cerebrum said:
Its really difficult to get my point across.... sorry about that. Some australians just say really informal things. "oi, oi oi, aussie, aussie aussie", its just not right. Although we don't need to be formal people, but we don't want to be potrayed like that.
So how should we be portrayed? As American, or rather yankee, clones. Or maybe it'd be more proper to cerebum's refined ears if we engaged in the jolly dialect of the Poms, (Originally spelt Pohm, but hardly anyone knows what it stands for so what's the point).
Is too hard of a concept to grasp that maybe the reason we have a different accent and unique words is because we, as a nation, actually have a culture, despite what those 'academics' who believe themselves above the common, uneducated, illiterate mob, claim.
Somehow I think that the language we use seperates us and creates for us an identity and we ought to be proud of that identity. At the very least cynics like cerebum, who strike me as very shallow people, ought to realise that us being typical Australians enhances the tourist trade. Who would want to come down under to see a bunch of immitation Americans.