10 Secret Words And Phrases Only Australians Understand

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A few years ago, I shared meals by having an American family at their property in Tulsa Oklahoma. I had met them previously within my city of Perth Australia.
I thanked them to the meal by saying: "That was great tucker."
My hosts along with other guests viewed me in stark amazement.
I then realized that we Aussies do speak some other lingo which led to a hilarious dinnertime discussion when other guests inquired about to "speak Australian"
Fast toward 2009.
I was a part of a small group touring remote Arnhem Land in Australia's Northern Territory. Our tour guide a broad Aussie accent.
We were discovering amazing Aboriginal rock art with 2 local Aboriginal guides. It was a remarkable tour taking us to hidden areas known only to the locals.
The group included a number from Europe and North America and they also were fascinated, not merely by the rock paintings (some thought to be 30 000 years!) but by his broad accent. Some words he to repeat and explain, much on the amusement of the Aussies inside the group.
So exactly what are these strange words and expressions?
If you're planning to check out Australia within the future, this is a taste.
Let's find out how you decide to go. (Don't worry, the answers are at the end)
1. Tucker
2. Blue
3. Cyclone
4. Petrol
5. Car
6. Pram
7. Chemist
8. Not Explore the Flinders Ranges (Related Homepag) full quid
9. Kangaroos short in the top paddock
10. Crack a tinnie and crack a fat.
Well, howja go?
The answers:
1. The word means food or a meal. It comes from your word "tucker box" utilized by outback workers to hold their lunch. It was immortalised inside the poem "Waltzing Matilda" by Australian writer Banjo Patterson.
2. Not only a colour. It has 2 other meanings. A bloke with red locks are called "blue" and when you obtain involved with a fight, you're developing a blue or "barny". Many blokes in pub fights will have a blue on the shiela, specially if they may be pissed after drinking a lot of amber fluid. To confuse the issue a "true blue" is often a dinki di Aussie.
3. The Australian word to get a hurricane. In the Southern Hemisphere a cyclone spins inside a clockwise direction. By the way, the name for a smaller localised spinning wind is "willy willy". They are common in Outback Australia and they are sometimes called dust storms.
4. Called gas in America. Australians call gas the non liquid type of fuel.
5. The Aussie term for a car or "motor" because the English call them. The luggage storage area is known as a boot along with the engine is housed beneath the bonnet. If an Aussie bloke gets drunk he or she is considered to be "as full being a boot"
6. Pram or perambulator. Called baby buggies in North America.
7. Chemist. Another name for pharmacy or drug store. Aussies feel ill at ease with the word "drug store"
8. A term accustomed to describe an individual who isn't very bright or "as thick as 2 short planks"
9. Similar to 8 but not only stupid, possibly dangerous. "He's a number of kangaroos short within the top paddock".
10. The first word ways to open a can of beer and also the second to have an erection.
If you scored 9 or 10, you can pass for an Aussie. 5 to 8 and you will probably soon pick up the lingo. If you scored under 5, you'll have to see Oz and have a number of coldies in the Aussie pub. Before long you could pass for a true blue!

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