Australian English
Differences from other variants of EnglishAustralian English is similar in many respects to British English but it also borrows from American English. (For example, it uses truck instead of lorry, and freeway is the most common word for a high-speed road, though motorway and highway are acceptable.) It is most similar to New Zealand English, although the difference is immediately obvious to a speaker from either country. There are also influences from Hiberno-English, as many Australians are of Irish descent. Most noticeable is the non-standard pronunciation of the letter 'h' as /heItS/ - although this is by no means universal - rather than the unaspirated /eItS/ found in New Zealand, as well as most of Britain and North America. This is attributed to Irish Catholic brothers and nuns teaching in schools. Others include the non-standard plural of 'you' as 'youse', /ju:z/ (common in some social circles, but generally uncommon elsewhere), and the expression 'good on you', although these are also encountered in New Zealand English. Many Americans struggle to distinguish an Australian English speaker from a New Zealand English speaker, or even a British speaker (just as Canadian and other North American English speakers are often indistinguishable to Australasian ears and are only identified as American). Due to the predominance of foreign mass media products in the country, Australians are familiar with at least some of the variants of modern British English and American English, and many have adopted some of the distinctive vocabulary and idioms of those languages. The exposure to the different spellings of British and American English leads to a certain amount of spelling confusion, for instance "organize" as opposed to "organise", or "behavior" as opposed to "behaviour". Generally, either variant is accepted (though British spelling is more prevalent). In 1981 the Macquarie Dictionary of Australian English was published after 10 years of research and planning. Editions have been published ever since. There is also an Oxford dictionary of Australian English. Unique Australian traitsAustralian English also incorporates several uniquely Australian terms, such as outback to refer to remote regional areas, walkabout to refer to a long journey of uncertain length and bush to refer to native forested areas, but also to regional areas as well. Fair dinkum can mean are you telling me the truth?, or this is the truth!, or even this is ridiculous! depending on context. The disputed origin (see [1] (http://www.anu.edu.au/ANDC/Ozwords/November_98/7._dinkum.htm) ) dates back to the gold rush in the 1850s, "din-kum" being derived from the Cantonese for "real gold": "fair dinkum" is the genuine article. G'day is well known as a stereotypical Australian greeting.("G'day" is not quite synonymous with "good day", and is never used as an expression for "farewell".) Many of these terms have been adopted into British English via popular culture and family links. Some elements of Aboriginal languages have been incorporated into Australian English, mainly as names for places, flora and fauna (e.g. Dingo, kangaroo). Beyond that, very few terms have been adopted into the wider language. A notable exception is Cooee (a musical call which travels long distances in the bush and is used to say 'is there anyone there?'), which can also be used as a term for an audible range of distance ("If he's within cooee of here we'll spot him"). Though often thought of as an Aboriginal word, Didgeridoo/Didjeridu (a well known wooden musical instrument) is actually derived from the Irish term "Dudaire Dubh", which literally means "black trumpeter". Australian English has a unique set of diminutives formed by adding -o or -ie to the ends of (often abbreviated words). There does not appear to be any particular pattern to which of these suffixes is used. Examples with the -o ending include abo (aborigine - now considered very offensive), arvo (afternoon), servo (service station), rego (annual motor vehicle registration) and ambo (ambulance officer). The Salvation Army is often referred to as "The Salvos". Examples of the -ie ending include barbie (barbecue), bikkie (biscuit) and blowie (blowfly). Occasionally, a -za diminutive is used, usually for personal names where the first of multiple syllables ends in an "r". Barry becomes Bazza, Karen becomes Kazza and Sharon becomes Shazza. Many Australians start sentences with "Look,...", especially in response to a question. This word doesn't really serve any purpose except as a phatic or a stand in for "umm" or "err" common in e.g. British English. Rhyming slangA very common feature of traditional Australian English was rhyming slang, based on Cockney rhyming slang and imported by migrants from London in the 19th century. Rhyming slang consists of taking a phrase, usually of two words, which rhymes with a commonly used word, then using the first word of the phrase the represent the word. For example "Captain Cook" rhymes with "look", so to "have a captain cook," or to "have a captain," means to "have a look." Rhyming slang was often used to create euphemistic terms for obscene words. In recent years this feature of Australian English has declined under the impact of mass popular culture. Some of the more colourful examples:
Phonetics of Australian EnglishThe "cultivated" and "general" accents use 24 consonants, 11 vowels, 8 diphthongs and the schwa. (The "broad" accents employ a myriad of different vowels and diphthongs). Australian English is a non-rhotic language; 'r' is pronounced only before a vowel, otherwise replaced with a schwa. IPA symbols of the sounds are as follows (with SAMPA symbols between square brackets): Consonants
Vowels
The symbols /a/, /e/ and /o/ are also used, but only in diphthongs. Diphthongsaɪ [aI], eɪ [eI], ɔɪ [OI], aʊ [aU], oʊ [oU], ɪə [I@], ɛə [E@], ʊə [U@] Note: Schwa /ə/ is the only short vowel that appears at the end of a word AllophonesThere are many allophones in Australian English. Here are some examples:
Other Phonetic QualitiesVarieties of Australian English (particularly Broad) are rife with elision and assimiliation. Often entire sentences are contracted into a single drawling word. "How are you travelling?" can be truncated to "Ayatravlin?". For this reason, Broad Australian can be difficult to decipher to non-Australians. This truncated language is sometimes referred to as "Strine", a self-referential truncation of "Australian" made popular in the 1965 book "Let Stalk Strine" (i.e. "Let's Talk Australian"). Vocabulary
Many distinctive Australian words have been driven into extinction or near extinction in recent decades, under the homogenising influence of mass media and imported culture. This process is widely regretted but seems to be irreversible. Some examples:
Spoken Australian EnglishAccording to stereotype, spoken Australian English is thought to be highly colloquial, possibly more so than other spoken variants. Various publishers have produced "phrase books" to assist visitors. These phrasebooks reflect a highly exaggerated and outdated style of Australian colloquialisms and they should partially be regarded as amusements rather than accurate usage guides. Perception has it that a common trait is the frequent use of long-winded similes, such as "Slow as a wet weekend", "Built like a brick shit-house", "mad as a cut snake" or "flat out like a lizard drinking". Whether this perception is based in reality or has been produced by popular culture items of fiction such as television series Neighbours and the films of Paul Hogan remains in question. A substantial collection of unique or unusual words is in common spoken usage, e.g. "dacks" (trousers, Most likely derived from the London clothier DAKS founded in 1894), "dag" (unfashionable person), "bludge" (to shirk or to idle), "ute" (a utility vehicle or pickup truck). Another well-known Australianism, "wowser" (a killjoy), is not as popular as it once was, but is still used. An even larger vocabulary is derived from recognisable words with entirely new meanings - "to bag" (to criticise), "blue" (either a fight or heated argument, or an embarrassing mistake), "crook" (unwell, also unfair), "to wag" (to play truant), "cactus" (non-functional), "cut" (angry or upset) and especially "root" (a euphemism for sexual intercourse, which has caused social embarrassment for American women who innocently declare that they "root" for a particular sports team). Also, the term Australians use for "fanny pack" is "bum bag" since in Australia fanny is a slang term for a vagina. Spoken Australian English is also generally far more tolerant of expletives than other variants: the former Prime Minister Paul Keating would openly refer to his parliamentary opponents as "mangy maggot pissants". This has been theorised to be due to the phenomenon known as tall poppy syndrome, itself an Australian English term. Australians are known for their directness or "why call a spade a spade, when you can call it a bloody shovel!", which can lead to misunderstanding and offence on the part of Australia's Asian neighbours. Another notable trait of Australian English usage, inherited from Britain, is the use of deadpan humour, in which the joker will make an outrageous or ridiculous statement without explicitly indicating they are joking. Americans visiting Australia have gained themselves a reputation for gullibility and a lack of a sense of humour by not recognising that tales of kangaroos hopping across the Sydney Harbour Bridge are examples of this propensity. See Drop Bear. Myths about Australian EnglishNegative evaluations of Australian English, like those of many other English dialects, tend to centre on the belief, or come from the perspective that other forms of English (especially Received Pronunciation British English) are superior for some reason. These evaluations of Australian English are simple value judgments and essentially meaningless. Australian English is sometimes described as high-pitched, nasal, lazy, or drawling. The charges of high pitch and nasality are not entirely true, as many Australian English speakers perceive much of American English to be nasal; while laziness and drawling are impossible to test objectively. If anything, the tendency for Australians to turn pure vowels into diphthongs requires more work from the speech organs. Similarly, the ridiculing of the Australian accent in Britain for its supposed 'questioning intonation' (known in linguistics as high rising terminal) is not entirely justified. Many Australians' speech patterns do not conform to this stereotype, and the 'questioning intonation' is often found in many regional speech patterns in the south of England, Northern Ireland, and in some American ones. Talking about foodWith foodstuffs Australian English tends to be more closely related to the British vocabulary, eg. biscuit for the American cookie (Although we do call a sweet biscuit a cookie and a savoury or otherwise flavoured ones a biscuit). However in a few cases such as zucchini, snow pea and eggplant Australian English uses the same terms as the Americans, whereas the British use the equivalent French terms courgette, mangetout and do not care whether eggplant or aubergine is used. This is possibly due to a fashion that emerged in mid-19th Century Britain of adopting French nouns for foodstuffs, and hence the usage changed in Britain while the original terms were preserved in the (ex-)colonies. For some uncertain reason, Australia uses the botanical name capsicum for what both the British and the Americans would call (red or green) peppers. Perhaps this is in order to contrast table pepper (berries of genus Piper) from so-called "hot peppers" (larger fruits of genus Capsicum). Regional variationIt is sometimes claimed that regional variations in pronunciation and accent exist, but if present at all they are very small compared to those of British and American English - sufficiently so that linguists are divided on the question. Overall, pronunciation is determined less by region than by social and educational influences. However, there used to be a significant regional variation in Australian English vocabulary between different states. For example, Queenslanders say "port" (short for "portmanteau") while New South Welshmen and Victorians say "school bag", "backpack" or "knapsack". "Football" refers to the most popular code in the state. Victorians start a game of Australian rules football with a "ball up", Western Australians with a "bounce down"; New South Welshmen and Queenslanders start a game of Rugby League with a "kick off". Another example is the word used for what is a fairly bland, thick, german sausage, usually eaten cold, which is a common filling (sliced with tomato sauce) in a sandwich. In South Australia it is Fritz, in Victoria it is Stras (Strasburg), in New South Wales it is Devon, in Western Australia Polony, in Queensland Windsor and in Tasmania, Belgium. People from north Queensland often end sentences with the interogative "..., eh?". The British colony in South Australia was composed of free settlers, and then had a significant German migration, leaving people from there with a somewhat distinctive clipped pronunciation. The manner of speech of South Australian born Alexander Downer, the Minister for Foreign Affairs, is mocked by many Australians for being ' ' or ' ' although many commentators have pointed out that his speech is simply typical of this regional accent. The steadily increasing effect of centralised film, TV and even radio production, however, is rapidly blurring these distinctions. Regional Phonetic VariationStudies have shown that there are limited regional variations in Australian English. This chart shows the percentage of speakers from different capital cities who pronounce words in a certain way, concentrating on the usage of /æ/ vs. /a/. This is probably the most significant regional phonetic variation in Australian English.
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Categories: Australian culture | English dialects | Sociolinguistics |
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