GA Home Cook
Sous Chef
Funny comment a friend of mine who is an Australian mother tells her son, with his friends, don’t forget your rubbers. AKA rain boots.
Don't forget fanny pack..that one can get us North Americans in trouble when we travelNever heard of that one, I visit Australia all the time.
Thongs= jandals, not thongs (underwear)
Gummies= gum boots
Singlet= wife beater
Russ
Galoshes..That's an old timey term, before hyper-sexualization began.
When I was a kid, we all had rubbers for our good school/church shoes.
Galoshes..
...I could have been out by now...
Get your skates on= hurry up.
Sarny = sandwhich.
Boot= trunk
Bonnet=hood.
Side valve = flathead.
Russ
My Scottish exDH used to say, "Don't get your knickers in a twist".My late FIL favourite... "Don't get your knickers in a knot!"...
All that springs to mind is "dep" for convenience store. It's something English speakers say in Quebec. It means the convenience store, "Do you need anything? I'm going to the dep for some snacks?" It's short for the French word for convenience store, "dépanneur". I'm not sure if they use that word in France or just in Canadian French.
So, what do you call that footwear that is usually sturdier than a shoe and often rises above the ankle.
What do you call that fancy hat women wear for Easter (or Ascot opening day)
I worked for an Australian company some years back and learned some strine (Australianese). One of my favorites was "He wouldn't know a tram was up him until the conductor rang the bell" (sort of like the American few bricks short of a full load). I was told that it was a Melbourne expression, and the company was based in Melbourne.
There was a pommie bastard (Englishman) who also worked for the company. He told the story of a young English schoolboy who had just arrived in the U.S. When he asked his teacher for an eraser, he used the English term, and the teacher was shocked when he said he needed a rubber.
Many unrelated things are known by a single name. Why do we in America call a large suitcase or the storage area of a car the same word we use for an elephant’s nose?So, what do you call that footwear that is usually sturdier than a shoe and often rises above the ankle.
What do you call that fancy hat women wear for Easter (or Ascot opening day)
Era - late 60's
My late BIL (from OK) drew a room full of shocked silence when he looked at one of the babies at a family gathering (in Toronto) and said:- "Well, ain't you just the cutest little bugger."
Here the reference would be to say the person practiced buggery and was a horrid insult.
I'm not sure it hasn't lost some of its stigma but...
It is also used as an expletive single word that used to carry the same implication that the British expletive "bloody" used to carry.
With global media, world travel and people relocating miles from their birth places it is hard to distinguish what is 'colloquial' anymore.