American reacts to Why the Australian accent is so difficult

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  • čas přidán 25. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 721

  • @a.m11558
    @a.m11558 Před rokem +90

    Another problem is that people assume there's only one Aussie accent, when (as far as I'm concerned) there are at least five or six most notable Aussie accents. The differences are very slight, but Aussies can pick up on them, and I think because our accents are so complex we have a good ear for accents in general.

    • @kerensabirch5214
      @kerensabirch5214 Před rokem +2

      My brother, sister and I all have slightly different accents due to what we've done in our adult lives. We all started with a slightly English accent due to our father but I'm the only one who kept it, also affected by my living in England for a while. Our sister stayed city living and dropped back to a general Aussie accent. Our brother's accent is the strongest because he moved to the outback for years and the English inflection was treated with suspicion out there.

    • @kristyl933
      @kristyl933 Před rokem +8

      Can always pick people from Melbourne as they pronounce "per-" words as "prah-". "Prahformance", "Prahaps". Drives me slightly batty 😁

    • @a.m11558
      @a.m11558 Před rokem +1

      ​@@kristyl933 I don't know about that. I live in Melbourne and there are many different dialects here. I have an old Kensington dialect, which is very similar to northern English dialects (such as Manchester, Sheffield, even some southern Scottish ones), and the accent is unlike any I have ever heard around Australia. Whenever I go travelling people ask me if I'm Scottish or English, and I have to say I'm an Aussie hahaha. We also have very different slang words, such as Madra, Black Mariah, Tuppence, and many more. I've never heard these elsewhere in Australia.

    • @aimeen843
      @aimeen843 Před rokem +5

      I live in Melbourne and have never heard prahaps or prahformance!

    • @a.m11558
      @a.m11558 Před rokem

      @@aimeen843 Yes me neither. I'm not sure where you're from in Melbourne, but have you heard any of the slang I listed? They seem to be extremely rare words these days

  • @carolynharris6060
    @carolynharris6060 Před rokem +29

    It's a good arvo when you get to watch Ryan. Thanks Ryan I look forward to your reactions as you always make me smile 😍

  • @zombiemeg
    @zombiemeg Před rokem +86

    Years ago when in Europe I ran into an Australian couple who had fairly broad Aussie accents (not as strong as Steve Irwin but still pretty ocker). They said I was lying about being Australian because of my accent (which is a general Aussie accent with a touch of Cate Blanchett). They told everyone there that I was lying! They were from Melbourne, so I told them (truthfully) that I was born in Wagga Wagga and that it doesn’t get much more Aussie than that! 😂

    • @paulhardbottle9982
      @paulhardbottle9982 Před rokem +1

      what about Tangambalanga mate? Waggas just a tourist name anyways lol

    • @richardwadd9769
      @richardwadd9769 Před rokem +5

      Wagga is Aboriginal for “piss”. When the word is repeated it denotes ‘a lot of’. The term “piss” in the Australian vernacular means beer. So Wagga Wagga translates as “The place of many beers.”

    • @janedoe4471
      @janedoe4471 Před rokem +3

      The accents change from one side of Melbourne to the other 😂 I would be willing to bet that couple came from the west.

    • @drewbarrett3338
      @drewbarrett3338 Před rokem +2

      I'm from Junee living in Wagga and there's a shit tonne of us with the broad accent here. If anything, the broad accent is getting stronger here. Most of the children have good broad accents

    • @briansims1987
      @briansims1987 Před rokem

      ​@@richardwadd9769Wagga is "crow" Wagga Wagga is many crows

  • @robertmurray8763
    @robertmurray8763 Před rokem +90

    40 years ago I was in Central Australia 🇦🇺. A man spoke with a Irish accent yet never travelled out of Australia 🇦🇺 His father was from Ireland 🇮🇪 and his mother was Aboriginal. Being so isolated his accent had developed.

    • @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307
      @danquaylesitsspeltpotatoe8307 Před rokem +4

      Check out the jewish accent in fundy groups! Even occurs in
      Australia, the New York version is widely known.

    • @robertmurray8763
      @robertmurray8763 Před rokem +9

      People that lived in Elizabeth Northern Adelaide (named after the Queens) 30 years ago had a very English sounding accent.

    • @deborahcurtis1385
      @deborahcurtis1385 Před rokem +2

      @@robertmurray8763 Yes, I sounded like the. Queen when I went to school, rather odd since I was going to a school in a remote part of Australia but my mother was perfectly bilingual and her accent was unfortunately posh. I adopted her accent from being isolated. Yet people have assumed I'm lying about coming from where I do. It's strange indeed!

    • @tinfoilhomer909
      @tinfoilhomer909 Před rokem +1

      I was born in Australia but I started kindergarten with a Scottish accent. I learned pretty quick from school how to do an Aussie accent. I sometimes get caught out on a few words so I just avoid them in my vocabulary.

    • @deborahcurtis1385
      @deborahcurtis1385 Před rokem

      @@tinfoilhomer909
      I find inverted snobbery really funny.
      It's as bad as garden-variety snobbery.
      My mother would correct my accent if I was adopting phrases or word that were grammatically incorrect.
      She told me: "you will thank me in the future".
      She was right because I can move in any circles and changing down is dead easy. I can talk with farmers and country people, and ordinary working people, or the toffs.
      Unfortunately doors can close if you don't express yourself well. So maintaining the Aussie accent and bad grammar can be a block. I just like to communicate clearly.
      Australians tend to mumble and don't speak clearly and that makes it very hard for others. I once found myself actually translating to a Canadian English speaking hotel receptionist what an Australian was trying to say ....in English!
      She had to get him to repeat himself twice after the initial request. She was incredibly grateful that I stepped in and clearly said what he wanted (are there any rooms available and if so how much?). This is kind of funny and not so great if you think about it!
      Plus the nasal accent can be grating. 'NIIIAAW' instead of 'now'. OMG it's horrible sounding.
      On grammar:
      Learned 'pretty quick' = learned 'pretty quickly'. I don't personally mind but others do and it can undermine your message.
      These days I help students with their English and they say they never have any difficulty understanding what I'm saying unlike with other Australians.
      It's just the way it is. Inverted snobbery is not so great IMO.

  • @Lnch4ALion
    @Lnch4ALion Před rokem +49

    Your first effort was genuinely funny. I like how it flowed from German (Henning Wehn) into some Attenborough mixed with Christopher Walken

    • @pascalswager9100
      @pascalswager9100 Před rokem +4

      Sounded like 1950's Australian 😂

    • @zombiemeg
      @zombiemeg Před rokem +4

      I also heard some Attenborough in there 😂

  • @ltdeditioncobba6382
    @ltdeditioncobba6382 Před rokem +18

    Its good to see an American learning about Australian culture and just enjoying learning about our way of life.
    I give big props to ya Ryan 👏 you're a top bloke in my book champ

  • @ChannelReuploads9451
    @ChannelReuploads9451 Před rokem +35

    In Lion, Dev Patel actually had an Accent coach for around 3 to 4 months, Its pretty pretty close. Dev actually went to the producers and BEGGED to be cast, but they had to put him through audition, but he still got it.

    • @zombiemeg
      @zombiemeg Před rokem +8

      He was really good. I didn’t even think about his accent in that film, which is always a good sign.

    • @aussiesheila9495
      @aussiesheila9495 Před rokem +4

      Dev did a great job with his accent, way better than others

    • @whitefangdragon101
      @whitefangdragon101 Před 8 měsíci +1

      H dev was great. He’s got an Australian girlfriend which must help too.

  • @sue-ellenlightbody2337
    @sue-ellenlightbody2337 Před rokem +21

    I’m from Perth, Western Australia. When I visited the states I got asked if I was British, Bostonian and Southern. I never got asked if I was Australian though haha. I love accents. I found that really video really interesting. Thanks Ryan. Happy arvo mate. Have a good one.

    • @kristyl933
      @kristyl933 Před rokem +5

      From NSW, when I visited the USA I was asked if I was British, South African, or New Zealander. 😁

    • @auzziecrunt8538
      @auzziecrunt8538 Před rokem +4

      @@kristyl933 oh yeh? one time in the states, someone thought I was Russian

    • @mollymuch2808
      @mollymuch2808 Před 4 měsíci

      Yes as an Aussie I got asked if I was from South Africa 😳
      Like they don’t know us

    • @freddy9120
      @freddy9120 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Im from Queensland most people i have met from perth think im from England

    • @katiesmethurst3766
      @katiesmethurst3766 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Same

  • @Iceman12123
    @Iceman12123 Před rokem +78

    If she thinks the broad accent isn't really a thing anymore she hadn't visited Queensland in a very long time. Must of been produced in Victoria or New South Wales

    • @shaunmckenzie5509
      @shaunmckenzie5509 Před rokem +8

      Yes, it's still very much alive up there. Practically dead in Victoria though

    • @Aussiedoll1
      @Aussiedoll1 Před rokem +4

      As a QLD’er…. Agreed 😂🤣

    • @Teagirl009
      @Teagirl009 Před rokem +11

      Depends where in Qld you're talking about. I was raised in northern Brisbane suburbs and have a general accent. When I moved to Sydney, no one guessed I was from QLD. The broad accent is more regional Qld, far north Queensland. They have a slower drawl.

    • @dcaruana81
      @dcaruana81 Před rokem +3

      Yeah, Rural QLD you hear tons of the broad accent.

    • @Iceman12123
      @Iceman12123 Před rokem +1

      I'm born and raised in northern suburbs of Brisbane 😅😅

  • @phunkmonkeycookiegarage7773

    lol, you pretty much nailed some weird combination of cockney and the British Royal Received Pronunciation accent. Not easy to do I would imagine lol, so well done on that :)

  • @sherrylovegood
    @sherrylovegood Před rokem +18

    I’m from, what was, a very conservative part of Queensland. I’m now 50. I was horrified when I first “heard” my accent. I was in LAX, getting my luggage, because I had a lay over and was on my way to NYC.
    The fact I was in the USA to complete my Shakespearean actor training made me terrified. I thought I sounded so stupid and I have what was then considered the “cultivated” accent - like Cate Blanchett.
    The course I was on was very prestigious and I didn’t have to audition for it. An American director had seen me performing and invited me.
    After hearing my accent, I thought he was stark, raving mad. It really knocked my confidence as I thought I sounded like a “slack-jawed yocal”. Thankfully I had a week in NYC before the course started. It really got to me, especially when I learned my vocal coach was the Head of Voice at Juilliard. I just thought, “Why the Hell did they bring me here?”
    Still got the gig after training.

    • @Badassery666
      @Badassery666 Před rokem +3

      Good on ya for realizing your own accent and doing your best to work thru it. The Juilliard dude would’ve helped. I’m from rural WA and as an entertainer, teacher and now health care worker I have been fighting to keep the accent intelligible all my life.

    • @sherrylovegood
      @sherrylovegood Před rokem +1

      @@Badassery666 He was incredible. Got me working in my chest resonator properly. We don’t hit our consonants and our vowel sounds are so flat!

    • @glenchapman3899
      @glenchapman3899 Před rokem +3

      @@sherrylovegood Same. I was living in the States for about 3 months. Was in San Fran to catch a Qantas flight back home. And all of a sudden the Australian accent actually hurt my ears lol Fortunately an Australian accent in the US opens far more doors than it closes

  • @danmac579
    @danmac579 Před rokem +4

    What I love about the Aussie accent is that every state has a different dialect which follows down the the ethnic accents. It’s fantastic

  • @HunterWinchester666
    @HunterWinchester666 Před rokem +10

    I have always LOVED my Aussie accent 🇭🇲 I reckon our accent is the best in the world ❤

  • @stephenbedford1395
    @stephenbedford1395 Před rokem +15

    I'm going to start saying 'happy arvo' to my friends and family... you never know, it might catch on and Ryan will have contributed a new addition to the Australian lingo.

  • @karinaw977
    @karinaw977 Před rokem +5

    Glad you have recovered from the Agro Outtakes. Didn’t think you would come back 😄

  • @keithad6485
    @keithad6485 Před 5 měsíci +5

    In Las Vegas in 2013 for a trade show, some Yanks I met took me to an Aussie restaurant (Sands Casino). We were waiting in a room with about twenty customers waiting for a vacated table. I got a bit bored so, put my bush hat on, went around to each of the customers and said in a broad Outback accent, G'day, my name's Keith from the Outback Down Under, welcome to this restaurant! People were looking at me with open mouths probably thinking who is this guy? Lots of laughs, cured the boredom, and the Yanks I was with loved it. Spur of the moment thing for me. At the time I was living in remote village in outback Western Australia about 4 hours north of Kalgoorlie Gold Fields. At the time, I was living on a WA cattle station of about 500,000 acres.

  • @stopandsmelltheroses104
    @stopandsmelltheroses104 Před rokem +7

    I love watching Americans give the Aussie accent a go 😀 happy arvo is a great catch phrase Ryan! 💥

  • @debdance2502
    @debdance2502 Před rokem +2

    Thanks Ryan you always make me smile. You don’t need to sound Australian your American accent is quite lovely to listen to.

  • @Hades-my4jq
    @Hades-my4jq Před rokem +8

    When I hear people trying to impersonate the Aussie accent, I tell them to imagine themselves as a two-stroke motorbike or lawn mower trying to speak English.

  • @tatyana5761
    @tatyana5761 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I love how all of the content you put on your channel is fun and interesting; how you sound genuinely curious and intuitive about each subject or topic; makes for an interesting viewing. But I especially love it when you put anything, about Australia 🇦🇺 on. You also come across as an awesome bloke. Great work mate. 👍💖🥳

  • @ForkRat
    @ForkRat Před 4 měsíci +2

    As a dutchie i find the ozzy accent the easiest and most comfortable of all accents. Actually makes speaking english a lot easier because the pronunciations feel more natural (should probably also mention two of my best mates during childhood were australian and i basically learned how to speak english by hanging out with them and i guess i kinda took over their accents)

  • @adeleniethe8274
    @adeleniethe8274 Před rokem +1

    I am fully Australian and just listening to them all trying an Aussie accent is hilarious. I never knew it was that hard for others to do the accent but I wouldn’t know because for me it comes naturally. I loved watching this though. Please keep doing these videos.

  • @kazz3956
    @kazz3956 Před rokem +16

    Kate Winslett played an Aussie called Tilley in the movie called The Dressmaker. She got our Accent right. Here is a clip of her in that movie, also staring Liam Hemmswoth czcams.com/video/IjXLVgyOQJs/video.html

    • @zombiemukbang7555
      @zombiemukbang7555 Před rokem +2

      yeah she was spot on in that movie loved it... but she did Holy Smoke in 1999 where she originally nailed it

    • @linmonash1244
      @linmonash1244 Před rokem +2

      That was a truly GREAT movie. Should have been a blockbuster. And Liam!!! Why is Chris always described as 'The Hot One'!? 😆

    • @kazz3956
      @kazz3956 Před rokem +2

      @@linmonash1244 loved Liam in this movie.

    • @24JJ821
      @24JJ821 Před rokem

      I totally agree, she nailed it. I think it's easier for Brits to pronounce our accent than Americans. We drop the "R" sound whereas I think the Americans drop the "O" sound.

    • @kazz3956
      @kazz3956 Před rokem

      @@24JJ821 I haven't noticed that, but now you've said it I will have to look out for that difference. Thanks for the heads up.

  • @robby1816
    @robby1816 Před rokem +3

    @7:25 That is a very good impression of an Englishman trying to do an Aussie accent.

  • @brettbridger362
    @brettbridger362 Před rokem +6

    I remember having lunch with a linguist. He was saying that there was a ranking to accents. Towards the bottom of the lists are accents like the general US one. Towards to top is the Australian. The average person finds it easier to do accents equal or lower on the scale. This is why the Aussie accent is so hard for so many.

    • @romandybala
      @romandybala Před měsícem

      Dont forget Australia was flooded with American culture in 1956 when we got television. This enables us to replicate various American regional accents.

  • @shaunmckenzie5509
    @shaunmckenzie5509 Před rokem +4

    It's funny hearing you try it. I hear British, South African, and kiwi, but rarely Aussie lol (pronounced ozzie, like the singer).

  • @gemkelly5646
    @gemkelly5646 Před rokem +2

    Arvo is mostly used as a “time “ as in “1’ll be there this arvo”

  • @nickfatsis9607
    @nickfatsis9607 Před rokem +6

    Two great examples of non Australians speaking in an Australian accent are Robin Wright and Kate Winslet, Robin plays and Australian in a movie called Adoration and Kate plays an Australian in The Dressmaker, if you had never heard them speak before, watching those two films, you'd swear they were Australian women, they're both great talents!

  • @pascalswager9100
    @pascalswager9100 Před rokem +7

    It totally depends on what company I'm around lol, I'm pretty bogan but can do snooty Australian too if need be 😁

    • @sunisbest1234
      @sunisbest1234 Před rokem +4

      Yep, I'm with you there. Lived in Vic for 40+ years, originally from FNQ. Talk like a Melbournite, but, 5 minutes conversation with anyone with a strong FNQ accent, back I go to that! And ending every sentence with "AY!" Weird! 🤣

    • @Reneesillycar74
      @Reneesillycar74 Před rokem +2

      Same here. It’s pretty funny how versatile I can be depending upon where I am & who I’m with. There’s one word I haven’t been able to just let go & do. “Ya” instead of you. It just doesn’t sit well. I find myself saying “see you!” instead of “see ya!” The looks I get sometimes 😅😂

    • @stuartmcquade3407
      @stuartmcquade3407 Před rokem +2

      I agree completely and I actually find it quite advantageous being able to be able to relate and understand to different people on different levels..That has also served me well being Scottish born but Aussie raised where I also find my more Glaswegian side coming out when I'm around other Scots and of course acting as the interpreter to my Aussie mates who don't understand a single word my fellow Scots are saying 😂

  • @ryanmccallum3119
    @ryanmccallum3119 Před rokem +3

    I tried to buy a lighter at a servo in New York and the bloke handed me a lotto ticket. Probably took about 2 solid minutes for him to finally understand what I wanted 😂

    • @kristyl933
      @kristyl933 Před rokem

      I had a similar issue, asking for water and being brought butter. 😁

    • @devonbradley4372
      @devonbradley4372 Před měsícem

      That's so hilarious, mate! Lol!

  • @megsybond
    @megsybond Před rokem +2

    When I was in the USA, a lot of people asked if I was English. No mate - I'm an Aussie!!

  • @discrete1163
    @discrete1163 Před rokem +3

    I would never lose my accent, I've witnessed a few Aussie's that have been to America for a couple weeks, come back home sounding like an American.. 🤦‍♂️

  • @KC-xi7uh
    @KC-xi7uh Před rokem +1

    My son has autism and when he was younger he couldn't talk but when he finally did he had a slight American accent from watching American educational DVDs. Like the alphabet and stuff it blew my mind 😂

  • @temmie5764
    @temmie5764 Před rokem +4

    One good tip that I do as an Australian is to not pronounce most vowels, like do it as sorta crukudile but fast lol

  • @lisasteel6817
    @lisasteel6817 Před rokem +2

    I absolutely love that my accent is so hard to learn. I find it hilarious when people try to do it, many entertainment.

  • @yugtdhoiijuh6617
    @yugtdhoiijuh6617 Před rokem +1

    cheers! Ryan, much better.thanks for letting us hear what there talking about before you give your opinion. way better. keep up the good work love your videos. congrats on new bub. hope all is going well. ange from oz

  • @FlyxPat
    @FlyxPat Před rokem +4

    The American accent came from England. At the time America was first settled the accent in southern England was rhotic (pronounced all /r/ sounds). It was the south-eastern English accent that later diverged from American English to become non-rhotic.

  • @darreld4844
    @darreld4844 Před rokem +8

    I'm just laughing at all the comments 'chastising' Ryan about saying 'happy arvo'🤣 They clearly dont 'get it'🤣 Keep it up Ryan & HAPPY ARVO😄

  • @richardwilliamson9763
    @richardwilliamson9763 Před rokem +3

    Btw I always thought the American accent sounds like it sprung for from the Irish, sometimes I have confused people for one or the other.

  • @idbruce
    @idbruce Před rokem +1

    Did a bus tour of Hawaii (Big Island) and the coach driver (originally from Texas) swore that he thought I was from Virginia. As you said, Ryan maybe we do sound like southern Americans. I was born and raised in Sydney, Australia. Our other coach driver on Oahu picked the Aussie accent straight away. He was Samoan.

  • @anthonyboland
    @anthonyboland Před rokem +3

    I am an Australian and i do prefer the American accent, i love the way americans talk.

  • @justanaussie7094
    @justanaussie7094 Před rokem +5

    We usually say good arvo, happy arvo is growing on me though 😊

    • @panelvanman7671
      @panelvanman7671 Před rokem

      ive never heard that in 60 years , have a good arvo mate or hope your enjoying your arvo , those i have

    • @Teagirl009
      @Teagirl009 Před rokem +1

      I kinda like it, it's a quirky Ryan thing.

  • @thetrashmaster1352
    @thetrashmaster1352 Před rokem +3

    Australian English sounds Southern to an American because the south of the US was colonized mostly by English and Scottish people. The rest of the US was colonised by mostly German people or by people from within German majority states in the US. That means the closest American accent to Australian is the southern accent.

  • @shanedorival3177
    @shanedorival3177 Před rokem +2

    Ha ha ha, good on you for having a go…… I’d leave it to us Aussies. We’ve been butchering English since birth lol

  • @druidinary
    @druidinary Před rokem +5

    The Australian accent often gets generalised as being one thing. Something I think a lot of foreigners don’t realise is that we actually do have regional accents here, they are just harder for foreign ears to distinguish. Subtler. I was born on the west coast of Australia and now live in metropolitan Melbourne in the southeast, and I sound completely different to those around me. I have more of a purr-y tone compared to my peers. Someone once described my accent as “stoned surfer”.

    • @toby9999
      @toby9999 Před rokem

      You're not far from me.

    • @aussiesheila9495
      @aussiesheila9495 Před rokem

      Hahaha alot of ppl think my sons a stoner ,he's very layed back ,and we're Melbournians
      It's definitely because of his accent I'd say,yet we're not from W.A

  • @larissahorne9991
    @larissahorne9991 Před rokem +1

    On the other hand we're pretty good at mimicking other people's accents. My Brother met a Pretty English Tourist and Followed Her Home from Australia to England. They got Married the following year. Apparently He has a British Accent none of us have ever heard. Because whenever he thinks or speaks about Australia he subconsciously switches back.

  • @serene5643
    @serene5643 Před rokem +4

    loving the aussie content, it's really heart warming to see people from other cultures experiencing Australia. you should check out Tasting History's ANZAC biscuit episode, it really shows aussie mateship, and how, despite being enemies, the Turks and Aussies respected each other from across the trenches

  • @damiangordon8893
    @damiangordon8893 Před rokem +1

    ppl in south Australia have a pretty strong English accent and i noticed this after moving there from the east coast

  • @jesbro12
    @jesbro12 Před rokem +1

    My mum was welsh/English and I still say thing like her with an English accent, 60 years on

  • @MaxK_
    @MaxK_ Před rokem

    🤣🤣 "how good was that?" It was a great effort. Here's a 🌟
    Keep at it Ryan! You'll be sounding like an Aussie soon enough 👏👏👊

  • @mort8143
    @mort8143 Před rokem +7

    Hey Ryan, don't forget we started as a Penal colony. The English spoken then by the majority, convicts, would have been pretty guttural and uncultured. Good on them.

    • @petermcculloch4933
      @petermcculloch4933 Před rokem

      So why is our accent similar to New Zealand speech?They were never a penal colony.

  • @elie1468
    @elie1468 Před rokem +1

    I'm an Aussie, lived in SA my entire life and don't swear
    Because of my accent when I say sittin' (sitting) it sounds like I say sh**tin'
    I also don't say all letters of words
    In the sentence
    "I need an editor to edit it"
    It sounds like
    "I need an ed-did-der d ed-did di"
    But the dashed bit is fast (I wrote it like that to try to have it make more sense)

  • @davidlean8674
    @davidlean8674 Před rokem +1

    One of the best things about an Aussie accent in the USA is that it can instantly get the local Police to chill out. Cop walks up to your car in a traffic stop, one hand hovering over his weapon. "Giday officer, howzitgon' What can I do for ya?" They relax instantly. Unless you are drunk, or have been a total FWit it will usually end with them recommending you drive differently & send you on your way.

    • @devonbradley4372
      @devonbradley4372 Před měsícem

      That's exactly how my younger brother talks. He's a bit more bogan than I. Lol!

  • @WendyPeirce
    @WendyPeirce Před rokem +1

    Hey Ryan always great to see your videos and your hilarious reactions Hope your baby boy is doing well 💙 👍

  • @R1981L
    @R1981L Před rokem

    Lolz at you trying to do the Aussie accent. You got a couple of words correct.

  • @wolf1066
    @wolf1066 Před rokem +2

    I like the fact that you send yourself up when you're doing the Aussie accent - which you acknowledge you're not good at.
    One of the things you would need to do is get rid of the automatic "oo" pronunciations that you have for words like "new", "due", "dew" and "emu"... all of them have a "you" pronunciation in Aus and NZ English - similar to a number of UK English accents. So "eem-you" for emu, "n'you" for new, "d'you" (often sounding more like "dj'you" or "j''you") for due or dew. Basically "dew" and "due" sound closer to "Jew" than to "do".
    Drop terminal Rs - people in the USA pronounce Rs way more aggressively than Aussies and New Zealanders. In Aus the R may lengthen the vowel - "car" becomes "cah" (in New Zealand it's just "ka") or may not - "bugger" becomes "bugga".

  • @mickdejager3910
    @mickdejager3910 Před rokem

    This arvo me Oldboy and I just pissed ourselves laughing mate , good attempt aye 🤣🇦🇺

  • @jenniferharrison8915
    @jenniferharrison8915 Před rokem +1

    Don't worry about it Ryan, you picked up that the man talking about the beach had a New Zealand inflection! Well done! 👍😊👋

  • @Gerryjournal
    @Gerryjournal Před 29 dny

    The Australian accent was first noted in 1820s school children. Children were developing an accent through schooling which was different to their parents. Australia at that time was an amalgam of British accents and the children were speaking with all these accents mushed together. There has been a computer generated accent made from all British accents and it is almost identical to the Australian accent.

  • @michelledawn2249
    @michelledawn2249 Před rokem

    I can't explain why but I literally love your channel :D You are so nice. I've been binge watching you on my tv account since I found you. I only found you last week from watching your reaction to John Farnham singing Help. I'm Australian by the way. See you again this arvo for more binge watching x

  • @Elriuhilu
    @Elriuhilu Před rokem

    Wow, Liev Schreiber's Aussie accent was spot on. I did not expect it.

  • @mikeythehat6693
    @mikeythehat6693 Před rokem +2

    Liev Schrieber pretty much nailed it ( pretty much ) because his wife ( Naiomi Watts ) is Australian . I imagine him imitating her accent around the house all the time . That's what I'd do .
    When I hear an American accent , I hear a very strong Irish influence . Now it might just be me but they seem fairly similar in quite a few ways . In particular , the "R" sound is very pronounced in both .

  • @karinaw977
    @karinaw977 Před rokem +18

    Liev Schreiber did a very good accent because he was married to Naomi Watts, an Aussie.
    If you want to find out about the history of English in America there’s a great BBC documentary that explains how the language changed once it hit America.
    The Adventure Of English - Episode 5 English in America - BBC Documentary
    m.czcams.com/video/oBqlVl0K9tw/video.html

    • @stuartmcquade3407
      @stuartmcquade3407 Před rokem +3

      And Naomi is an English born Aussie so she would probably would fall into the more Cultivated Australian accent category.

  • @marklivingstone3710
    @marklivingstone3710 Před rokem +4

    The funniest moment of the Simpsons episode when they came to Australia was Marj and Lisa walking past a building that had AUSTRALIAN CULTURAL CENTRE and underneath that a sign saying cart your arse on in.😂

    • @glenchapman3899
      @glenchapman3899 Před rokem

      There is a really subtle joke in that episode when Bart gets the letter from Australia. The stamp was issued to celebrate 20 years of electricity in Australia

  • @williecoulter1091
    @williecoulter1091 Před rokem

    We love your "Happy Arvo" it is unique to you, so you are starting a fad! 😋😆

  • @Jeni10
    @Jeni10 Před rokem +2

    If you’ve never taken much notice of international journalists, have q listen to them more closely. They travel so much and hear so many accents, that it affects their own without them realising it. Over time, you start to hear English with about six or seven different accents creeping into their speech.

  • @justanaussie7094
    @justanaussie7094 Před rokem +2

    Did Liev do a good job? I'd say he was about 85-90% there. It was slightly off but I was still very impressed.

  • @keithad6485
    @keithad6485 Před 4 měsíci

    When Meryl Streep acted as Lindy Chamberlain in the Aussie film Evil Angels - she said the Aussie accent was the most difficult accent she had to master.

  • @pugman99
    @pugman99 Před rokem +1

    One last thing; best, most hilarious, imitation of the Aussie accent was done by Robin Williams... just classic!
    God I miss him...

  • @tropicsalt.
    @tropicsalt. Před rokem

    LOL, those crocks in the outback scare the hell out of me.

  • @tnytyson
    @tnytyson Před rokem

    I love the Happy Arvo. He does try . I love this channel

  • @drfill9210
    @drfill9210 Před rokem

    Ha ha right at the end- you decided to add deep south to your Australian accent. Kinda sounded like me trying to impersonate Dr Phil

  • @kathleenmayhorne3183
    @kathleenmayhorne3183 Před rokem +1

    Your rolled R's come directly from Yorkshire in england. I have a Yorkie friend in Cairns and everybody mistakes him for an american on first meeting. I had a 2nd generation dutch flatmate who always said color because her dad said it that way.

  • @poizen-ivy
    @poizen-ivy Před rokem +1

    Happy Arvo, Jas 😂

  • @zaccat693
    @zaccat693 Před rokem

    When my dad was in Hospital the nurse was from Asia, maybe China or Singapore and she spoke with a N.Z. accent which shocked me. My Uncle and Aunty who were from N.Z. didn't notice.

  • @suzanne5807
    @suzanne5807 Před rokem

    Your attempt at an aussie accent at nearly 8 minutes had me rofl seriously you cracked me up 😂😂😂😂😂

  • @jf-s7809
    @jf-s7809 Před rokem

    Haha lol yeah nah 'happy arvo' probs would be more like 'alright you have a good arvo mate' for most Aussies but love your enthusiasm 😄

  • @megan2878
    @megan2878 Před 5 měsíci

    When I try to do an American accent, the first thing I think of is holding my nose half closed to get the squeak sound. The tongue raises in the center to the roof of the mouth. In Oz, the tongue is relaxed, and not used like a muscle.

  • @Lilah_Ninigigun_Belet-Eanna

    I was born in Perth, WA but am from Anglo-Burmese/British colonial heritage so my grandparents/mum spoke with an RP British accent. I moved to Melbourne and have also lived in rural Sydney and California so my accent can go from Cate Blanchett to NorCal to British and Aussie ocker as I grew up with lots of Aboriginal friends in WA and lived/worked on farms in NSW. I am pretty quiet/introverted and Americans could never ever hear me as they speak so loudly in comparison. Even after 10 years Americans can still hear a NorCal accent when I speak actually but I can't tell at all lol.

  • @simonegeorge5682
    @simonegeorge5682 Před rokem +4

    LOL at 10:37 you have a strange version of Forrest Gump happening there. I like that you keep trying though. If you like learning about Great Austalian moments then on Netflix is the "Untold" series "The Race of the Century" is about how Australia won the America's cup back in 1983. I think you would enjoy it very much.

  • @iamkat-agnt99-ash-kbt.59

    😄😄😄
    Haha I love it when you try and do the Aussie accent!! Lol 🤣
    I suppose it is hard to do!
    We are a nutty bunch!
    None of those actors got it right! Lol

  • @Bottle-OBill
    @Bottle-OBill Před rokem +1

    The way I describe the Aussie accent is that it's "slack-jawed UK english", so your idea about it sounding like "deep south of the UK" is pretty accurate, in my unlearned opinion.

  • @hodlingstrong4234
    @hodlingstrong4234 Před rokem

    I mean this in the nicest way possible. You have the shortest aussie accent, it’s hilarious

  • @adamhofman4933
    @adamhofman4933 Před rokem +1

    I’m not sure if visitors would notice but us Aussies notice the difference in accents between someone who lives in North Queensland and someone that lives in Tasmania!

  • @thornbird6768
    @thornbird6768 Před rokem

    You're right 👍🏻 I'm British and from the south west , I spent time in the States for work and 9 times out of 10 they thought I was Irish or Australian !! When I told them I was British the reply was usually " really " 😂

  • @yugtdhoiijuh6617
    @yugtdhoiijuh6617 Před rokem +3

    hahaha how good was that. u sounded like a pom. lol

  • @glimmagma4551
    @glimmagma4551 Před rokem +2

    Our kids really pick up the American accent these days from Tv and the internet as it’s mostly American, you can really notice it already in culture here 🐨🇦🇺😱

    • @lisajay9512
      @lisajay9512 Před rokem +1

      Yes I’m constantly ‘correcting’ my child: tomato sauce not ketchup, foot path not side walk, fairy floss not Cotten candy, nappy not diaper, 100’s & 1000’s not sprinkles 😂😂

    • @AW-zk5qb
      @AW-zk5qb Před rokem

      American Cultural Hegemony

  • @Badassery666
    @Badassery666 Před rokem +1

    As an Aussie I’ve only ever heard 2 Americans that could do a convincing Aussie accent, Robin Williams and Robert Downey jr. Fun fact, when most yanks attempt an Aussie accent they end up doing a north London accent, badly.

  • @edwardrodgers9383
    @edwardrodgers9383 Před rokem +1

    Happy Arvo Man, you sound like a pome!🇬🇧🤺🇦🇺 The English look down on us because of our accent - and we don't care, because we've got better weather!🤣🇬🇧🤺🇦🇺

  • @heatherclark8668
    @heatherclark8668 Před 16 dny

    I grew up in Mildura which is a country town in North West Vic Australia
    It is interesting that, although there is no such thing as a Mildura accent, I met a man once in Melbourne, the capital city of Victoria, where I have lived for the past 40 years, who told me that he was from rural Victoria.
    I asked him if he was from Mildura as he just sounded like he was from Mildura!
    He was amazed

  • @georgemanifold6802
    @georgemanifold6802 Před rokem

    Happy Arvo Ryan. Love your videos

  • @SomeYouTubeGuy
    @SomeYouTubeGuy Před rokem

    If I was overseas and feeling homesick I would want to hear Steve Irwin speaking. What an accent! Love it.

  • @dheath3697
    @dheath3697 Před rokem +1

    I was once in LA and witnessed a fatal accident, I'm trying to explain to the cop what happened leading up to the crash, I was a little excited I admit having never experienced anything like that, the cop stops me, and in his broad latino?? accent says to me, "I know we are all speaking English, but can you slow down, I can't understand you" I cracked up laughing so much, a little bit inappropriate of course!

  • @j-1159
    @j-1159 Před rokem +2

    Barnsy and Farnsy , when something is wrong with my Baby, check it out

  • @AussieCreeker
    @AussieCreeker Před rokem +2

    They both seemed to be talking about city folk. Country towns certainly in Northern Australia have a much stronger accent.

  • @ardizzle06
    @ardizzle06 Před rokem

    happy arvo needs to be like your normal intro now LMAO

  • @AC-kc2qt
    @AC-kc2qt Před rokem

    I love your analysis, truly.

  • @chich61
    @chich61 Před rokem

    I got asked by a nurse when I went in for my 2nd covid shot if I was English. My reply was no, I'm Aussie born and bred, so are my parents. She reckon she could hear a slight english accent. I found that very interesting because the only other time I was asked that was when I went to the USA back in 1998.

  • @user-hd3pw9vi9h
    @user-hd3pw9vi9h Před 4 měsíci

    She also hasn't been to the Western Suburbs of any East Coast city lately either.

  • @michaeldelahunty2440
    @michaeldelahunty2440 Před 10 měsíci

    I meet a couple with two kids ,the kids spoke with American accents ,they were born in Australia and never left ,it turns out they grew up watching Sesame Street