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		Message board > On Australian Slang     
			
		 On Australian Slang 
		
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 almaz
 
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							| Interesting article, Sophia. I wonder how many of our Antipodean cousins agree that Strine is in decline. 
 Alex |  12 Jun 2014     
					
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 joy2bill
 
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							| Interesting but the article did feature a number of expressions I �ve never heard before. I must admit when I first relocated to Oz ( from NZ) 16 years ago I had to learn a  �new � language. I had no idea what  �an arvo � or an  �avo � were. Australians love shortening things...so mozzie, ambo, servo, etc. Strine is alive but changing. |  12 Jun 2014     
					
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 thundermore
 
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							| nteresting article, Sophia. I wonder how many of our Antipodean cousins agree that Strine is in decline. |  12 Jun 2014     
					
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 Jayho
 
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							| Thx for posting, Sophia. It �s an interesting read.   The shortening of words certainly is still very common (although  �swimmers � is not used in my neck of the woods.  In fact, swimming trunks are called different things in different parts of Australia: swimmers, togs, cossi, bathers).   I don �t recall our budget being compared to a Pollywaffle  but I am a fan of Pollywaffles and I wish they �d bring them back.  The idiom used by the former PM, about the sauce bottle,  is not correct and media took the mickey  out of him for his use of it (naughtily!) and that he got his idioms mixed up  Of the 14 on the list, I know 11 of those but most are not used in the circles I mix in.  I do think they might be fading out and I really only hear them on TV now.  One exception is budgie smugglers.  Our current PM has brought that idiom well and truly back to life and he is often portrayed in cartoons wearing his budgie smugglers .  So funny!!  Cheers    Jayho |  13 Jun 2014     
					
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 ueslteacher
 
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							| Thank you, Joy and Jayho, for taking the time to read the article and comment on it because you are the people who can tell if it �s true:) |  13 Jun 2014     
					
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