Australian Slang | Real Life English! | Vocabulary and Common Expressions

1,136,635 views ・ 2018-01-26

mmmEnglish


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:09
This video is one that you've been asking me for
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for a long time!
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I'm Emma from mmmEnglish,
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here to share some very common,
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very Australian expressions with you.
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If you are living in Australia or
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planning to visit Australia in the future
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and plan to chat with some locals while you're here,
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you're going to have to learn
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some of the local slang expressions
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and get used to listening to
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an Australian English accent.
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If you don't already know, I'm from Australia,
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a very big, very beautiful island underneath you
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or to the east or the west of you.
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Now, my Australian English is
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an English teachers version of Australian English,
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so I thought it would be useful to get some
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real Australian accents on here
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just to show you what it's like.
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So I've asked a few friends to think of some common
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Australian expressions that they use all the time
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and then try to explain them for you.
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It's going to seem like a bit of a random collection
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of expressions because I asked
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them to think of ones that they use.
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But they are super useful and they're used every day!
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Ready?
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Let me first introduce you to Ben.
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Now you've actually met Ben before in this video here.
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I often say "What are you doing this arvo?"
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which means, well it's a compressed way of saying
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"What are you doing this afternoon?"
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Thanks Ben! that was a pretty good explanation.
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This afternoon is very often spoken by Australians as
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"This arvo" or even "sarvo".
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Arvo is used in spoke English only
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and that goes for most of the expressions in this video.
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They're informal and they're mostly used in
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spoken English.
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And Australians like to shorten words
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as much as possible.
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Arvo.
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Avo. Ambo.
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Servo.
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Barbie.
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Sanga.
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Kanga.
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Blowie.
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Footy.
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Mozzie.
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Bottle-o.
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And it just goes on and on!
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That's where arvo comes from.
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And then there's the link between the words, this
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and arvo.
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And this happens all the time in spoken English
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for all native speakers
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who are speaking at a natural pace
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no matter where they come from.
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Words that end in a consonant sound are often linked
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to the following word,
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if it starts with a vowel sound.
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I'm a little hungry.
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I'm a
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I'm a little hungry.
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Keep it together.
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Keep it together.
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Keep it together.
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So that's why this and arvo
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sound like they're smashed together this.
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This arvo.
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This arvo.
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This arvo. This arvo. This arvo.
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We're having some mates around for a barbie 'sarvo,
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you should come!
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You can also hear arvo on its own.
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I'll pick it up on Wednesday arvo.
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Let's move on.
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She'll be right.
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Where would I use "she'll be right"?
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Any time that something looks like
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it's going to go wrong
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or you're in doubt or
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any uncertainty.
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Yes!
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And you're just like "nah it'll be fine"
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but instead you just go "she'll be right".
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Mate
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add a "mate" on the end.
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Mate is
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that extra convincer. It just reassures everyone
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she'll be right mate.
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Like Jess said, this expression is used all the time
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when you're trying to convince yourself or someone else
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that everything will be okay.
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It's the equivalent of saying "don't worry about it"
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or "it'll be fine"
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The car feels a little strange,
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I hope we don't have a flat tire.
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She'll be right,
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there's only ten K's to go.
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The trick with this expression is that 'she' as a pronoun
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doesn't always refer to a woman or a girl.
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Most of the time, yes it does,
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but sometimes you'll hear people refer to objects
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as she - it's just something to keep in mind
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particularly for this expression.
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Here, she is referring to the tire
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or even to the situation in general.
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So let's hear a few common ways that Australians talk
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positively about something. Here's Ali.
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I say either it'll be ace
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or I've had a ripper of a time!
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It's a great thing. If you have a ripper,
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yeah a ripper, a ripper of a time, you've had a great time
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like it's it's up here.
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Yeah.
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And the good time's probably here and a ripper of a time
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and an ace time is like
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like maybe a little bit lower.
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Okay so all of these expressions are used to say
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that something is really great.
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Note that ace is an adjective, it could be used
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to describe people, things, experiences.
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Ripper can be an adjective too!
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I've had a ripper day!
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But it can also be used in this
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fixed expression as a noun.
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A ripper of a time.
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How was your trip?
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It was ace! We had a ripper of a time!
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We just hung out on the beach all day!
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Now when Ali and Jess were using their hands to show
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how great these expressions were,
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they were explaining the degree of greatness.
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So according to them,
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a great time is here and an ace time is here
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and a ripper of a time is here.
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I guess that might be true!
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Australians, what do you think?
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Is a ripper better than ace?
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I think so.
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Meet Tom.
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Now Tom is a tradesman and tradesmen work in trades.
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They build things and they fix things.
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Here in Australia it's really common to hear
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the abbreviated names of these jobs.
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The shortened version
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because we Australians love to make words shorter.
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Say out of all the tradies, which is a tradesman,
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tradies, you got your chippies - which is a carpenter -
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sparkys - which is an electrician -
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the brickies - which are bricklayers.
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Did you get that?
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He's referring to people's jobs. A tradie is a tradesman.
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A chippy is a carpenter.
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Someone who workswith wood.
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A sparky is an electrician.
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A brickie is a bricklayer.
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Probably the other best part of the day
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is where we knock off.
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Finish. Get on the piss,
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which is like you go have a beer.
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Knock off and get on the piss.
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Not distinctly Australian expressions there
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but ones that you will definitely hear
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when you're speaking to Australians.
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Unfortunately.
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Knock off is to finish work for the day.
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What time do you knock off?
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I'll knock off early so we can go to the cinema.
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To get or to be on the piss means to drink alcohol
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and usually quite a lot of it.
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One glass of wine is not "getting on the piss".
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Drinking ten beers is definitely on the piss.
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Now this is not really
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a pleasant way to describe this activity.
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It's very, very informal and used only amongst friends
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but for goodness sake's please don't tell your boss
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that that's what you're doing on a Tuesday night.
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Tell your boss you're meeting a friend for a drink.
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But then when you're talking to your friend you could say
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let's get on the piss.
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That would be letting them know that you were
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interested in drinking a lot that night.
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Where's Sam?
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It's Friday, he'll be on the piss with his mates.
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Please don't tell anyone you learnt that from me,
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you learnt it from Tom.
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I've got a few mates who often chuck a sickie
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which means when you can't be bothered going to work,
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they pretend to be sick and they tell their boss,
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well they tell them I'm sick,
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but they're really chucking a sickie.
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Okay this is a good one, every Australian watching
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has definitely chucked a sickie
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at least at some time in the past.
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And you might have done it as well.
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So this is when you tell your boss
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that you're unwell
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and that you need to take the day off work.
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But really you just want to do something more fun
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like go to the beach or maybe the night before,
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you went out and you partied too hard
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and you can't be bothered, you feel lazy.
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So in Australian slang
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you can say that you chucked a sickie.
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Your new friends here might try and convince you to go
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camping with them one long weekend.
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Come with us!
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You can just chuck a sickie on Monday!
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The weather is so good today,
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I think we'll just chuck a sickie and go to the beach.
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Also check out how Ben said Australia.
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Not in Australia anyway. Not in Australia anyway.
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Not in Australia anyway.
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This is literally what Australia sounds like
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when Australians say it.
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Let's get back to the girls.
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Take it easy. Yeah.
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If you're too keen, too excited.
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When else do you use it? Like if you, just like,
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I'm going to take it easy.
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Too much.
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But then you can also tell someone if they're like
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angry or like
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too like, erratic.
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Just say like whoa take it easy.
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Take it easy is not strictly Australian.
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You'll hear it said by lots of different
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native English speakers
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but it does have a few different meanings
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like Jess suggested.
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It can mean relax,
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to do nothing, just rest or chill out.
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What are you doing on the weekend?
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Nothing much, just taking it easy.
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Or it can mean calm down
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so if someone is getting angry or upset
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or they're too energetic,
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then you can say,
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hey, take it easy, Sam.
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Stop yelling, tell me what's wrong.
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Okay we're just going to deal with the shrimp thing
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right now.
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You probably think that we say
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"Chuck another shrimp on the barbie!" all the time.
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No!
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In Australia, this
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is not a shrimp.
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It's a prawn.
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We never say shrimp,
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you'll never hear an Australian say shrimp.
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But barbie is slang for barbecue
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and you'll hear people say that all the time!
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Come round to our place for a Barbie on Sunday.
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That just means come around to our house for dinner.
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A dinner that we're cooking on the barbecue.
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So there you have it,
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a collection of Australian expressions by Australians.
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Thanks to all of my awesome Aussie mates
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who helped to make this video.
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That's just a little taste of the type of English
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that you can expect down here in Australia.
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Have a prawn off the barbie.
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Chuck another prawn on the barbie.
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Yeah, cut to me.
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Well, I'm gonna play cricket, I bowl a few rips and orders
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or a couple of ring-a-ding-dinggers.
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Yeah I don't have to explain it,
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you have to have like the words come on.
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Sorry mate. Typical tradies, though,
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I'm a chippy, you know, all the tradies get to work,
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smocko, knock off, get on the piss.
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Take it easy, take it back a notch,
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just wind it down over there, just keep going.
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How do I speak in slang?
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Do you know what though? I reckon we nailed this.
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Don't forget to subscribe
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and check out some of my other more
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serious English grammar lessons over there.
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Thanks for watching, I'll see you soon.
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