How to understand Australians Slang Words Expressions

Ah Australia, the world’s largest island.

The smallest continent. A big rock.

And a very pretty harbour.

You should definitely visit if you have the chance.

You absolutely should.

I’m Emma from mmmEnglish and I’m also Australian.

Here on YouTube, you are always asking me

about where I’m from so I guess I don’t say it enough.

But here in Australia, we speak English with a distinctly

Australian accent which has some unique features,

some that are similar to British English and others

that are more closely aligned

with American English pronunciation.

But for most people who come to visit,

whether they’re an English speaker or not,

they’re confused or they’re dumbfounded, surprised

by our slang vocabulary.

So in this video, I’m gonna share forty slang expressions

that you need to know if you plan to move here,

to visit here, to study here,

or even if you’re just hanging out with some Australians

in some other part of the world.

This lesson will help to reveal that mysterious secret

slang language that Australians use to communicate.

A little history lesson first. Australia is a British colony

so our grammar rules and our spelling rules

are the same as British English and that means

they’re a little different from American English.

Our sense of humour is also quite similar to Brits,

even some of our slang words are the same.

That sense of humour is dry, it’s sarcastic.

It can sometimes take a little bit of getting used to,

especially because with sarcasm, it often involves

saying one thing but the tone and the body language

is completely opposite, you know, like a joke

that’s said with a completely straight face so it’s

really hard to know if they’re actually joking or not.

We are generally pretty easygoing people, you know,

we definitely don’t take ourselves too seriously.

In fact, we’re usually laughing at ourselves,

making fun of our mates, joking around.

So in Australia, if an Australian is making fun of you,

quite often it means that they actually like you,

it’s a weird way of showing affection.

The best thing that you can do is make an Australian

laugh, you will be mates for life.

Now a mate is a friend, right? This is

one of the most important words to an Australian.

It’s usually an affectionate word, you know, meaning

friend but

mate can also be your partner, your brother, your sister,

your son, your daughter, your friend, your colleague

and a mate can also be a total stranger.

Anyone can be called mate, right?

Mate, how are you?

Cool, I will catch you later mate.

It’s super friendly.

But with a shift in tone, it can also be used

to confront someone about a problem.

Listen, mate, we need to talk about this.

Mate, calm down I’m not trying to start an argument.

In fact, the Australian police usually walk up

to any situation and start with

“Hey mate”

like friend, relax. I’m here to help.

Now I know this concept of mate and

mate,

it could be really confusing, right?

But try to use facial expression and tone as a guide,

you know, is it friendly? Is it serious?

If you’re doing the wrong thing and someone

walks up to you and says

“Mate, what do you think you’re doing?”

you know, they’re pissed off right

and that’s Australian for annoyed.

Now a lot of slang words in Australia follow a really

similar pattern.

You take the original word and you shorten it

and then you add either

EEE, AHH or OH at the end.

Now this is really, really common.

These words are really commonly used all the way

across Australia, across all levels of society.

You’ll hear the Prime Minister using these words

along with a truck driver that’s driving across

the Nullarbor which is

the big dirt patch in the middle of Australia.

Now there are literally hundreds of funny words like this

and that can be really intimidating to try and learn

but the ones that I’m including in this video are

ones that I use regularly myself, ones that I hear

people use, my friends, my colleagues, my family.

They use them all the time.

Or ones that regularly come up in the media

because these ones are all relevant, current,

slang words to learn right?

And if you look up Australian slang on a whole

bunch of websites, it might be quite funny to read

all of these random words but actually not a lot of them

really get used anymore, you know, they’re sort of

from a few decades ago.

In Australia, we are big fans of footy

but not this type of footy, that’s soccer.

This is Australian football, footy.

Now I want you to really pay attention to that flap

T sound, it sounds more like a D, right? Footy.

If you’re moving to Melbourne in particular, one of the

first things that you’ll need to do is pick a footy team.

Okay this question will get asked of you probably often.

So get amongst it, go to a couple of games,

even if it’s just to say that you did, it’s a really good place

to start to understand Australian culture.

Barbie is a barbecue.

Snags, sausages.

Arvo, afternoon.

We’re gonna throw some snags on the barbie

on Saturday arvo! Come round.

And that really just means we’re going to cook some

sausages on the barbecue on Saturday afternoon

come over.

Avo, avocado.

Brekkie, breakfast.

Avo on toast is a very common breakfast meal at

cafes in Australia.

It seemed to be the reason why young Australians can’t

actually save enough money to buy a house

because they keep spending all their money on going

out for breakfast and having avo on toast.

So avo is a very common thing to eat for breakfast.

It’s definitely also common at brunch.

Now brunch is a meal between breakfast and lunch,

common in Australia but in other English speaking

countries too. Now it’s not in addition to those meals,

it usually replaces one or the other.

Usually on weekends when

lots of people have a sleep in, maybe they wake up later.

So on Saturday and Sunday in Australia you would

definitely see a lot of people out for brunch

on the weekend.

Alright let’s talk about some places now. So

McDonald’s is called Maccas.

Now if anyone asks you to do a Maccas run,

it means go out and pick up McDonald’s

and bring it back for everyone.

Or you might say

“I’m just waiting on the corner near Maccas”

Now uni is university, uni.

What did you study at uni?

How’s uni going?

This is incredibly common.

If you’re planning to study in Australia,

really the only time that you’re going to hear the word

‘university’ is in formal context.

Everyone else is gonna talk about uni.

So that’s university.

The servo is a service station

or a petrol station.

Now in America the fuel that goes in your car

is called gas but you won’t hear people in Australia

calling it gas. We call it petrol.

So this place is a petrol station or a service station,

a place to service your car

hence the servo.

I need to stop at the servo on the way.

means I need to stop and get some petrol.

The bottle-o.

The bottle-o is a bottle shop or a liquor store,

a shop that sells alcohol.

In Australia, places where you can buy alcohol

are strictly regulated so you can’t buy alcohol

at a 7-Eleven like you can in some countries.

You have to go to the bottle shop, the bottle-o.

Hey I’m gonna stop at the bottle-o on the way,

let me know if you need me to pick something up.

Now while we’re on the subject,

Australians love a drink and one of the best places to sit

and to observe Australian life is in a pub,

at the beach or at the pub.

It’s a really social space and a great space

to strike up a conversation with someone

and to have a chat.

But I wanted to share a few more words

that you might need.

So a slab is a carton of beer,

usually a twenty-four pack of beer right in a box.

A tinny is a can of beer.

A stubby is a bottle of beer.

And a stubby cooler, one of these hideous things

is used to keep your stubby or your tinny cold

during the long hot Australian summers.

These are tourist souvenirs that you can get in

any servo, anywhere around Australia

and you can collect all of the ugliest ones that you can

find and keep them as souvenirs

of your time in Australia.

This one’s from the Nanutarra Road House.

It’s got a goanna, a road train and an eagle.

Every Australian has at least twenty of them

stuffed in random places around their house

and generally

the gaudier, the uglier, the better.

And an esky is what you need to take to the park

to keep your drinks and your food cooling so it’s like

an insulated box where you put ice

and keep your drinks cool, that’s an esky.

Lotto is the lottery.

The most I’ve ever won on a lotto ticket is

about fifty bucks.

And bucks is slang for dollars.

If I catch an uber home from the city,

it usually costs me about thirty bucks.

Ripper is a good expression when something’s going well

or it’s good like “ah ripper!”

You could say

“You little Ripper!” when something’s really good.

You’ve got great news. Or you could say

“Bloody ripper!”

when something’s really great like when

you win the lotto.

Bloody ripper!

What a great day!

In Australia, many, many, many suburbs and place

names are also shortened too.

So Brissie is Brisbane.

Tassie is Tasmania

Sandy is Sandringham.

Freo is Fremantle.

Rotto is Rottnest Island in WA.

The Goldie is the Gold Coast in Queensland.

The G is the MCG, famous sports ground in Melbourne.

And if there are any Australians watching and

you can think of others,

please let me know in the comments, hit me up.

There are so many of these,

the list is way too long to continue with here.

But the point is that if you hear a word that you don’t

recognise, it’s totally okay to ask, you know.

Australians know that not everyone understands our

slang way of you know,

referring to things, especially place names.

So if you’re not sure, just ask.

Another really important place is the loo,

the toilet.

So the dunny used to be a very Australian expression

but it’s rarely used now. Lots of random Australian slang

websites include it because it’s funny

but don’t bother learning it and actually using it.

Nobody does it.

So people who are involved in construction work

are often called tradespeople. They’re the skilled people

who also come to your house to fix things

when they break.

Now in Australia, of course, we have shortened

the names for all of these people.

Starting with tradie. Now tradie is a tradesman.

It’s a really general word for everyone who works in that

type of industry.

But specifically a brickie is a bricklayer.

A sparkie is an electrician.

A chippie is a carpenter.

And this kind of continues into all

other types of work as well.

A truckie is a truck driver.

A poli is a politician

and you’ll often hear this used in

Australian media when talking about politicians.

A sickie is a sick day.

But not a real sick day.

I don’t know if this happens much in your country but

a sickie is when you take a day off work but you’re not

actually sick.

Maybe it’s because the weather’s really nice and you

want to go fishing with your mates.

This is called chucking a sickie or pulling a sickie.

What else is there?

Info is information. Intro is introduction.

And I think those two are pretty commonly used across

lots of different English-speaking countries but

in Australia we definitely love it

because we love those shortened versions.

A mo, the moustache.

A roo is a kangaroo.

Mozzie is a mosquito. I hate those guys!

For some reason they always come after me so

I am always taking mozzie spray with me

everywhere I go in summer.

This insect repellent is called mozzie spray

in Australia.

Anyway that is a solid list of

relevant Australian slang words to learn

and even if you don’t use them yourself,

just becoming familiar with them is going to help you

to understand Australian native English speakers

so much more easily.

Now you might even be able to think of some others

so let me know in the comments if you’ve got some

other ideas and suggestions.

But also if you’ve got some questions about how these

words are regularly used or

maybe you’ve heard of another slang word

and you’re not sure about the meaning

or if it’s commonly used,

let me know in the comments. I’d be happy to jump

down and answer your questions there.

Now I know it’s unlikely that you’ll be

travelling to Australia anytime soon but

if you want to follow me on my adventures in Australia,

well make sure you come check out my

Instagram account here.

I’m gonna be heading up north on a camping trip in

a couple of months and I’m really excited to share

my beautiful country with you

and take you along for the journey

so come check it out if you want to come along.

Otherwise, I will see you in the next lesson.

See you there!

啊澳大利亚,世界上最大的岛屿。

最小的大陆。 一块大石头。

和一个非常漂亮的港口。

如果有机会,您绝对应该参观。

你绝对应该。

我是 mmmEnglish 的 Emma,我也是澳大利亚人。

在 YouTube 上,你总是问

我来自哪里,所以我想我说得还不够。

但是在澳大利亚,我们说英语时带有明显的

澳大利亚口音,具有一些独特的特点

,一些与英国英语相似,而另

一些则更接近于

美国英语的发音。

但对于大多数前来参观的人来说,

无论他们是否会说英语,

他们都会对

我们的俚语词汇感到困惑或目瞪口呆。

所以在这个视频中,我将分享四十个俚语

,如果你打算搬到这里,

来这里参观,来这里学习,

或者即使你只是和一些澳大利亚人

在其他地方闲逛,你需要知道这些 世界。

本课将有助于

揭示澳大利亚人用来交流的神秘的秘密俚语。

先上一点历史课。 澳大利亚是英国的殖民地,

所以我们的语法规则和拼写

规则与英国英语相同,这意味着

它们与美国英语略有不同。

我们的幽默感也和英国人非常相似,

甚至我们的一些俚语都是一样的。

那种幽默感是枯燥的,是讽刺的。

有时可能需要一点时间来适应,

特别是因为讽刺,它通常涉及

说一件事,但语气和肢体

语言完全相反,你知道,就像

一个完全板着脸说的笑话,所以

真的 很难知道他们是否真的在开玩笑。

我们通常都是很随和的人,你知道,

我们绝对不会把自己看得太重。

事实上,我们通常是在嘲笑自己

,取笑我们的伙伴,开玩笑。

所以在澳大利亚,如果一个澳大利亚人取笑你,

往往意味着他们真的喜欢你,

这是一种奇怪的表达爱意的方式。

你能做的最好的事情就是让澳大利亚人

发笑,你们将成为终生的伴侣。

现在伴侣是朋友,对吧? 这

是对澳大利亚人来说最重要的词之一。

这通常是一个深情的词,你知道,意思是

朋友,但

伴侣也可以是你的伴侣,你的兄弟,你的姐妹,

你的儿子,你的女儿,你的朋友,你的同事

和伴侣也可以是一个完全陌生的人。

任何人都可以称为伴侣,对吧?

伙计,你好吗?

酷,我稍后会抓住你的伙计。

它超级友好。

但随着语气的转变,它也可以

用来面对某人遇到问题。

听着,伙计,我们需要谈谈这个。

伙计,冷静点,我不是要开始争论。

事实上,澳大利亚警方通常会

面对任何情况并像朋友一样以

“Hey mate”开头

,放松一下。 我是来帮忙的。

现在我知道了伴侣和

伴侣的概念,

它可能真的很混乱,对吧?

但是试着用面部表情和语气作为指导,

你知道的,友好吗? 严重吗?

如果你做错了事,有人

走到你面前说:

“伙计,你认为你在做什么?”

你知道,他们很

生气,这就是澳大利亚人的愤怒。

现在澳大利亚的很多俚语都遵循着非常

相似的模式。

你取原始单词并将其缩短

,然后

在末尾添加 EEE、AHH 或 OH。

现在这真的非常普遍。

这些词

在澳大利亚的各个社会阶层都非常普遍。

您会听到总理

和一名卡车司机一起使用这些词,该卡车司机正在穿越

澳大利亚中部的大片纳拉伯(Nullarbor)。

现在确实有数百个这样的有趣单词

,尝试和学习可能真的很吓人,

但我在这个视频中包含的

那些是我自己经常使用的,我听到

人们使用的那些,我的朋友,我的 同事,我的家人。

他们一直在使用它们。

或者那些经常出现在媒体上的,

因为这些都是相关的,当前的,

俚语学习对吗?

如果你在一大堆网站上查找澳大利亚俚语

,阅读所有这些随机词可能会很有趣,

但实际上并没有很多人

真正使用过,你知道,它们

有点像几十年前的事了 前。

在澳大利亚,我们是足球的忠实粉丝,

但不是这种足球,那是足球。

这是澳大利亚足球,足球。

现在我要你真正注意那个拍打的

T音,听起来更像是D,对吧? 脚丫子。

特别是如果你要搬到墨尔本

,你需要做的第一件事就是挑选一支足球队。

好的,这个问题可能会经常被问到。

所以加入其中,参加几场比赛,

即使只是说你参加了,这也是

开始了解澳大利亚文化的好地方。

芭比是烧烤。

香肠,香肠。

阿尔沃,下午。

我们要在星期六 arvo 上给芭比娃娃扔一些障碍

! 转过来。

这真的只是意味着我们要

在周六下午的烧烤架上煮一些香肠

过来。

鳄梨,鳄梨。

布雷基,早餐。

Avo on toast 是澳大利亚咖啡馆非常常见的早餐

这似乎是为什么年轻的澳大利亚人

实际上无法攒够钱买房的

原因,因为他们一直把所有的钱都花在

出去吃早餐和吃面包上。

所以avo是很常见的早餐吃的东西。

这在早午餐时也很常见。

现在早午餐是早餐和午餐之间的一顿饭,

在澳大利亚很常见,但在其他英语

国家也很常见。 现在它不是除了那些饭菜,

它通常代替其中一种。

通常在周末

很多人都在睡觉的时候,他们可能会晚点醒来。

所以在澳大利亚的周六和周日,你

肯定会看到很多人周末出去吃早

午餐。

好了,我们现在谈谈一些地方。 所以

麦当劳叫Maccas。

现在,如果有人要求你参加 Maccas 跑步,

那就意味着出去买麦当劳,

然后把它带回来给每个人。

或者你可能会说

“我在 Maccas 附近的拐角处等着”

现在 uni 是大学,uni。

你在大学学了什么?

大学怎么样?

这非常常见。

如果您打算在澳大利亚学习,那么您

真正听到“大学”这个词的唯一时间

是在正式语境中。

其他人都会谈论大学。

所以这就是大学。

伺服是服务站

或加油站。

现在在美国,你车里的燃料

叫做汽油,但你不会听到澳大利亚人

把它叫做汽油。 我们称之为汽油。

所以这个地方是一个加油站或服务站,

一个为你的汽车服务的地方,

因此是伺服系统。

我需要在途中停在伺服器上。

意味着我需要停下来买点汽油。

瓶子-o。

Bottle-o 是酒瓶店或酒类商店,是一家卖酒的商店

在澳大利亚,您可以购买酒精饮料的地方

受到严格监管,因此

您不能像在某些国家/地区那样在 7-11 购买酒精饮料。

你必须去瓶子店,瓶子-o。

嘿,我会在路上停在瓶子旁边,

如果你需要我去取点东西,请告诉我。

现在,当我们谈到这个主题时,

澳大利亚人喜欢喝一杯,而

坐下来观察澳大利亚生活的最佳场所之一是在酒吧

、海滩或酒吧。

这是一个真正的社交空间,也是

与某人进行对话

和聊天的绝佳空间。

但我想再分享几句话

,你可能需要。

所以一块板是一盒啤酒,

通常是一盒二十四包啤酒。

一罐啤酒就是一罐啤酒。

粗短是一瓶啤酒。

还有一个粗短的冷却器,这些可怕的东西之一

是用来

在澳大利亚漫长炎热的夏季让你的粗短或微凉的。

这些是您可以

在澳大利亚任何地方的任何伺服系统中获得的旅游纪念品

,您可以收集所有您能找到的最丑陋的,

并将它们作为

您在澳大利亚的纪念品。

这是来自 Nanutarra Road House 的。

它有一只猩猩、一辆公路火车和一只鹰。

每个澳大利亚人至少有 20 个

塞在他们家周围的随机位置,

而且通常

越艳丽、越丑陋越好。

esky 是您需要带去公园

以保持饮料和食物冷却的东西,因此它就像

一个隔热箱,您可以在其中放置冰块

并保持饮料凉爽,这就是 esky。

乐透是彩票。

我在乐透彩票上赢过的最多的彩票

大约是 50 美元。

bucks 是美元的俚语。

如果我从城里赶上一辆优步回家

,通常要花我大约 30 美元。

当事情进展顺利时,Ripper 是一个很好的表达方式,

或者像“啊 ripper!”这样的好表达。

你可以说

“你这个小开膛手!” 当事情真的很好的时候。

你有好消息。 或者你可以说

“该死的开膛手!”

当你赢得乐透时,事情真的很棒

该死的开膛手!

美好的一天!

在澳大利亚,很多很多很多郊区和

地名也被缩短了。

所以布里西就是布里斯班。

塔西是塔斯马尼亚

桑迪是桑德灵厄姆。

弗雷奥是弗里曼特尔。

罗托是华盛顿州的罗特尼斯岛。

Goldie是昆士兰的黄金海岸。

G是墨尔本著名的运动场MCG。

如果有澳大利亚人在看,

你能想到其他人,

请在评论中告诉我,打我。

其中有很多

,列表太长,无法在此处继续。

但关键是,如果你听到一个你不认识的词,你

可以问,你知道的。

澳大利亚人知道,并不是每个人都能理解我们的

俚语,

指事物,尤其是地名。

因此,如果您不确定,请询问。

另一个非常重要的地方是厕所

,厕所。

所以dunny曾经是一个非常澳大利亚的表达方式,

但现在很少使用了。 许多随机的澳大利亚俚语

网站都包含它,因为它很有趣,

但不要费心学习它并实际使用它。

没有人这样做。

因此,从事建筑工作的

人通常被称为技工。 他们是技术娴熟的

人,当它们坏了时也会来你家修理东西

当然,现在在澳大利亚,我们已经缩短

了所有这些人的名字。

从传统开始。 现在tradie是一个商人。

对于在该行业工作的每个人来说,这是一个非常普遍的词

但具体来说,砌砖工就是砌砖工。

sparkie是电工。

一个chippie是一个木匠。

这种类型的工作也会延续到所有

其他类型的工作中。

卡车司机是卡车司机。

poli 是一位政治家

,在谈论政治家时,您经常会在

澳大利亚媒体上听到这句话。

病假是病假。

但不是真正的病假。

我不知道这种情况在您的国家是否经常发生,

但病假是指您请假一天但

实际上并没有生病。

也许是因为天气真的很好,你

想和你的伙伴一起去钓鱼。

这被称为夹住病人或拉病人。

那里还有什么?

信息就是信息。 介绍是介绍。

而且我认为这两个在

许多不同的英语国家都很常用,但

在澳大利亚,我们绝对喜欢它,

因为我们喜欢那些缩短的版本。

阿莫,小胡子。

roo是袋鼠。

Mozzie是一只蚊子。 我讨厌那些家伙!

出于某种原因,他们总是追着我,所以

我在夏天去的任何地方都随身携带 mozzie 喷雾。

这种驱虫剂在澳大利亚被称为mozzie spray

无论如何,这是一份

需要学习的相关澳大利亚俚语单词的可靠列表

,即使您自己不使用它们,

只要熟悉它们就可以帮助您更轻松

地理解以澳大利亚英语为母语的人

现在您甚至可以想到其他一些

,如果您有其他想法和建议,请在评论中告诉我

但是,如果您对这些词的常用用法有一些疑问,

或者您可能听说过另一个俚语

,但不确定其含义

或是否常用,请

在评论中告诉我。 我很乐意跳下

来回答你的问题。

现在我知道你不太可能

很快去澳大利亚旅行,但

如果你想跟随我在澳大利亚的冒险之旅,

那么一定要来这里查看我的

Instagram 帐户。

几个月后我要去北方露营,我很高兴能

和你分享我美丽的国家

,带你一起去旅行,

所以如果你想一起去看看。

否则,我们下节课再见。

到时候那里见!