Subtitles section Play video
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- I'm Dacre Montgomery.
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- I'm Geraldine Viswanathan.
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- We are Australian, and we're gonna be defining
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Australian slang for you today.
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[air whooshes] [upbeat music]
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- Hoon!
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- Yeah, hooning, in your car.
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- Live to hoon, just-
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- But you can actually get pulled over and you get,
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I was at the American Embassy in Australia,
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and someone couldn't get into America
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because they had a hooning charge from 15 years prior,
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something crazy, so they couldn't go have their honeymoon.
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Because they had an hooning charge,
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which is literally, like, the charge
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is literally for speeding, but they call it hooning.
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- To me, I thought hooning was just driving around
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with friends, listening to music, being a little rascal.
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But-
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- I thought, I coulda sworn, 'cause you literally
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can get pulled, I think hooning is when
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you're over 20 kilometers over the limit.
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- Oh!
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- It's called a hooning charge,
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because it's such a hooligan.
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- That's good to know.
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So yeah, I don't, yeah,
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I don't endorse that kind of hooning, then.
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[air whooshes]
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Bloody ripper.
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- Yeah, bloody ripper.
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- [laugh] Wait, that sounded
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amazing. - That's just an exceptional-
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- In your voice.
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- Exceptional term.
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I like this one.
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But you gotta say rippa,
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so you almost replace
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[typing] that E-R
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with an A, [typewriter dings]
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and that's a better phonetic pronunciation.
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Rippa. Bloody ripper.
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Exceptional legend.
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[air whooshes] Tuck in.
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Ah, food. Yeah.
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Love it, yeah. - Dinner.
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- Or food, yeah.
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[murmurs] - Tuck into some tucker.
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- Yeah, have some tucker.
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[air whooshes]
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- Biccy!
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- [laughs] Yeah! Biscuit.
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- Biccy and some tea.
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- But you gotta say it like that.
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"Have a little biccy."
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[Geraldine laughs]
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[air whooshes]
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- Pash on!
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- Yeah, get your pash on.
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- Make out, baby.
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- Have a little makeout, yeah. - Smoochin'.
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- You're in high school, right?
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- I don't know if I would really use it,
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but it definitely feels like, yeah,
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an extreme [laughs] Australian way to say making out.
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"They pashed."
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[air whooshes]
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Okay, Dacre, you wanna do this one?
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- Ah, you beauty!
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You beauty!
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That's beauty used in a sentence.
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An endearing form of describing how beautiful
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something is, or a person is, or a experience is.
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- I feel like the way I would use this,
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if someone does something nice for me,
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they'll be like, "Hey, I made you lunch,"
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and I'll be like, "You beauty," you know?
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- That's perfect.
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[air whooshes] - Mates rates.
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Like if it's your mate, he'll give you
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mates rates on the expense.
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He'll give you a little discount.
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- Like if you have a mate that's a tradie,
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which is a tradesperson, he's an electrician,
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and if he usually charges 150 bucks an hour,
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he'll do it for you for 50, 50 bucks.
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[laughs]
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That's a mates rate. - The most Australian sentence
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ever uttered.
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[air whooshes]
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Rubbers?
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Oh! An eraser.
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- Yeah.
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[air whooshes]
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Brekky.
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This is my brekky.
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This is my brekky.
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- Australia is really good at brekky, breakfast.
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I feel like we've really, the cafes have really
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figured out how to do a good brekky.
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Just like avo toast.
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I miss that the most about [laughs] Australia.
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[air whooshes]
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Oh, cobber!
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[laughs] - I don't know
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this one. - This is still used.
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Ah, cobber. It's like, some of my mates
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have called me a cheeky cobber,
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[laughs] which is like, I think,
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I don't know what the actual, I guess,
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the derivative of it is, but you say, "You cheeky cobber!"
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[both laugh]
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I don't know.
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Again, I've got a friend that says that to me all the time.
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And just always remember, replace
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[typing] that E-R
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with A, and you're Australian. [typewriter dings]
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Cobba.
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[air whooshes] - Ta.
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Thanks!
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- Yeah, yeah, thank you, ta.
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[air whooshes] Coldie.
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It's like a beer, right?
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- A brew.
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- Have a coldie, yeah.
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- I reckon. - There's nothing
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like a cold beer in summer on ice.
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A good VB.
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[air whooshes]
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Feeling crook is like feeling unwell,
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like you're feeling real crook.
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"I can't go to work today. I'm feeling really bloody crook."
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- That's good.
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[air whooshes]
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We say the dog's bollocks.
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[laughs]
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- Like bad?
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- Do you use it?
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- I've never used this.
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- Yeah, like dog's [beep], dog's breakfast.
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[laughs] [air whooshes]
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Yeah, I mean, I've got this.
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- Classic. Crikey!
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- Crikey. Crikey, mate.
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- You know, made world-famous by Mr. Steve Irwin.
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[air whooshes]
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- Ah, that bloody galah!
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It's like...
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- Havin' a chat.
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- [Dacre] It's like a galah.
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- Like a birdie.
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[air whooshes]
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Halfa. Half an hour.
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"We'll be there in halfa."
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- 30 minutes.
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[Geraldine laughs]
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[air whooshes]
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- Innit. This one's very British, though.
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- That's a crazy story, isn't it?
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Idn't it?
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Innit? - Innit?
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[Dacre laughs]
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To me, if I'm doing a terrible English accent,
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I'm probably gonna be like, "Innit?"
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Like it feels very...
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- It does feel very British.
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- I think my English accent is worse
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than my [laughs] regular accent.
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I don't know why.
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- I feel like there's so many different accents
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in such a short sort of space,
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like that's the hardest thing.
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There's like so many tiny variations.
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[air whooshes]
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- Get on the lappy.
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Laptop.
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- That's what I'm calling you from.
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Yeah, lappy.
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Get my lappy out.
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[air whooshes]
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- "Oh, yeah, you mole!"
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- I haven't heard this one!
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- "You're ugly."
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This is very "Puberty Blues." - Ah!
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Oh, okay. - This is quite
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an old-school term.
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[air whooshes]
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- No dramas, no worries, no wackers.
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Those are some variations.
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It's just like it's no hassle, or no dramas.
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"Do you want me to do this?"
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"Yeah, no dramas."
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- It's the whole Australian energy.
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[air whooshes]
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- Reckon.
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That's probably the one I use the most,
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yeah. - Me too.
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It's like I think, I think, would you say, Geraldine?
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Like, "I reckon this is a good idea."
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- Yeah, like, yeah, I reckon that's the right definition.
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- Thank you so much for listening
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to our partial definitions, or at least
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my partial definitions of Australian slang.
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- Yes, cheers!
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- See you later.
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- Catch ya!
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[upbeat music]