American learned How to sound like Native (British,Aussie)
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 11. 06. 2024
- It was so much fun having these lovely people on our studio!
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đșđž Von
/ vonnsoares
đŹđ§ Cady
/ cady4dead
/ cady4dead
đŠđș Mia
miajabara?... - ZĂĄbava
As I haven't seen Cady on the channel recently, I forgot how much I liked her accent, very pretty and charming for me
Dear World, please understand that Aussies NEVER use that many slang words together đ Slang works best in moderation.
Right; it's an even mix of slang and swearing đ
I love this australian girl she's truly amazing.
The british and american one're cool too.
Aussie english use shorts words sometimes they're confusing but sometimes i love it.
These three have such great chemistry, been loving these past videos with them! :)
Another meaning for raincheck is a voucher a store gives you when they run out of an item that is on sale so that you can buy it same price once they restock.
I LOVE THIS SO MUCH
The standard British equivalent of âboganâ is âchavâ, Iâm surprised Cady didnât mention it (though other more regional derogatory terms like âpikeyâ, âcharvaâ and âscallyâ also exist).
I'm from West Yorkshire, the home of the charvas, so I have to agree with u on that one lad
In Australia to cancel something is to bail
Thatâs certainly not unique to Australia.
We also use miffed in America. Same meaning. For us pissed and pissed off are the same meaning angry but we say piss drunk. whereas UK says pissed for drunk and pissed off for angry.
Pissed can be angry or in a mood too. Pissed up is drunk, pissed off is annoyed either can be reduced to just pissed.
There's also "a pisser" an annoying circumstance; "pissed on" to be defeated easily or by a large margin.
@@ethelmini reducing âpissed ofâ to âpissedâ is an extreme Americanism that can only very rarely be heard in the U.K.
What a great trio they make!
These guys were truly so much fun to be around!
Mate is maritime in origin - ship's mate.
Don't hear scooch much, budge or shift though.
I love Cadyâs accent!
2:59 you gon get some milk boy
3:07 NEVER force someone to drink tea. Younger brits know why
I love aussie people an nzealand too, they take yankee and brits slangs, resume in an animated slang word doing his own slang, sinthetizin' other slangs from brothers countries.
Barbie and arvo we say in Australia. I don't know anyone that says defo though.
A bludger is someone who bludges (sponges) off the work/efforts of someone else, that is, they take without contributing like a freeloader.
Fun fact: "sponges off" doesn't help make it any more international đ
"Hello friends, obviously that sounds weird" she says on World *Friends* channel đ
Amazinggg â€
"I'll take a raincheck." -> "I'll pass."
I've watched quite a few of these English comparison videos on a variety of channels. As a Canadian I'm always struck by how many words and expressions we share with both the UK and US. I typically understand without thought 90 plus percent of British expressions. A large portion of the remaining ten percent I can figure out via context. My percentage is a hair higher with US expressions, excluding teenage slang and highly regional expressions.
The British expression that totally threw me in a different video was "morish". The suffix "ish" only has one use in Canadian English. Essentially "similar to, or kind of" commonly in reference to colors. Example. It's not quite my idea of yellow, but it's yellowish. The use of "ish" meaning "I could have/eat more of that" was confusing. My initial understanding of it was "I don't really want more, but I wouldn't complain about more if offered."
Makes sense considering you're pseudo-British but located just above the US đ
@@IceMetalPunk I don't understand your first message or this one. Obviously phones are much older than the web. Given how the evolution of language works. Older terms get applied to new things until new terms develop to replace them. It would therefore be perfectly reasonable for old school modems to use the same terminology as the previous and most relevant technological. How that is relevant to my comment about current technology being ridiculously out of date is not entirely clear!
Listen closely mofo!!! I am very proudly Canadian and not pseudo anything!!!! I could say Americans are pseudo entitled D-bags, but that wouldn't be true all of the time, just in this case!!!!
@@forksandspoons7272 CZcams is glitching out and putting comments in the wrong place; my comment about modems was in reply to a different comment about using the word "dial" despite no longer using a rotary phone. CZcams just put it in the wrong place (and I don't even see that dial-based reply of mine here now). đ€·ââïž
And I meant no offense with the phrase "pseud-British", but... you do have the Queen of England on your $20 bill đ
We say chinwag in Australia as well Iâm surprised sheâd never heard it
I guess Iâm living under a rock too cause Iâm Australian and I have never heard that
What does it mean?
@@OhOkay_ It means to catch up/have a gossip.
@@FionaEm Oh ok thank you
Well her accent is like half American
'Scoot!' means 'Go!' If you're angry
you say, 'Get !!' đ
In the Midlands in England it's pronounced "wanna cup-pa-tie" only recently learned this from my next door neighbours đ
Thereâs a rather daft joke where a Brummie or perhaps someone from the Black Country is depicted as saying âkipper tieâ when they actually meant âcup of teaâ but itâs not an accurate depiction of those accents, just a stereotype.
Aussies to not confusing people are moderated with slangs. They its hardware for foreigners catch and assimilades slangs. They use with closed and local people, it's a correct posture. Most of Others countries doesn't have the same posture with foreigners peoples.
The Aussie girl hadn't heard the expression chinwag??
Why do they all never wear shoes?
Because shoes are dirty and they are inside a studio or something. đ
The white floor gets dirty easily
@@ChillStepCat fair point
@@janslavik5284 true
I think they're in Korea, so I assumed it was a Korean tradition
Well, whenever I hear the word 'Goon', I immediately think of Spike Milligan, Harry Secombe, Michael Bentine and Peter Sellers. It's a generation thing. "Hello folks, Hello folks of world! I'm speaking to you using the new aluminium voice-cone projector!""
25 seconds in and the subtitles are wrong already
I'm Australian and i didn't know what arvo ment
I think you'll have to relinquish your citizenship đ
Are you an immigrat or something?
Goon is something totally different in the USA. Usually it refers to a criminal who physically terrorizes and intimidates people. I mostly associate it with mobsters.
The feels old-fashioned to me, though. I hear "goon" and I just think "a silly or dumb person" đ€·ââïž
@@IceMetalPunk Iâve never heard goon to mean silly person. Beyonce has a song that isnât that old called Black Parade and in the lyrics she says sheâs âgoing to send her goonsâ. I still hear people day this now and then.
How do you get on this channel?
Live in South Korea, have a good personality, be good in front of the camera and hit them up. Also, speak Korean
Holy shit Mia's accent isn't even Australian anymore
All those thing is always US vs World. When you feel the center of the universe.
All? Apparently you haven't watched any of the multiple videos exclusively with Spanish speaking people...
Love this group and the Australian girl was great as well but I would advise people not to use the phrase "white trash" It's just over the edge of inappropriate lol
So you are the one who determines what is "inappropriate" and "over the edge" for other people?
@@gerohubner5101 - I'm surprised they didn't use some of today's "trendy" words like "offensive" or "racist"...
Actually when I wrote "Whte Trsh" in a comment, it was deleted by CZcams.
Oh man this Aussie isnât shy of saying anything in front of a cameraâŠyou just donât say white tr*sh in publicâŠso inappropriate
thats why i absolutely love them ! no filter and fun people overall. they dont get offended
How is it inappropriate? Genuinely wondering, because I didn't realise it was bad.
@@thespankmyfrank I mean, nobody would care in America lol.
People in the USA say it. Iâve even heard it in country song lyrics đ
yes, I wouldn't say "white trash" unless you're referring to yourself lol Definitely not a phrase that's ever said to someone else in a lighthearted way. I'm in the US and the only time it's ok to say that is if you're referring to yourself (if you say it to or about someone else it's not the same)
Sorry i cant watch anything Australian these days....they took our only chance to go to the world cup and they dont even care.....We played horribly. 18 matches vs southamerican teams for nothing.
Man weâre just happy we got in
Would you feel sorry if you won a game and got to complete in world cup
Itâs literally one on a lifetime for everyone
Fancy a cuppa?đ”đ€đ» I really enjoyed this video!! So fun! you guys made my day