There is a difference between 'Mates' and 'Friends'. All Mates are Friends but not all Friends are Mates. Mates always go that extra step for each other.
I see it the other way round hahaha!! All friends are mates but not all mates are friends!! If I say the phrase “listen mate” u know I’m not happy with u hahahah
I have to say, I use mate also when I am annoyed with a person..... it's a different inflection than 'that's my mate'... it's like 'WTF are you talking about mate'.... so almost like an insult lol
Also, “mate” can also be used to insult someone too … or be aggressive towards someone … and sometimes instead of calling our friends “mate” we call them the c word 😂 … and that is sometimes more respected
Key to a basic Aussie accent is to move your lips as little as possible (so as to not swallow any flies). Also, in general, understatement, dryness and deadpan delivery are important aspects of classic Aussie humor.
@@adrianhempfing2042 I don't think anyone could help but love him! Joel said he'd like him for a friend. Who wouldn't. As you say, he's a decent bloke. And what better way to be than to make people happy just through being who you are. Adrian, blessings!
@@KrazeeKraftZ Some people call a spade a shovel, so there's that! People tell me I sound well educated, but I'm not really. I just know what I know and sound how I sound. Blessings!
I have a lot of different friends and family with differing degrees of the Aussie accent. I'm also involved in amateur theatre and I work as a sales rep'. So I'm around different people all the time. I slip quite easily from one accent to another without even thinking about it. I love our Aussie slang also, very laid back.
Same my dad's side is from Ipswich/Inala Queensland and my mothers side is from England. So I can easily switch from Aussie cool to Aussie posh whenever needed. My regular "accent" is very different to my "phone accent".
@@overlordnews4075 My partner and I grew up in South Australia and we moved to Queensland and QLDers point out our pronunciations all the time. People sometimes think my partner is British.
Australian English is great because you can literally say anything and it just kinda makes sense. It’s like a big joke that everyone’s in on. Like you can say, “as ____ as a ______” (fill in the blanks with any random things like “as happy as a koala up a tree”) and everyone would just be like “yep I get it.” Even though it probably doesn’t make much sense. It’s all about the context of the conversation. Also good on you for pronouncing it as “Ozzie” instead of “Ossie”. 👏🏼
I think it's hilarious when people throw out the most aussie sentences ever to demonstrate how batshit crazy our lingo can be. e.g.: Takin me mates in me ute down to the servo n the bottlo s'arvo to grab more durries n booze then back ere to have some fags n get smashed while watchin the footy
You're right about "bar" and "barring" being related. "Bar" is used here to mean "except", "but" or "other than", e.g. "I've had nothing to eat bar a sandwich all day." We also speak of people being "barred" from entering premises, or driving, or whatever. Kind of means the same as "banned", which is odd. But is that something commonly said in the USA as well, as in being "barred" from practicing law/medicine etc? Great reaction as always, Joel, to a very good video that gave you a few more clues to the characteristics and diversity of our Aussie accent.
You're right, Aussies do. However, I think it's used in America too as I remember on Dave Chappelle Show with the famous Rick James skit (Cocaine is a helluva a drug!), Charlie Murphy is telling a story about an 'orange aura' he saw when he first met Rick James. He said ... "I seen it! His aura or whatever, I seen it!" ...it was something like that. I know that was rather random, but that's the first thing that popped in my head.
My late grandma, used to try and correct me on that all the time! I knew the correct saying was, "I saw it." But, I preferred the flow of, "I seen it!" I'd say that to her on purpose as well, cause I know she hated it 😏!
Yeah, I pricked my ears up when I heard that. It kinda helps remove the "foreign-ness" which puts up a little bit of a barrier between those speaking and those being spoken to. Hurrah!😍
As a Brit I notice the crossovers with Aussie slang. Very similar in a lot of ways, makes me feel at ease around Aussies same way I would my northern family lol
"Scooter" comes from the word "scoot" not the other way around. It means "to go quickly" or "to slide across sonething". People will also sometimes say "ma car" rather than "my car". In British English and by extension in Australia, "bar" means "except for".
The Australian accent definitely depends on where you live, in Australia! A lot of Aussies on camera really put on the slang, on purpose! 😄 I think Daniels is authentic Qld! At least he doesn't use "do you know what I mean" or "like"! 👍😏 I agree common slang is more friendly and inclusive! 😊
Yes, of course you're correct about the word 'bloke' also being used in the UK- the words 'bloke and 'mate' were brought by English immigrants to both Aussi and here in New Zealand, although bloke is seldom heard among young people these days- it was gradually replaced by 'guy' over the last twenty to thirty years.
As an Aussie girl who has visited America, I love your perspective on Australian life, I really think you'd like it down here mate👍😎 Of course we don't all talk that way, like in that tone 😂 but we all sure understand it ✌️
Great reaction Mate! I loved how the two of you were smiling in synch during the interview... and he is a Legend. I had watched this video a few times and had always understood everything that Daniel' said, but now I understand how weird we must sound to others. Like how could people not understand that "How you going mate?" has nothing to do with mode of transport to a destination. Thanks for the cute smiles.
I could watch him all day. As the presenter of the video said “salt of the earth”. And it’s the kind of thing, as an Aussie who speaks in a General accent, you can drop into when you need too to communicate better. Just like you can “posh it up” with people depending on who you are speaking to and under a different setting. I imagine that it’s more difficult for those with Received Pronunciation to do either. Happy to be on the fence linguistically and enjoy all of our diverse accents, colloquial terms and slang.
I'm not sure if you're ready for a bit of "Australiana" by Austen Tayshus. He's a comedian who uses Australian puns to tell a story. You'd have to really listen to catch them all but it was a hit in the 1980s. The version with a film clip of a party is the best to give visual clues about what he's saying
Actually, Daniel's got a world class comedy skit right there! He need change nothing about any of it, front up on a theatre stage, and the audience would be left laughing in the aisles. Seriously!
@@rickau Sucking up to someone..."Oh c'mon maaate!"😁 Then there's "Old mate" (someone you don't know/average Joe Blogs) or "Mate" as in you're angry with them and you're going to smack them out! Australia...where you call you mates "cunts" and your enemies "mates!" 😁
Haha love this! Very QLD bogan accent 😂 He’s great! A lot of our words are interchangeable - mate is a big one, ALOT for curse words too! Can be an insult or can be a term on endearment - it’s all about tone, volume and body language. Aussies are pretty casual in general and the way we speak really reflects that - there is just alot of variation on levels of slang and accents due to background ect
His accent is why I avoid travelling to Queensland. The accent is similarly unsophisticated in Victoria much of the time, regardless of their protestations of culture and education
Joel, Australia is like the US with different accents in different areas. I had a problem with an expat Irishman some years ago. He said he couldn't place what part of England I was from. We were in Newcastle, Australia. I tried to explain that I was born about a mile from where we were standing. I was back at the same location the next day so I took my birth certificate with me. He had to accept what I had told him then. I left school when I was sixteen and I worked as an electrician but I have always taken care with my speech. You are very similar. You don't have the drawl that people from further South have. Thank you for your work it is appreciated.
Fits the brief is a semi-legal or professional term. For example an architect is given a brief, that is a set of general guidelines about what is required in the finished building. If the final design "fits the brief", the architect has designed a building that satisfies the requirements of the customer. The same applies when a lawyer presents a case in court: if the arguments "fit the brief" they have fulfilled the needs of the prosecution (or the defence). A brief like this is where the word "briefcase" comes from.
You got it 100% correct in regards to "bar". It's the verb form of "barring". You'll find a few pieces of weirdly archaic english appears in Australian vernacular.
I find when talking to guys in particular that have the broad Aussie accent you start talking the same way yourself because we all know what they are saying. I love it and hope it never dies. We call these guys "characters".
Actually took me many years to figure out how to write 'this morning' because its just "s'mornin" when we say it. Also, yeah, more tradies and people who work out West/ middle of Australia (just like small towns and farmers) have that broad accent, very occasionally will you hear it in the big cities.
What a great way to start the day Joel!! Great video, such fun. Amazingly, his slang was totally understandable to me, as we used many of the same words and phrases in Canada, but with a different accent of course. Cheers, John
Great study of the broad Aussie accent and some phrases which can be heard in the conversational speech of some Australians, especially working class men and even women. Very rich in expression and always engenders a relaxed and friendly mood. Having said that, what is interesting is that the word "mate" can be used in both a friendly way, as in "thanks for the beer, mate", or in an unfriendly or even threatening way, as in "What the hell are you lookin at, mate?
I think the Nasal thing might have come from Londoners who emigrated to Australia generations ago. South and East Londoners sometimes have the nasal thing.
Yep - it's spelled Aussie but pronounced Ozzie. You're learning a lot 😊 This guy has a REALLY broad accent, especially the way he says "me" instead of "my" and drops the g's from a lot more words than most of us would. Given his accent and general appearance, he's what we'd call a 'bogan'. Can't remember if you've come across that slang word before.
Yo Carl Barron stand up comedy is also a good one for Aussie slang terms; The "yous" (pronounced "use") as a collective for "You guys" is another common expression.
There is a a traditional Yorkshire song “On Ilkley Moor Baht’at” which means “On Ilkley Moor without a hat” (or “without the hat”). “Baht” means “without” in the same way.
So true about how we change the way we speak depending on the circumstances.... I was a receptionist/admin worker for years, so I'd put on my 'phone voice' or 'speaking with the CEO/CFO voice'... yet in my real life, I sound as bogan/westie as you get..... lmao...... we all adapt to circumstances I think.....I left school at 16, I did continue to educate myself... I read A LOT..... and lot's of different genres.... non-fiction/fiction/science journals etc... just because I speak like a bogan doesn't mean I don't know things... I'm just quite happy with where I was born, the environment I was in.... it is me......
Thank you for sharing! It’s a classic 😂 also noticed that the guy being interviewed wasn’t that colloquial, as he didn’t use profanity for example “bloody” ect, he may have been told beforehand not to swear on camera 😂 👍
That guy has little to no education but he has the typical Aussie ‘help a mate’ attitude. You said you have to speak properly all day for work and like to use slang in your off-time. That is pretty much what we do, but listening to that bloke, I would think, the way he spoke in the interview, is the only way he knows how to communicate. More power to him though, he’s a good friend to have in a difficult situation. I’d not mind if he were my neighbour and I’d lend him a cup of sugar or a tool he needed, no worries.
Today Show with Karl Stephanovic, you have to check it out Joel. There are a number of Karl/Today show posts to chose from on UA-cam ie highlight posts .
Ive been watching you for a while now and I genuinely respect your work. I think it's important to point out that Australians are so multicultural that there are many alternatives but you are I think, mostly correct. I love that I can see the way your interest piques at certain points in your facial expressions the way I expect them to. My only negative would be that you're sharing too much with the world. We don't want everyone to know how amazing our country is. In our words "Fuck of we're full"😘
Bar as in 'everything except for' is exactly where " bar me jocks" came from and the accent is But Australian accent is a heavy mix of slang and the words are naisly but our words are spoken from the back of the pallet thats what help form our sentences into one big word, but Americans speaks more from the front of the mouth and put more annoucication on each letter and space words The reason old mate changed his word between jocks and undies was because they mean the same and he the words would flow better together as he was saying it Assies are walking thesourousas we always got 6 different words that mean that same thing and use in replace of regularly
I’m so glad you prefer the dialect.. i speak like this and I’m educated but feel embarrassed when in the company of ‘proper’ people but I’m just being my friendly self
18:43 no, it comes from the Glottal T/Glottal stop T of other english/scottish accents that came over and became the australian accent. You will hear it in some very informal English and Scottish accents, where the T at the end of a syllable/word comes from a glottal stop (where you close the air off in your throat, almost like a cough - or where a cough comes from) so instead of BUT - You get Bu', Butter becomes - Bu''er, Water becomes Wa'er. The Glottal stop has become somewhat subdued in our accent. I'd argue, there is probably still remnants of a glottal stop, and he isn't literally sah bah/bar, it's just less pronounced.
@@MultiEmmet OMg read my comment. I didn't say Australian's did. I'm saying where the Bah/bar came from. Go to the timestamp, then read my comment. And then READ the part of my comment that says " You will hear it in some very informal English and Scottish accents" In Some British and Scottish accents.... ffs. The Bah comes from that part of the accent. There were fucking examples of an English or Scottish accent that uses a Glottal T. FFS
Today show funny bits is an old channel that had all the karl stefanovic clips with his original today show crew... karl is still on but the older stuff is absolutely gold
Thanks for this educational, but also very amusing video, Joel. You might be interested in a video comparing and contrasting English accents Australia v NZ v S Africa v England v Canada. Where they differ, which pronunciations were similar, etc was very informative for me. There are several videos on UA-cam covering aspects of this, and some include US accents too.
Yeah I'm looking forward to Jps' reaction to South African. There was a native darker skin population there with some different groups and languages. Then white people came and speak English with a different accent. There's a language called Afrikaans or something
Can’t stand Stefanovic, he cheated on his wife of 20 years and dumped her for a younger woman, and he did it all so publicly, just humiliated his wife and kids. A classic middle life crisis. Plus he’s an LNP shill as well.
Another thing you’ll hear some Aussie saying to refer to a group of 2 or more people is “yous guys” instead of “you guys”- it’s another thing “less educated” (to use his phrase) people tend to say🤷♀️ And we shorten ALOT of words- “arvo” “servo” “bottle-o” etc And also- we take out vowels alot too- so instead of “Brisbane” it’s more like “Bris-bn”
Actually "guys" is more of an American word. It's not at all very common in Australia to say "yous guys". The term that is more commonly used that is similar is "you lot". Even just trying to say "yous guys" is hard for me to say and pronounce. I can honestly say I have never heard an Australian actually say. And if we do say it, we say you guys.
18:52 yep nailed it! I love that about etymology, being able to deconstruct words like that can make you sound intelligent whatever you’re talking about… Just gotta have the wit to avoid them calling your bluff lol
Without being told about the definition, or looking it up, my understanding of “fits the brief” relates to a design brief (or project brief, or whatever else - brief). Iirc, design briefs are the set of instructions from a client to a contractor. “This is what i am after, these are the parameters, these are my intentions, these are my reasons, etc.” If it fits the brief, then it adheres to the concept initially presented. In the context of the video, he is a hero and is wearing his jocks as his outermost garment, which adheres to the idea of famous superheroes that the vast majority of people would be familiar with, especially during the silver age of comics
If all he had was his jocks on, I wonder if he meant something else by "flash" 😉 16:44 - by the way, "pants" in Australian refers to trousers, whereas "pants" in British English refers to underwear. I gather that the Australian usage of "pants" is similar to the American usage of the term.
True about flash - to briefly pull down your underwear , expose your genitals or buttocks. One way to get the attention of police as you can be charged with a crime for flashing. But likely meant flashing his car headlights
Regarding 'bar', it probably comes from "barred", which is what we call being banned from a pub or other business. "You're barred mate" would be like "You're banned, buddy." It likely spread from there.
This is one of the most iconic news stories in Australia, I’ve seen this about 50 times.. this is what a bogan, and this is the bogan Australian. This news story is also for comedy
you were correct about the "bar" origin - it comes from "barring" - which is an old english word, hes not slurring the word "but" - so good onya mate lol
ive got this like habbit of responding "oh yeah, righto" or just "righto" to anything being explained to me or asked of me. my teacher was teaching me something in maths and she got up to walk away, i responded with "righto" and she stopped looked and hesitated and walked away. im a working-middle class aussie but mum still doesnt like it when i speak slang at all, she hates it and when i was 10-12 she tried getting me to use less slang, didnt work so she cant be stuffed to try now. i also go to a pretty rough secondry school which doesnt help. me classroom has bars on the windows, only 2/30 odd classrooms have bars
I fucking love him. He's absolutely hilarious. I for one vote for him for prime minister. He does sum up Australia though, look after your mates and your mates will look after you. Almost like we're amazing when we stand together. Who'd have known???
One interesting thing he kinda touched briefly with "bar" but left out was how Aussies like myself pronounce "t" and "th" in words. There's typically two ways we say it, but it's overall deceptively complicated, but I'll try my best to explain. Firstly the more complicated one, those with thicker broader accents tend to do this thing with the back of our throats to stop air passing briefly (I think the technical term is a glottal stop), best way I can describe it is the very start of a fake or real cough, that closing of the throat using the back of the tongue. It was done once with this guy's sentence which I will use ' to emphasize: "Bud I had nuthin on bu' me jocks", Depending on where you're from you might also say "nu'n" instead of "nuthin". It's most common when we say "Mate", we typically don't end the word at the front of the mouth near the teeth but at the back, so more like "May' ". We often substitute "t" for "d" with certain words depending on the vowel before or after. For example we'd still say "rotation" like you'd expect, but we'd likely say "moda" when referring to a "motor". If it has two Ts you'll likely drop the second for D: Rotaded 🔄 , Potado 🥔. If the Ts are together or the word ends in Y both are changed: Matter -> Madda, Footy -> Fooddy. If I were to list all the nuances of our dialect we'd probably be here all day, but hope this shed a little more light on how our language works ^-^
There is a difference between 'Mates' and 'Friends'. All Mates are Friends but not all Friends are Mates. Mates always go that extra step for each other.
I see it the other way round hahaha!! All friends are mates but not all mates are friends!! If I say the phrase “listen mate” u know I’m not happy with u hahahah
@@chilli1115 yeah I agree with ya there, ya will call random people on the street mate but doesnt mean they are but all friends are mates
Wrong way around
and a true mate is considered family and will always be there for one and other no matter what
I have to say, I use mate also when I am annoyed with a person..... it's a different inflection than 'that's my mate'... it's like 'WTF are you talking about mate'.... so almost like an insult lol
Also, “mate” can also be used to insult someone too … or be aggressive towards someone … and sometimes instead of calling our friends “mate” we call them the c word 😂 … and that is sometimes more respected
Or being affectionate 🤣🤣Yeah he's a good c***
The actual definition of a bogan in video form. What an absolute legend of an Aussie. This bloke right here is why I'm proud to be an aussie
look up about the two on here who 'lost me plugger'
Key to a basic Aussie accent is to move your lips as little as possible (so as to not swallow any flies).
Also, in general, understatement, dryness and deadpan delivery are important aspects of classic Aussie humor.
The down to earth-ness heard in Daniel's accent, it's the stuff Aussie sincerity is made of. Call a spade a spade. You can't beat it! Love him!
I just hope people aren't really laughing at him for who he is and how he is. He's just a decent bloke
@@adrianhempfing2042 I don't think anyone could help but love him! Joel said he'd like him for a friend. Who wouldn't. As you say, he's a decent bloke. And what better way to be than to make people happy just through being who you are. Adrian, blessings!
Sure, but if I call a spade a spade in my upper middle class, educated accent, I get called out for being something'ist!!!
@@KrazeeKraftZ Some people call a spade a shovel, so there's that! People tell me I sound well educated, but I'm not really. I just know what I know and sound how I sound. Blessings!
@@PhillipLWilcher lol you know a spade and a shovel are 2 different things I assume!!
Not everyone talks like that in Australia, but I can't take it away from him. He is an absolute legend. #trueaussie
hes a DOG police informant who put his family at risk ! was a damaged shop worth everyone knowing your a DOG ! police informant !
I have a lot of different friends and family with differing degrees of the Aussie accent. I'm also involved in amateur theatre and I work as a sales rep'. So I'm around different people all the time. I slip quite easily from one accent to another without even thinking about it. I love our Aussie slang also, very laid back.
Same my dad's side is from Ipswich/Inala Queensland and my mothers side is from England. So I can easily switch from Aussie cool to Aussie posh whenever needed. My regular "accent" is very different to my "phone accent".
@@overlordnews4075 My partner and I grew up in South Australia and we moved to Queensland and QLDers point out our pronunciations all the time. People sometimes think my partner is British.
Australian English is great because you can literally say anything and it just kinda makes sense. It’s like a big joke that everyone’s in on.
Like you can say, “as ____ as a ______” (fill in the blanks with any random things like “as happy as a koala up a tree”) and everyone would just be like “yep I get it.” Even though it probably doesn’t make much sense. It’s all about the context of the conversation. Also good on you for pronouncing it as “Ozzie” instead of “Ossie”. 👏🏼
I think it's hilarious when people throw out the most aussie sentences ever to demonstrate how batshit crazy our lingo can be. e.g.:
Takin me mates in me ute down to the servo n the bottlo s'arvo to grab more durries n booze then back ere to have some fags n get smashed while watchin the footy
As dry as a dead dingoes donger is my fave lol
@@lillibitjohnson7293 I’ve never heard of that one but I’m gonna use it from now on 😂
Happy as a pig in shit usually. My favourite though is "mad as a cut snake" which my dad frequently uses
@@xxillicitxx both great examples :)
You're right about "bar" and "barring" being related. "Bar" is used here to mean "except", "but" or "other than", e.g. "I've had nothing to eat bar a sandwich all day." We also speak of people being "barred" from entering premises, or driving, or whatever. Kind of means the same as "banned", which is odd. But is that something commonly said in the USA as well, as in being "barred" from practicing law/medicine etc? Great reaction as always, Joel, to a very good video that gave you a few more clues to the characteristics and diversity of our Aussie accent.
no its not ! BAR means person in australia
like "hay bar what u doing "
Aussies also say “I seen it” a lot. Instead of I saw it or I have seen it. This is very common and was also said in this video. Love your reactions
You're right, Aussies do. However, I think it's used in America too as I remember on Dave Chappelle Show with the famous Rick James skit (Cocaine is a helluva a drug!), Charlie Murphy is telling a story about an 'orange aura' he saw when he first met Rick James.
He said ... "I seen it! His aura or whatever, I seen it!" ...it was something like that.
I know that was rather random, but that's the first thing that popped in my head.
My late grandma, used to try and correct me on that all the time! I knew the correct saying was, "I saw it." But, I preferred the flow of, "I seen it!" I'd say that to her on purpose as well, cause I know she hated it 😏!
Correction, bogans say that a lot.
True, not all Aussies say it. A lot do but lol
oh wow, that is a phrase i don't i realise i say until you pointed it out. It's isn't grammatically correct at all, though it feels like it should.
7:06 Finally, Joel got the pronunciation of ‘Aussie’ right!
Yeah, I pricked my ears up when I heard that. It kinda helps remove the "foreign-ness" which puts up a little bit of a barrier between those speaking and those being spoken to. Hurrah!😍
Yep. It might be spelt with two esses, but it sounds like a zed. I usually say to my American friends, pronounce it like Ozzie.
As a Brit I notice the crossovers with Aussie slang. Very similar in a lot of ways, makes me feel at ease around Aussies same way I would my northern family lol
I’ve just watched most of your Australia reactions.. you seem to really like learning. You take a lot in. ❤
That's why I subbed
Exactly young fella
All this Aussie content and yet you have a union jack in the background. So many more flags to add! 😄
"Scooter" comes from the word "scoot" not the other way around. It means "to go quickly" or "to slide across sonething". People will also sometimes say "ma car" rather than "my car". In British English and by extension in Australia, "bar" means "except for".
The Australian accent definitely depends on where you live, in Australia! A lot of Aussies on camera really put on the slang, on purpose! 😄 I think Daniels is authentic Qld! At least he doesn't use "do you know what I mean" or "like"! 👍😏 I agree common slang is more friendly and inclusive! 😊
DIFFERENT words .DIFFERENT state.
Yes, of course you're correct about the word 'bloke' also being used in the UK- the words 'bloke and 'mate' were brought by English immigrants to both Aussi and here in New Zealand, although bloke is seldom heard among young people these days- it was gradually replaced by 'guy' over the last twenty to thirty years.
the speaker also used the word Tradie - short for tradesman like Carpenter, Plumber, Electricial, Decorator etc.
As an Aussie girl who has visited America, I love your perspective on Australian life, I really think you'd like it down here mate👍😎 Of course we don't all talk that way, like in that tone 😂 but we all sure understand it ✌️
Great reaction Mate! I loved how the two of you were smiling in synch during the interview... and he is a Legend. I had watched this video a few times and had always understood everything that Daniel' said, but now I understand how weird we must sound to others. Like how could people not understand that "How you going mate?" has nothing to do with mode of transport to a destination. Thanks for the cute smiles.
11:50 "The teachers would usually give you a hard time" absolutely slayed me.
Makes me love being an Aussie. :D
I could watch him all day.
As the presenter of the video said “salt of the earth”.
And it’s the kind of thing, as an Aussie who speaks in a General accent, you can drop into when you need too to communicate better. Just like you can “posh it up” with people depending on who you are speaking to and under a different setting. I imagine that it’s more difficult for those with Received Pronunciation to do either. Happy to be on the fence linguistically and enjoy all of our diverse accents, colloquial terms and slang.
Yeah, you were spot on about the where the word bar comes from. Well picked up mate.
This young lad is good n i enjoy his vids n knows n understands Aussie slangs.
You catch on really quick mate. Ive nearly watched all your videos and im impressed with your intelligence.
I'm not sure if you're ready for a bit of "Australiana" by Austen Tayshus. He's a comedian who uses Australian puns to tell a story. You'd have to really listen to catch them all but it was a hit in the 1980s. The version with a film clip of a party is the best to give visual clues about what he's saying
I think still a bit later to go for that one
😱😱😱😱😱 Alexander Gutman isn't funny. Intellectually clever, but not funny
Australiana is extremely funny and brilliant
@@melissabarrett9750 maybe you just didn't understand it
Oh my god I remember this 😂
I was fully expecting him to describe the shop as "Cactus" .
The term mate can refer to ANYBODY at ANYTIME , we even call the cops "Mate" .
True it did look cactus (fully wrecked)
Actually, Daniel's got a world class comedy skit right there! He need change nothing about any of it, front up on a theatre stage, and the audience would be left laughing in the aisles. Seriously!
Can’t remember how many times we’ve joked around having a full conversation with just the word “mate” with different intonations 😂😂😂 Try it!
"Mate " is such a versatile word that can be used in many ways.
@@kevkoala insult, compliment, backhanded compliment. expression of awe, etc. I love it.
M a a a t e! Matey!! Can we mate?
@@rickau Sucking up to someone..."Oh c'mon maaate!"😁 Then there's "Old mate" (someone you don't know/average Joe Blogs) or "Mate" as in you're angry with them and you're going to smack them out! Australia...where you call you mates "cunts" and your enemies "mates!" 😁
I remember working with a bloke that used to go "Yeah maate!" "Swoit mate!" "Three bags full, maaate!" 30 years ago. He was a funny bastard!
Haha love this! Very QLD bogan accent 😂 He’s great!
A lot of our words are interchangeable - mate is a big one, ALOT for curse words too! Can be an insult or can be a term on endearment - it’s all about tone, volume and body language.
Aussies are pretty casual in general and the way we speak really reflects that - there is just alot of variation on levels of slang and accents due to background ect
True about the same word eg Mate having different meanings depending on Tone and Context
His accent is why I avoid travelling to Queensland. The accent is similarly unsophisticated in Victoria much of the time, regardless of their protestations of culture and education
@@melissabarrett9750 not really an easy going Aussie type r ya!
Joel, Australia is like the US with different accents in different areas. I had a problem with an expat Irishman some years ago. He said he couldn't place what part of England I was from. We were in Newcastle, Australia. I tried to explain that I was born about a mile from where we were standing. I was back at the same location the next day so I took my birth certificate with me. He had to accept what I had told him then. I left school when I was sixteen and I worked as an electrician but I have always taken care with my speech. You are very similar. You don't have the drawl that people from further South have.
Thank you for your work it is appreciated.
Fits the brief is a semi-legal or professional term. For example an architect is given a brief, that is a set of general guidelines about what is required in the finished building. If the final design "fits the brief", the architect has designed a building that satisfies the requirements of the customer. The same applies when a lawyer presents a case in court: if the arguments "fit the brief" they have fulfilled the needs of the prosecution (or the defence).
A brief like this is where the word "briefcase" comes from.
You got it 100% correct in regards to "bar". It's the verb form of "barring". You'll find a few pieces of weirdly archaic english appears in Australian vernacular.
Me and my is like seen and saw.
I find when talking to guys in particular that have the broad Aussie accent you start talking the same way yourself because we all know what they are saying. I love it and hope it never dies. We call these guys "characters".
Actually took me many years to figure out how to write 'this morning' because its just "s'mornin" when we say it. Also, yeah, more tradies and people who work out West/ middle of Australia (just like small towns and farmers) have that broad accent, very occasionally will you hear it in the big cities.
There are lots of Karl Stefanovic compilations on UA-cam- one I love is from the “Today” show channel- “best of Karl” part 1.
I'm so proud 😊😊 lol you said Aussie like us x
What a great way to start the day Joel!! Great video, such fun. Amazingly, his slang was totally understandable to me, as we used many of the same words and phrases in Canada, but with a different accent of course. Cheers, John
Great study of the broad Aussie accent and some phrases which can be heard in the conversational speech of some Australians, especially working class men and even women. Very rich in expression and always engenders a relaxed and friendly mood. Having said that, what is interesting is that the word "mate" can be used in both a friendly way, as in "thanks for the beer, mate", or in an unfriendly or even threatening way, as in "What the hell are you lookin at, mate?
Your right, the way we use bar, is derived from barring exactly how you assumed..
Bloke is also in common usage in NZ
I think the Nasal thing might have come from Londoners who emigrated to Australia generations ago. South and East Londoners sometimes have the nasal thing.
Agree.
Yep - it's spelled Aussie but pronounced Ozzie. You're learning a lot 😊 This guy has a REALLY broad accent, especially the way he says "me" instead of "my" and drops the g's from a lot more words than most of us would. Given his accent and general appearance, he's what we'd call a 'bogan'. Can't remember if you've come across that slang word before.
Not simply a bogan, but a hardcore bogan. The type who thinks people with good diction are snobs or trying to make him look stupid
Yo Carl Barron stand up comedy is also a good one for Aussie slang terms; The "yous" (pronounced "use") as a collective for "You guys" is another common expression.
I also think Adam Hills has a good aussie slang / accent vid floating around too, also a cracker.
There is a a traditional Yorkshire song “On Ilkley Moor Baht’at” which means “On Ilkley Moor without a hat” (or “without the hat”). “Baht” means “without” in the same way.
So true about how we change the way we speak depending on the circumstances.... I was a receptionist/admin worker for years, so I'd put on my 'phone voice' or 'speaking with the CEO/CFO voice'... yet in my real life, I sound as bogan/westie as you get..... lmao...... we all adapt to circumstances I think.....I left school at 16, I did continue to educate myself... I read A LOT..... and lot's of different genres.... non-fiction/fiction/science journals etc... just because I speak like a bogan doesn't mean I don't know things... I'm just quite happy with where I was born, the environment I was in.... it is me......
Thank you for sharing! It’s a classic 😂 also noticed that the guy being interviewed wasn’t that colloquial, as he didn’t use profanity for example “bloody” ect, he may have been told beforehand not to swear on camera 😂 👍
Daniel isn't prone to swearing.
Most valid American out there ngl.
Barring/Bar can be used interchangeably
The brief is also a legal term for the documents required for a court case.
Exactly right, "bar" does come from a derivative of being "barred" or except from.
That guy has little to no education but he has the typical Aussie ‘help a mate’ attitude. You said you have to speak properly all day for work and like to use slang in your off-time. That is pretty much what we do, but listening to that bloke, I would think, the way he spoke in the interview, is the only way he knows how to communicate. More power to him though, he’s a good friend to have in a difficult situation. I’d not mind if he were my neighbour and I’d lend him a cup of sugar or a tool he needed, no worries.
G´day Mate! Really enjoying these videos. So grouse to see ya spinning out on the way us people from down under live.
Today Show with Karl Stephanovic, you have to check it out Joel. There are a number of Karl/Today show posts to chose from on UA-cam ie highlight posts .
Best of Karl part 1 is the best to choose from.
Ive been watching you for a while now and I genuinely respect your work.
I think it's important to point out that Australians are so multicultural that there are many alternatives but you are I think, mostly correct.
I love that I can see the way your interest piques at certain points in your facial expressions the way I expect them to.
My only negative would be that you're sharing too much with the world. We don't want everyone to know how amazing our country is. In our words "Fuck of we're full"😘
Oh, how many times my boys run outdoors in the morning in their jocks to take the rubbish bin out. Aussie blockes are very relaxed.
Welcome to Australian! 🤗
Mate, I loved this video
Everyone's ya mate in Australia. A stranger is just a mate you haven't met yet.
mate or BAR, like hay what u doing BAR, or bruzz hows things going ?
Bar as in 'everything except for' is exactly where " bar me jocks" came from and the accent is
But Australian accent is a heavy mix of slang and the words are naisly but our words are spoken from the back of the pallet thats what help form our sentences into one big word, but Americans speaks more from the front of the mouth and put more annoucication on each letter and space words
The reason old mate changed his word between jocks and undies was because they mean the same and he the words would flow better together as he was saying it
Assies are walking thesourousas we always got 6 different words that mean that same thing and use in replace of regularly
I’m so glad you prefer the dialect.. i speak like this and I’m educated but feel embarrassed when in the company of ‘proper’ people but I’m just being my friendly self
18:43 no, it comes from the Glottal T/Glottal stop T of other english/scottish accents that came over and became the australian accent. You will hear it in some very informal English and Scottish accents, where the T at the end of a syllable/word comes from a glottal stop (where you close the air off in your throat, almost like a cough - or where a cough comes from) so instead of BUT - You get Bu', Butter becomes - Bu''er, Water becomes Wa'er.
The Glottal stop has become somewhat subdued in our accent. I'd argue, there is probably still remnants of a glottal stop, and he isn't literally sah bah/bar, it's just less pronounced.
No ideas what your talking about but Australians do not say say wa'er or bu'er.
Woda is water.
Budder I'd butter.
What your saying is not our accent!
@@MultiEmmet OMg read my comment. I didn't say Australian's did. I'm saying where the Bah/bar came from. Go to the timestamp, then read my comment.
And then READ the part of my comment that says " You will hear it in some very informal English and Scottish accents"
In Some British and Scottish accents.... ffs. The Bah comes from that part of the accent. There were fucking examples of an English or Scottish accent that uses a Glottal T. FFS
You got it mate... nice Tube. Cheers from Sydney, AU.
Today show funny bits is an old channel that had all the karl stefanovic clips with his original today show crew... karl is still on but the older stuff is absolutely gold
When you use "me" instead of "my", it kinda rolls of our Aussie tongues a bit smoother and easier.
G'day from Oz
Absolutely brilliant, what a legend 😆
Thanks for this educational, but also very amusing video, Joel. You might be interested in a video comparing and contrasting English accents Australia v NZ v S Africa v England v Canada. Where they differ, which pronunciations were similar, etc was very informative for me. There are several videos on UA-cam covering aspects of this, and some include US accents too.
Yeah I'm looking forward to Jps' reaction to South African.
There was a native darker skin population there with some different groups and languages.
Then white people came and speak English with a different accent. There's a language called Afrikaans or something
Karl Stefanovic is a morning show host and he once did the whole show totally drunk after an award show, it’s here on UA-cam it’s amazing.
'Amazing' is definitely not the word I'd use. The guy's a tool.
@@Geoskan yes I agree my description of Karl is an embarrassing tool!
Can’t stand Stefanovic, he cheated on his wife of 20 years and dumped her for a younger woman, and he did it all so publicly, just humiliated his wife and kids. A classic middle life crisis. Plus he’s an LNP shill as well.
Mate you need to just come ere you'd love it
A definition of a GOOD MATE is someone who gets to two head jobe and then comes home and gives you one of them .........LOL ❤😋🙄
😂😂😂😂😂
Yes you gotta check out the vids on Karl Stefanovic from the Today show. There is several compilations on him.
Another thing you’ll hear some Aussie saying to refer to a group of 2 or more people is “yous guys” instead of “you guys”- it’s another thing “less educated” (to use his phrase) people tend to say🤷♀️
And we shorten ALOT of words- “arvo” “servo” “bottle-o” etc
And also- we take out vowels alot too- so instead of “Brisbane” it’s more like “Bris-bn”
Actually "guys" is more of an American word. It's not at all very common in Australia to say "yous guys". The term that is more commonly used that is similar is "you lot". Even just trying to say "yous guys" is hard for me to say and pronounce. I can honestly say I have never heard an Australian actually say. And if we do say it, we say you guys.
Despite his accent and/or education he's a good bloke. As long as we can understand eachother it's "all good"".
18:52 yep nailed it!
I love that about etymology, being able to deconstruct words like that can make you sound intelligent whatever you’re talking about…
Just gotta have the wit to avoid them calling your bluff lol
Not saying that’s what your doing by the way… just how I see etymology
All I was saying you were doing is being right 😊
Haha, I remember this guy. He was such a character.
Ive met this guy in real life, i know his Mrs and kids. He is just like that
If you like the accent i think you'd love watching Kath and Kim. it's a great show and the accents are fantastic.
Hahaha omg you two need to do a video together heys !! :-)) loved it , ya both seem like ya d get along Great ai!!
❤❤ much love :-)
YOU ARE A CLEVER YOUNG MAN! Bar is definitely derivative from barring! WELL DONE OLD CHASP!
And his accent and look would have been inown as ocker.
You need to have a look at the Bachelors and Spinsters Ball which is held once a year in the Outback - truely Australian
Without being told about the definition, or looking it up, my understanding of “fits the brief” relates to a design brief (or project brief, or whatever else - brief). Iirc, design briefs are the set of instructions from a client to a contractor. “This is what i am after, these are the parameters, these are my intentions, these are my reasons, etc.”
If it fits the brief, then it adheres to the concept initially presented.
In the context of the video, he is a hero and is wearing his jocks as his outermost garment, which adheres to the idea of famous superheroes that the vast majority of people would be familiar with, especially during the silver age of comics
Oh I so remember this, it was massive and still makes me lol today. Another great video JP, you need to do a video on where you can try our accent.
Barring is the present participle of the verb, to bar.
If all he had was his jocks on, I wonder if he meant something else by "flash" 😉
16:44 - by the way, "pants" in Australian refers to trousers, whereas "pants" in British English refers to underwear. I gather that the Australian usage of "pants" is similar to the American usage of the term.
Yeah Aussie pants are trousers, jeans, sweatpants.
Underwear are sometimes said as underpants
True about flash - to briefly pull down your underwear , expose your genitals or buttocks. One way to get the attention of police as you can be charged with a crime for flashing.
But likely meant flashing his car headlights
I like watching you react at someone else reacting at a video.
Regarding 'bar', it probably comes from "barred", which is what we call being banned from a pub or other business. "You're barred mate" would be like "You're banned, buddy." It likely spread from there.
In nz we use morning and arvo but that depends on what school you want to but I think slang takes over witch in a funny way
You should look up Austen Tayshus song Australiana. It’s using places names and other Aussie slang
This is one of the most iconic news stories in Australia, I’ve seen this about 50 times.. this is what a bogan, and this is the bogan Australian. This news story is also for comedy
you were correct about the "bar" origin - it comes from "barring" - which is an old english word, hes not slurring the word "but" - so good onya mate lol
Ya need to watch "Housoes vs authorities" & "Trent from punchy" is another eye opener.
This video is up there with "just waiting for a mate"
ive got this like habbit of responding "oh yeah, righto" or just "righto" to anything being explained to me or asked of me. my teacher was teaching me something in maths and she got up to walk away, i responded with "righto" and she stopped looked and hesitated and walked away.
im a working-middle class aussie but mum still doesnt like it when i speak slang at all, she hates it and when i was 10-12 she tried getting me to use less slang, didnt work so she cant be stuffed to try now. i also go to a pretty rough secondry school which doesnt help. me classroom has bars on the windows, only 2/30 odd classrooms have bars
I fucking love him. He's absolutely hilarious. I for one vote for him for prime minister.
He does sum up Australia though, look after your mates and your mates will look after you. Almost like we're amazing when we stand together. Who'd have known???
I’ve heard the term ‘fits the brief’/‘fits the bill’ a lot.
One interesting thing he kinda touched briefly with "bar" but left out was how Aussies like myself pronounce "t" and "th" in words. There's typically two ways we say it, but it's overall deceptively complicated, but I'll try my best to explain.
Firstly the more complicated one, those with thicker broader accents tend to do this thing with the back of our throats to stop air passing briefly (I think the technical term is a glottal stop), best way I can describe it is the very start of a fake or real cough, that closing of the throat using the back of the tongue. It was done once with this guy's sentence which I will use ' to emphasize: "Bud I had nuthin on bu' me jocks", Depending on where you're from you might also say "nu'n" instead of "nuthin". It's most common when we say "Mate", we typically don't end the word at the front of the mouth near the teeth but at the back, so more like "May' ".
We often substitute "t" for "d" with certain words depending on the vowel before or after. For example we'd still say "rotation" like you'd expect, but we'd likely say "moda" when referring to a "motor". If it has two Ts you'll likely drop the second for D: Rotaded 🔄 , Potado 🥔. If the Ts are together or the word ends in Y both are changed: Matter -> Madda, Footy -> Fooddy.
If I were to list all the nuances of our dialect we'd probably be here all day, but hope this shed a little more light on how our language works ^-^
Great reaction! Very entertaining and educational video!