sengjc Posted October 28, 2015 Posted October 28, 2015 The British claim: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/australiaandthepacific/australia/11957994/Gday-mate-Lazy-Australian-accent-caused-by-alcoholic-slur-of-heavy-drinking-early-settlers.html And the Australians retort: http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-10-28/aussies-slur-their-words-because-our-forefathers-were-drunk/6892910?pfm=ms 2
Jeremy Festa Posted October 28, 2015 Posted October 28, 2015 I mean, far canal mate that is outrageously entertaining and then informative! Sent from my iPhone
Warren Posted October 28, 2015 Posted October 28, 2015 Or yeah, well fuggem, fuggem all. I ope their chooks turn into emus and kick their dunny down. Chuck us a tinny love, the footyz on. 1
khamy Posted October 28, 2015 Posted October 28, 2015 After reading that slur on our culture i find myself parched with thirst. glug glug glug ... BURRRP!! flamin' drongo's. to rite Wazza... fuggem all. 1
perkinke Posted October 29, 2015 Posted October 29, 2015 That researcher thinks the Australian accent is bad? Should send them to talk to an old Brooklyn family!
dangolf18 Posted October 29, 2015 Posted October 29, 2015 Hmm..took those articles with a grain of salt. Accents have always interested me. Always wondered how American accents formed and what accent George Washington and his constituents had at the time. They must have had something similar to an English accent.
soutso Posted October 29, 2015 Posted October 29, 2015 Isn't it obvious that when you mix a bunch of Brits - English, Irish, Welsh, Scottish; generations later you get an Aussie accent. Simple 1
Rye Posted October 29, 2015 Posted October 29, 2015 Isn't it obvious that when you mix a bunch of Brits - English, Irish, Welsh, Scottish; generations later you get an Aussie accent. SimpleSend the same group to a cold climate, and voila! Canadian accent! 2
Jeremy Festa Posted October 29, 2015 Posted October 29, 2015 I listened to this podcast the other day. Pretty interesting to study modern trends https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/stuff-you-should-know/id278981407?mt=2&i=355150231 Like the comments on Aussie's modern impact on accent and style trends. And when looking back, I personally always thought that even 1940-60's American radio sounded a little Englishy. Sent from my iPhone
cigcars Posted October 29, 2015 Posted October 29, 2015 ...and coming across this limp animal's body, I fancied; "Blimey - I think this bloke's kicked!" But, Crikey! I was wrong! G'day, mate!
sengjc Posted October 29, 2015 Author Posted October 29, 2015 I speak: - Aussie with an Asian-American accent, - American with an English accent, - English with a Malaysian/Singaporean accent, - Malay with a Chinese accent, and - Cantonese and Mandarin with a Westerner accent. I am quite confused...
Guest rob Posted October 29, 2015 Posted October 29, 2015 I speak: - Aussie with an Asian-American accent, - American with an English accent, - English with a Malaysian/Singaporean accent, - Malay with a Chinese accent, and - Cantonese and Mandarin with a Westerner accent. I am quite confused... At least you don't speak like a bloody Queenslander !
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