  • @1337flite
    @1337flite Месяц назад +7

    I'm from Adelaide. We say "heaps" for "a lot" or as an amiplifer, e.g. "that is heaps good" or " just buy the medium you'll get heaps, not worth paying for the large".

    • @Boomer19771
      @Boomer19771 23 дня назад

      Live in Adelaide for 3 years and still use heaps lol

    • @johnphaceas7434
      @johnphaceas7434 22 дня назад

      There's even a beer label out my way named "Heaps Normal" - zero alcohol, full taste, ergo "heaps normal".

    • @nashd8005
      @nashd8005 13 дней назад

      Aah! Thank you! My in laws are from Adelaide - you have just explained something that always baffled me about my usually well spoken SIL 😂

  • @Lewythefly
    @Lewythefly 23 дня назад +2

    Doggy bag is so you can take the left over food home and feed it to your doggo

  • @borneovet8372
    @borneovet8372 Месяц назад

    One good thing Oz has not drowned in is the insertion of the work “like” Jen every single sentence.

  • @Lyvvie
    @Lyvvie Месяц назад +8

    Bingle was the first word that caught me out. It was all over the news about a celebrity having a bingle and I had no idea what happened. We (American) call it a fender-bender; a small, minor car accident or collision.

    • @lightbearer313
      @lightbearer313 Месяц назад +3

      Prang is another word for a minor collision or crash.

    • @caretakerfochr3834
      @caretakerfochr3834 10 дней назад

      @@lightbearer313 Yeah both prang and bingle are onomotopia.

  • @garyrowlands2334
    @garyrowlands2334 Месяц назад +8

    In Queensland, we sometimes end sentences with the word "hey" as either an affirmation or to form a question.
    My personal take on the language used in different countries is that words and expressions aren't weird. They're just different. I lived in Spain for 6 years, and a lot of their expressions, once translated to English, would initially leave me very surprised. Once you start talking like a local, people tend to accept you more. I guess they see you as accepting of them.

  • @johnaquillo3397
    @johnaquillo3397 Месяц назад +5

    Snags are sausages - not hot dogs- and go usually in a slice of white bread with tomato sauce (ketchup) and / or mustard (often American mustard). A "doggy bag" hasn't anything to do with dogs or poop but is a way of saying "I can't eat all of this food right now so can I please get a takeaway container and I'll have it later at home". Better than just having it thrown away!

  • @johndouglass3377
    @johndouglass3377 Месяц назад +3

    Up here in Queensland there are drive through bulk alcohol sales, pull up in your ute and get a pallet of beer

  • @franceslaw8993
    @franceslaw8993 29 дней назад +2

    A doggy bag is an expression that is used in both Australia and South Africa to my knowledge and goes way back to, at least, the 60s and 70s. It is used in a restaurant to indicate that you would like to take your leftovers home rather than have them thrown away. After all, you paid for them. Oh yes, it’s called a doggy bag because the leftovers are supposed to be for your dog not you.

  • @suzannelampe4957
    @suzannelampe4957 Месяц назад +7

    We lived for a year in USA and I made the mistake of saying, dur8ng a rainstorm, that it was bucketing down (aka pissing down) … the yanks looked at me, wide-eyed, and drawled … say what now?

  • @NicoleMachele
    @NicoleMachele Месяц назад +9

    This is extremely general… we do not all use the C word! Sausages go in bread. There is a huge difference between a hot dog and a sausage… hot dogs are not big over here… never heard of “thanking you” but ta we grew up saying… doggy bags have been around since the 70,s or earlier. Way before you had to pick up your dogs 💩… we say no worries or no problem… it differs state by state and even town by town… bogans have a language all of their own and you used some of those terms and those brought up in more educated or refined areas sound completely different… their Aussie accents are a lot milder… 👍🏻

    • @jolovescats2426
      @jolovescats2426 Месяц назад +1

      Isn't Bogan an Aussie word?

    • @NicoleMachele
      @NicoleMachele Месяц назад

      @@jolovescats2426 yes… I am an Aussie… 👍🏻

  • @mattms.
    @mattms. Месяц назад +12

    Even as an Australian, I was surprised by how common it is to hear "mate" in the office, even up to the executive level.
    If you're in Tassie, we also have "cock", which is used similar to mate, but you likely won't hear that in the office.

    • @bluewren65
      @bluewren65 Месяц назад

      I kind of feel like "cock" is used in a more aggressive sense more often than a friendly one here.

    • @chriswatson1698
      @chriswatson1698 Месяц назад +3

      I worked in an office with a lot of men. I was charmed to hear them talk to their sons on the phone, addressing them as "mate". "See ya tonight, mate".

    • @lynne3580
      @lynne3580 Месяц назад +3

      Must admit I use ‘mate’ regularly, especially if I can’t remember someones name, saves me a lot of embarrassment.

    • @rayniebee
      @rayniebee Месяц назад +3

      I only ever really use mate these days in a sarcastic or negative context, in or out of the office. Like, "Oh, there's your mate" = "there's that person you can't stand". If someone calls me mate, my first thought is that they're annoyed with me. lol

    • @caretakerfochr3834
      @caretakerfochr3834 10 дней назад

      Whatever happened to "Cobber"?

  • @duncid7659
    @duncid7659 22 дня назад

    This is one of the more accurate descriptions of Australian slang

  • @fionaworrall2865
    @fionaworrall2865 Месяц назад +2

    It’s so funny the things said in different countries. You will find there are different slang expressions in each state as well. It almost identifies where someone if from in Australia. When I first moved to the country from Sydney, I literally couldn’t understand things people said as the country had another whole lots of slang terms. Enjoy your time year!

  • @camillef8698
    @camillef8698 Месяц назад +7

    very funny cuz in France we also use the term "doggy bag" in restaurants

    • @tinfoilhomer909
      @tinfoilhomer909 Месяц назад +3

      When Australians want to be *very* rude they will call the waitress "garçonne", accompanied by raised hand and a click of the fingers. I know a few Aussies who tried this in France thinking it was part of your culture, with predictable results 🤣

    • @leddivah
      @leddivah Месяц назад +3

      pretty sure "doggy bag" is just an American phrase we have adopted.

    • @Pomdownuder
      @Pomdownuder 17 дней назад

      The Brits use doggy bag, it was to take the leftovers home "for the dog"