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AE 1111

My family IS or ARE?? | Advanced English Grammar Lesson

Learn English here on the Aussie English podcast where I teach you advanced English grammar on how to use the English articles IS vs ARE.

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In today's episode...

Learn English in this newest English Grammar lesson on the Aussie English podcast!

In today’s episode, I am going to teach you how to correctly use the articles IS and ARE.

There is one simple rule for it, and it has something to do with the subject of your sentence. Subject = who or what you are talking about in the sentence.

We will also go through some practice sentences. Listen to how I say the whole sentences because there are some word sounds that link to one another.

As always, don’t hesitate saying the words or sentences out loud! You are learning and you are doing great!


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Transcript of AE 1111 - My family IS or ARE?? Advanced English Grammar Lesson

Hey, Pete, are you into music? Karnivool are my favourite Australian band. You mean Karnivool "is" your favourite band. No, there are five of them in the band. Karnivool "are" my favourite band. Yeah, but band is a singular collective noun, so you should be using the singular form of the verb "to be", "is".

Karnivool "is" my favourite band. I guess so, but I'm thinking of them as a group of people. So, it sounds more natural to say Karnivool "are" my favourite band. Yeah, okay. But grammatically, it's wrong. But everyone says it this way. I don't. Yeah, because you're a weirdo.

G'day, you mob. I'm Pete, the host of Aussie English, welcome to this episode. Today we're going to be covering why sometimes English speakers use plural verb forms with singular collective nouns. Bit weird, right? Before we get started, guys, don't forget to grab today's worksheet, which is linked in the description below.

When you download this you can follow the lesson as you go, see all the example sentences, all of the vocab, everything like that. Take notes, print it out, etc. And you'll get all my future lessons directly in your email inbox. So, a common question I get from students is, why do native speakers sometimes say things like, "the crowd 'are' getting angry, or the class 'go' out for lunch every day"?

"Crowd and class" are singular collective nouns after all, right? So, why are we using "go and are" instead of "is and goes"? For example, you could say "the crowd 'is' getting angry, or the class 'goes' to lunch every day."

Technically, that's right, but English speakers often use the plural form because they're thinking of the group as many different people. So, the rule is supposedly as follows, if the speaker thinks about the collective noun as a single entity where the individuals or members within it are acting together, they should use the singular verb form.

For instance, "my family 'is' coming to dinner. Your footy team 'wins' every game. The government 'collects' taxes." However, if individuals or members of the group aren't acting as a unit, the speaker can decide to use a plural form of the verbs instead.

For example, "my family 'are' arguing over what to have for dinner. Your footy team seem 'to be' competing with one another for the ball. The government 'disagree' constantly about tax reform." In reality, though, English speakers aren't really considering the grammar that they're using and whether it's correct or incorrect. They're using structures that they hear commonly with people in their social network that they speak with.

So, if it's in high frequency, whether it's correct or not, it's common to use it. So, ultimately, what it comes down to is whether what's being said sounds natural to the English speaker. If they're used to thinking about collective nouns as plural, because there are many individuals in that group, they may prefer to use plural verb forms instead of a singular one.

So, you may hear phrases like, "my family 'are' coming to dinner. Your footy team 'win' every game. The government 'collect' taxes." Let's go through a few more examples, guys, where now we'll use it as a listen and repeat exercise, so you can practise your pronunciation. And we'll also focus on stress, so which words within these phrases are being stressed?

Before we get into that, though, guys, if you're enjoying this video, could you do me a favour and give that like button a little boop just to show the YouTube algorithm that this video is helping, and it'll show it to other people just like you? It really helps small channels like mine. Thanks.

Okay, so repeat these sentences after me. "The class are a great bunch of kids. The class are a great bunch of kids." Which words are being stressed? Class, great, bunch and kids. So, the important nouns there, as well as the adjective "great". "The class are a great bunch of kids."

"The group want to go out for dinner. The group want to go out for dinner. Which words are being stressed? Group go out and dinner. And interestingly, for the phrasal verb, "go out", I feel like the stress is actually on the preposition "out" instead of on "go". "The group want to go out for dinner. The group want to go out for dinner."

"The band start touring Australia in January. The band start touring Australia in January." There's a lot of words being stressed here. Band, start, touring, Australia and January. The verbs and the nouns. Band, start touring, Australia, January. "The band start touring Australia in January."

"The audience clap after every joke. The audience clap after every joke." Which words are being stressed? Audience and clap, every joke. So, the verbs and the nouns. "The audience clap after every joke." And the last one, "the team hope that they win the game. The team hope that they win the game." Which words are being stressed? Team, hope, win and game. The nouns and the verbs. "The team hope that they win the game."

Great job, guys. Remember if you want to listen to this episode as a podcast episode, so the audio, you can review this, you can practise this when you are working, when you are commuting to work, at the gym, outside walking, wherever it is, and you have dead time that you could be filling with English lessons.

Be sure to download my podcast app up here, it is free, and you can listen to this anywhere, any time. Also, if you want to keep learning English with me, check out this episode and I'll see you next time. Bye.

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        AE 1056 – The Goss: Lost in the Australian Bush? Here’s What to Do! https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-1056-the-goss-lost-in-the-australian-bush-heres-what-to-do/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-1056-the-goss-lost-in-the-australian-bush-heres-what-to-do/#comments Wed, 24 Nov 2021 08:00:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=171691 AE 1056 – THE GOSS: Lost in the Australian Bush? Here’s What to Do! Learn Australian English by listening to this…

        The post AE 1056 – The Goss: Lost in the Australian Bush? Here’s What to Do! appeared first on Aussie English.

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        AE 1056 - THE GOSS:

        Lost in the Australian Bush? Here's What to Do!

        Learn Australian English by listening to this episode of The Goss!

        These are conversations with my old man Ian Smissen for you to learn more about Australian culture, news, and current affairs. 

        pete smissen, aussie english podcast, learn english australia, learn english with pete, learn language podcast, australian podcast, learn english podcast, learn english online course, australian bush, how to survive in the bush, how to survive in the australian outback, australian outback

        In today's episode...

        Welcome back to the weekly The Goss episodes here on the Aussie English podcast!

        A local news article caught my eye about people getting lost in the Australian bushland.

        First off is a story about a couple who, despite their experience in the outdoors, still got lost while hiking in Victoria’s Mount Buffalo National Park.

        Another story involves a boy on the autism spectrum who got lost in a rural bushland in New South Wales. The search for him lasted for several days until a rescue helicopter located him in a creek near where he was first reported lost.

        And have you heard about Aboriginal trackers? These are skilled Aboriginal bushmen who help find people who get lost (or hide) in the vast Australian outback.

        Join us today as we talk about new local stories from around Australia, and what to do when you get lost in the bushes!

        Improve your listening skills today – listen, play, & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!

        Watch & listen to the convo!

        Listen to today's episode!

        This is the FREE podcast player. You can fast-forward and rewind easily as well as slow down or speed up the audio to suit your level.

        If you’d like to use the Premium Podcast Player as well as get the downloadable transcripts, audio files, and videos for episodes, you can get instant access by joining the Premium Podcast membership here.

        Listen to today's episode!

        Use the Premium Podcast Player below to listen and read at the same time.

        You can fast-forward and rewind easily as well as slow down or speed up the audio to suit your level.

        Transcript of AE 1056 - The Goss: Lost in the Australian Bush? Here's What to Do!

        G'day, you mob. Pete here, and this is another episode of Aussie English. The number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. So, today I have a Goss' episode for you where I sit down with my old man, my father, Ian Smissen, and we talk about the week's news whether locally down under here in Australia or non-locally overseas in other parts of the world.

        Okay, and we sometimes also talk about whatever comes to mind, right. If we can think of something interesting to share with you guys related to us or Australia, we also talk about that in The Goss'. So, these episodes are specifically designed to try and give you content about many different topics where we're obviously speaking in English and there are multiple people having a natural and spontaneous conversation in English.

        So, it is particularly good to improve your listening skills. In order to complement that, though, I really recommend that you join the podcast membership or the academy membership at AussieEnglish.com.au, where you will get access to the full transcripts of these episodes, the PDFs, the downloads, and you can also use the online PDF reader to read and listen at the same time.

        Okay, so if you really, really want to improve your listening skills fast, get the transcript, listen and read at the same time, keep practising, and that is the quickest way to level up your English. Anyway, I've been rabbiting on a bit, I've been talking a bit. Let's just get into this episode, guys. Smack the bird, and let's get into it.

        Welcome to The Goss', guys. What's going on? How are you, dad?

        Hey, good, Pete. Yeah. Have you been lost in the outback recently?

        No, not recently. Good segue. It's always hard, I'm always like...

        In the bush rather than the outback. The outback is actually quite hard to get lost in. But yeah, getting lost in the bush.

        Well, yeah, they'll find you in the outback, it's just whether or not they can get to you.

        Yeah, and whet- Yeah, and whether or not you survive the conditions...

        Stay with the car, guys, stay with the car. Yeah. So, this was a cool article that popped up on ABC News where I get most of my news from, getting lost in Australian bush can happen to anyone, but being prepared could save lives. So, I'll read the first little story here, which is about a guy called Trevor Salvado. He's probably of Brazilian or South American heritage.

        Well, I guess Portugal, Spain as well. But anyway, Trevor Salvado is not the kind of person you'd expect to get lost in the bush. He's an experienced hiker who loves the outdoors and has been involved with search and rescue operations. But in 2019, Mr Salvado and his wife, Jacinta Bohan, were on a hike in Victoria's Mount Buffalo National Park when things went very wrong.

        Quote "we were walking on the track and the bush was just getting thicker and thicker. And then we walked into a position where we couldn't see any more of the track markers. And with the scrub thickening up, we actually weren't quite sure which direction we'd come from."

        The couple stopped and spent five minutes having a chat, each convinced that they had come from a different direction. "Then we just came to the conclusion okay, we're lost. What do we do now?" So yeah, it was an interesting little story about them. Obviously, they, you know, spoiler they got rescued.

        Yes, exactly.

        We had a recent touching story in the news, too, about a young kid, a three-year-old called Anthony AJ Elfalak, who was a non-verbal autistic child who disappeared into the bushland. And I think a lot of people were thinking, you know, was he abducted or something. Because I think they searched for him for, was it three days?

        Three days.

        And they ended up finding him 200 metres away from where he'd gone missing in a creek in a puddle of water, just splashing his face and drinking the water. And it was like, it was a really touching scene because it was from the bird's eye view helicopter eye view where the helicopter had obviously found him and just kept the camera on him.

        And that was going live to the news, and you could just see him whilst he was waiting for the people to be shown where he was and get to him. He was just in the water playing. But it's crazy how much shit like that affects you once you're a dad of a young child.

        Yeah, it changes your perspective...

        Oh, my God I almost cried when I saw that, I was just like imagining it was Noah.

        I'm a, as your mother keeps saying to me, you're an old sook, you're a softie. Because I fall apart whenever there's a story about, you know, kids or partners or...

        Cats.

        ...You know, cats.

        Beer.

        ...In my early 20s and I was, I thought I was, you know, fairly empathetic and sympathetic to things. But yeah, you'd hear that story and go, oh, that's sad. But now you just go, oh yeah. I look it and go, what if that was my grandchild, you know?

        Oh, man. Not even that. But yeah, just thinking about it, right? Like, it's fucked. I was, you know, to go on a segue, I was reading that book, I think it was trackers, about the indigenous trackers that worked alongside the police, and I think it was something like 80% to 90% of their job back in the 1800s. It was just tracking down dumb white people who went into bush and disappeared.

        But there was one tragic story about two children who were walking, you know, obviously a huge distance in the time, but kilometres and kilometres. One of them was a two-year-old boy, and the other one was a five or six-year-old girl, and they're walking from one place to another, I think they were, you know, going from school to home or whatever.

        And it's this story that I've heard a few times now of just the older child getting pissed off that the younger child dawdling and taking forever and just says, well, you know...

        You're on your own.

        You're on your own. Yeah. And then the boy just disappears. And the sort of tragic thing about that, not just the boy disappearing, was that the I think the Aboriginal tracker was like, you know what? I think I know where he's gone. And I think they ended up giving up because they were just like, yeah, he's dead now. You know, there's no chance it's been a week or something.

        And the Aboriginal tracker ends up going back to where the guy, the boy disappeared and ends up tracking him down and finding him in shelter, in a cave, up in a mountain that he just starved to death up there. And you're just like, God. Brutal. Just brutal.

        So, yeah, anyway, getting lost in the bush, it's a very common thing, especially along the East Coast here, where you do have a lot of thick bush. And it can happen even if it's not an incredibly remote area, right?

        Yeah. Yeah, you can. And look, these guys, these two, the couple, Trevor and his partner, they did the right thing. You know, they were experienced enough. And I think that's part of the story is that, yes, you can be, you know, you can be lost, whatever that means out in the bush.

        But if you're prepared in terms of both carrying the right stuff with you and its water, food, equipment, mostly protection and it's clothing as much as anything else. And ideally, you want to have first aid of things with you as well, because a lot of the times people get what we call lost is that the people are not lost, they're just incapable of coming out.

        Yeah.

        So, somebody, you know...

        Breaks a leg.

        ...And sprains their ankle and they can't walk. It doesn't have to be a particularly severe, life-threatening injury. It just means that you can't walk out. And typically, the best thing to do and this is- This comes back to a combination of is it a rescue? Is it first aid? Or is it just bushwalking? Is that typically you say, well, yeah, you should never go bushwalking by yourself.

        That's the first thing. And secondly, you want, you know, more than two. Because if somebody is injured, you should, and if they're badly injured you need to leave somebody with the person as well as having somebody to walk out. And then you look at and go, well, then it should be four because you don't want somebody walking out by themselves.

        And then it becomes a ridiculous argument of just multiplication of risk factors. But I think that's the key point is that always assume that you're not going to get back in the time that you think you're going to get back in. Always assume that the weather conditions are going to change and therefore you need to have food, water and shelter.

        You don't necessarily have to take machetes and everything to build shelters, but just have waterproof and warm clothing with you and things like a hat and sunscreen and stuff if it's going to be hot. And the problem that we have in this case, it was, you know, Mount Buffalo and, you know, it's not going to get particularly hot there, even in the middle of summer, it'll be hot, but during the night time, it'll cool down.

        And but it's, you know, people don't realise how much water you go through in the heat and there's lots of stories of people getting, you know, particularly cars breaking down or and so on out in the outback, where it can be 50 degrees in the shade and there is no shade. Ironically, the only shade you'll have is the car that you've just broken-down in.

        Yeah.

        So, it's better to stay in the shade, and it's also better to stay with a big thing, like a car where you've got, you know, particularly where you've got air-based search and rescue, where they'll see you...

        I saw a story a while back about someone who is a marathon runner and, you know, had come from Germany or something...

        This is the couple. The woman was the marathon runner...

        Was it? Yeah.

        Yeah.

        And she ends up being like, oh yeah, I got this... (both talking)

        ...And the track from the Stuart Highway to Lake Eyre is about- And I've been on it. It's about 40 kilometres of sand track. And under normal conditions, you can drive a bus down it. It's fine. But they got to the car park at the end and got bogged, and they couldn't get the vehicle out.

        And she was a marathon runner and she decided that, you know, it's only 40 kilometres. She wasn't going to run back. She said, it's 40 kilometres back to the main road...

        I got this.

        ...I'll make it. And off she went, and she was carrying water, she was carrying a couple of litres of water. But you go through in under normal conditions in say 35 to 40 degrees, you'll need at least a litre of water an hour when you're not exercising. If you're then walking in it, you're going to need to carry two. So, 40 kilometres, the average person is going to walk that in about 10 hours.

        So, in 10 hours, you're going to have to carry 20 kilograms of water with you. And most people don't carry 20 kilograms of water with them, let alone be able to carry 20 kilograms of water. So, stay with the resources that you have. And the stupid thing with this one was when they eventually were found, she was found dead on the track...

        Yeah.

        ...And the car kept coming in, you know, figure, you find a person dead on the track. They kept coming in, found the guy, he was a bit dehydrated, you know, and so on. But he was fine, and it took the person 30 seconds to get the car out, all you had to do was lower the tyre pressures to drive the car out.

        That must have been the most brutal part about it, where you realised you had the capability of resolving the situation and someone not dying, and then they died.

        And that's the problem that we have with tourists coming to Australia. They land in Perth or Darwin in particular, and they go, you know, you can- In Darwin, you can drive for 20 minutes and you're in the outback...

        Yeah.

        ...And they hire a four-wheel drive when they get there, they have no experience of driving with a four-wheel drive. Yeah, they might have an all-terrain vehicle or an all-wheel drive vehicle in Germany, but they're driving on the autobahn. But it's very different when you get off on sand and mud and so on, and they don't have the skills to drive in those conditions. So, that's one part is just having the skills to drive.

        And, you know, emergency self-rescues are a big thing in the four-wheel driving community, and you need the experience to be able to do it. And often it's not difficult if you know what you're doing...

        Yeah.

        ...But the other thing is...

        Just to pause you there quickly. If you guys are interested in this sort of stuff, there are plenty of courses that you can do you, you know, weekend courses, multiple day courses to learn how to drive four-wheel drive safely.

        Even if you don't have one, you can probably find courses where you can go along with other people and do all the exercises about how to get unbogged and how to get over sand dunes, how to pump the tyres up or lower them...

        And the pumping the tyres one is the classic one because the best thing you can do in a four-wheel drive for almost anything is lower the tyre pressures.

        And have an air pump in your car.

        Which just gives you- Exactly. Which is the lowering of tyre pressure just gives you a greater surface area of the tyre on the ground, which means that you get more grip and therefore you're more likely to get out.

        But if you have to lower them to the point where it is unsafe to drive, you then have to have a compressor in the car to pump the tyres up. And that's the first thing you should ask if you're hiring a four-wheel drive is do you have an air compressor on board?

        Yeah.

        And if not, insist that they have one before you get it. If you're just going to be driving on the road, you're probably are going to be alright, but as soon as you go off road, you need it. But getting back to this, you know, the bush stuff in addition to the, you know, the water, food, equipment and first aid.

        The other things that people really need to think about when you're going out is understanding the environment, knowing what the weather changes are likely to be. You know, I've been up in the high country, so-called high country for those who come from North America, Asia or Europe...

        Is that behind you in the video here, dad?

        That is a little bit. Yes. That's high country. Well high-ish country, that's halfway up.

        Mountain country.

        Even in the Victorian Alps, where we're up to, you know, 1,500-1,600 hundred metres high and you can still drive there, so, yeah, you're not out. But you can go off on a bushwalk there. I've been up there in summer, and it snowed, and so you can be 35 degrees and then four hours or five hours later, it's snowing.

        Well, we had that with China recently, right, where they were doing some crazy marathon run and all these people went up a mountain dressed for running a marathon. And it ended up suddenly having these sort of like cyclonic crazy blizzard conditions. And a whole bunch of them ended up freezing to death.

        Yeah. And so, that's something you need to take into consideration. You don't just assume, oh, I can go walking around in a T-shirt and shorts and running shoes...

        She'll be right, mate.

        Yeah. Yeah, she'll be right. Because and you might go, I'm only going to walk for a couple of hours, you know, an hour in an hour out. But if something goes wrong, you get lost or you sprain your ankle or something and then you've got to stay overnight, then you need that ability.

        So, understanding the weather conditions and the environment. Secondly, understanding a bit of local knowledge of the geography, so study the area before you go.

        Or find a map, right.

        Yeah. And no map- Basic map reading skills. Carry a map with you and carry a paper map. Don't rely on, you know, the map on your phone because, you know, most places you're going to go out bushwalking you're not going to get a signal anyway and or the battery runs down, so. And understand how to do some basic map reading, not just reading the map, but reading the environment...

        Orienteering. More courses that you could do.

        More courses you can do. And the other one is carry a hand-held GPS with you and spare batteries if you need to. Not- The GPS is never going to get you out of somewhere, but it's going to tell you where you are.

        And so, if you can point on a map to exactly where you are or even if you don't have the map, the thing I do and if I go out, yeah, particularly go out birdwatching up in north-western Victoria, where you're up in the Mallee and there are no landmarks, you can be 100 metres away from the road.

        And if it's during the daytime and the sun's up, obviously you can go, oh, there's the Sun. I know which way North is, and I know where I originally walked, and I just turn around and go back the other way.

        But if it's suddenly cloudy and you've got no idea where the sun is and so on, you can get disoriented rather than lost very quickly in places with no landmarks. So, what I have is I just carry a handheld GPS, I put a waypoint at the car and then I can turn the thing off.

        I don't have to have it on all the time, I'm not using it to track trails, do any of that sort of thing. I can walk two kilometres off into the bush somewhere, and all I then do is turn that thing back on and go, I need to go into that direction to get back to the car. So, this is one of those sort of old school GPS as...

        It'll cost you a hundred bucks.

        ...Telling you which way things are than necessarily having a map on it... (both talking)

        ...$1,000. And having this stuff on your phone is all very well. But the phone, typically, unless you're going to do the preparation and download the maps to your phone and everything else with certain maps. But, you know, using Google Maps, is only useful if you've got a connection to a telephone network. So, just having that ability to navigate around yourself is going to help you.

        The other one is that if you're going into places where it is likely that you're not going to have any electronic access to anything, carry an EPIRB that is a- It's a little device that you can carry around, and if you press the button on it for three seconds, then it'll send out a GPS message to emergency services and they'll know exactly where you are. And it is not just here I am, but it's here I am, and I need to be rescued.

        Yeah. So, these are emergency personal locator devices or beacons? Yeah, so PLB's. But I guess sort of, yeah, to rehash that the New South Wales police have a good guide, I think it's called think before you trek.

        Yeah.

        And they outline these things, of the four main things of taking up water, food, equipment and first aid supplies. Register your trip with someone, so you can go to police stations, right, in the local police station and just tell them where you're going to go, especially...

        ...National Park officers if you're in a national park.

        ...Especially if it's a hike that's going to be multiple days, take an emergency personal locator beacon. Yeah, and then always keep to your planned route, is number four, right.

        So, don't deviate. One of the big things they were talking about in this article that's an issue is that when you get lost, when the SES, the search and rescue come in and try and find you, if you're moving around constantly trying to, you know, get out. Every day, they effectively have to reset the search because you could be in the place that they looked yesterday.

        Yeah, they've got to do a search over and over and over again.

        So, they say, you know, stay still. Yeah, because you'll be found faster, even though it feels like you won't.

        And if you- If- With your clothing, carry something that is bright and light.

        Or wear something that's bright and light, right. Yeah.

        Even if you're not wearing it, carry it with you so that if you need to wear it, it might be a jacket that you've got to put on if it gets cold. But you can, and in the case of this couple that we saw here, they had a bright blue jacket and they just spread it out on the ground.

        Well, they bunched it together. They've got a few things here, like a backpack, it looks like a cover of something and the jacket. And they spread it, spread them all out with rocks and put them next to one another and created an "X" with branches, which is a shape that is obviously not very natural. And so, people would see it from the sky.

        ...Obvious marker that people can see.

        But then, yeah, and they ended up building a shelter and just staying in the one place and waiting to be rescued. And then they were.

        Yeah.

        So, anyway, yeah, that's about it. I guess, here what have we got at the end? What to do if you get lost? Stop, don't panic. Give yourself a chance to plan wisely and make good choices.

        The ability to keep a clear head is probably the most powerful resource you've got. Only if it's safe to do so, go to any nearby high ground to look for clues or mobile phone coverage. And then if you were- You are well and truly lost and it appears you need to be rescued there are six extremely important words of advice, Stay put and make yourself seen.

        Yeah, that's it.

        Yeah.

        Yeah.

        So, yeah, hopefully that helps if you guys go out. But I think it's just the, what is it, the five or the six P's? Preparation prevents piss poor performance.

        ...Performance.

        So, just don't over assume your capabilities and even me, if I were to go out bush or, you know, to go four-wheel driving with friends, I feel like I'd need to do courses or do a bit of research. Because you couldn't just throw me into the bush, and having grown up in Australia, I'm automatically going to know what I need to do and everything. I'm just as, you know, clueless as the next Aussie.

        Yeah. And look, I'm a reasonably experienced bushwalker. I'm no longer fit, so I've got to choose where I go. And I've turned around from places and gone, no, I've walked a kilometre in like this and I know it's another three and there's no way I'm going to be able to walk the three or four kilometres back out again.

        Just jog it.

        Yeah, exactly...

        And my legs broken.

        ...Driving as well. You know, I've been on tracks where I go... (both talking) ...People in the car. If I look at it and go, I don't have another vehicle with me, so I'm not going to put myself in a situation where I'm stranded by myself.

        It's a bit iffy, a bit sketchy, a bit dodgy.

        A bit dodgy.

        Turn around.

        Exactly.

        Awesome. Well, thanks, guys. Hopefully that helps. And hopefully you stay safe next time you go out in the Aussie bush.

        All right, see ya.

        See ya next time.

        Alrighty, you mob. Thank you so much for listening to or watching this episode of The Goss'. If you would like to watch the video if you're currently listening to it and not watching it, you can do so on the Aussie English Channel on YouTube. You'll be able to subscribe to that, just search "Aussie English" on YouTube.

        And if you're watching this and not listening to it, you can check this episode out also on the Aussie English podcast, which you can find via my free Aussie English podcast application on both Android and iPhone. You can download that for free, or you can find it via any other good podcast app that you've got on your phone. Spotify, podcast from iTunes, Stitcher, whatever it is.

        I'm your host, Pete. Thank you so much for joining me. I hope you have a ripper of a day, and I will see you next time. Peace!

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              The post AE 1056 – The Goss: Lost in the Australian Bush? Here’s What to Do! appeared first on Aussie English.

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              AE 982 – Discovering Our Family Descends From European Royalty with Jo Smissen https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-982-discovering-our-family-descends-from-european-royalty-with-jo-smissen/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-982-discovering-our-family-descends-from-european-royalty-with-jo-smissen/#respond Wed, 11 Aug 2021 09:00:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=164835 AE 982 – INTERVIEW: Discovering Our Family Descends From European Royalty with Jo Smissen Learn Australian English in each of…

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              AE 982 - INTERVIEW:

              Discovering Our Family Descends From European Royalty with Jo Smissen

              Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie English Podcast.

              In these Aussie English Interview episodes, I get to chin-wag with different people.

              pete smissen, host of the aussie english podcast, interview with jo smissen, pete smissen mother, smissen family descends from european royalty

              In today's episode...

              In this special interview episode, I got my mum Jo Smissen to talk about how our family descends from European royalty!

              With passion for doing research, she went all over the Web in an attempt to trace our family’s ancestry.

              She was able to go back to the 1700s, finding out that we had family members who we part of the 12 known companions of William the Conqueror in The Battle of Hastings!

              Improve your listening skills today – listen, play, & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!

              Watch & listen to the convo!

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              Transcript of AE 982 - Discovering Our Family Descends From European Royalty with Jo Smissen

              How's it going? Welcome to this interview episode today. It's happened, it's happened. I twisted her arm, and I got her back on the podcast. So, my mother is on the podcast, today.

              And we talk about a whole bunch of things related to family history, specifically our family history, and how my mum ended up finding out that we were related to some pretty incredible characters throughout European history going back at least, I think a thousand years.

              So, it's an interesting story. It's not a 100%- We're not 100% sure, but we're 99% sure that it's true. So, take it with a grain of salt. Anyway, without any further ado, guys, I give you my mother, Jo Smissen. Enjoy the episode. So, welcome to the podcast, Mum. Are you pumped?

              Yes, my son.

              What was- What was the little Jedi reference?

              Just- It's just an interesting experience.

              Bring this closer to your mouth. Yeah, you'll get the microphone etiquette down. Don't be afraid to lean forward to it. Yeah.

              Right.

              Or bring it towards you. Bring it up towards you. There you go. There you go. How does that feel?

              My friend the microphone.

              Yeah, exactly. Exactly. So, what does it feel like being on the podcast? You were on a while ago. I wonder what episode that was. I have to look it up whilst you're telling us what it's like.

              I don't remember. It was such a long time ago. I was probably talking with you and Ian.

              Yeah. In fact, the last episode was about you growing up in the 1960s.

              No.

              Yeah, yeah. From Episode 650, growing up in 1960s Australia with Jo Smissen. So, I guess we can't really cover the same topic.

              I've got no idea what I said. Do you remember what you asked?

              We talked about collecting stamps and a bunch of other things, yeah, moving around.

              Nobody collects stamps anymore.

              Yeah. Yeah, it was interesting. Well, I guess we could talk about similar sort of stuff. We had- I had Dad on the podcast recently for the module about his childhood. And he talked about a whole bunch of these interesting things, like having a horse and cart deliver milk and bread and stuff like that. But I think you had a bit of a different childhood because you had quite a bit of moving around, didn't you, as a child?

              Compared to Dad.

              Compared to Dad, yes, because I was born in the UK, and I lived there for about six weeks.

              What was it like?

              I have absolutely no memory whatsoever, although a few years ago I actually went and visited my hometown for the first time and that was- That was really interesting and I actually feel quite attached to the place, it's just a little English village, but I feel quite attached to it.

              I don't remember it as a baby, but I have memories as an adult now of going back and taking my parents back and actually seeing it a bit through their eyes, visiting the places that they visited.

              That's probably a good topic for this podcast, potentially, then. How you feel as a European Australian with, what, the majority of your heritage being great British or English effectively. Right. Dads got Scottish in him, but you're pretty much pure English.

              Pretty much.

              And maybe the connection to a country that you didn't grow up in, but you visited multiple times and are probably influenced by culturally and comparing it to Australia. So, I mean, you were born there, you then grew up in Australia. Would you say that from your sort of perspective that childhood in Australia-

              Well, I guess you wouldn't know what it's like in Great Britain. But do you think if you got to choose from the start now, you would say I would 100% go Australia? Or would you be- Do you feel now like you missed something, and you were like, I wonder what a British childhood would have been like?

              No. No.

              Sorry Great British listeners. No.

              ...Because...

              No kangaroo's, right?

              I'm- I've been an Australian citizen since birth, I was registered as an Australian citizen because my parents were Australian. So, there was no real personal connection for me to the UK other than the oddity, I suppose, of being born there. It's never actually been a part of my growing up. My parents were Australian, their parents were Australian, and my family goes back between four or six generations Australian.

              We can tie in the family history stuff, which I think you've just- You've got a little twinkle in your eye. I have a feeling you've just cottoned on to that, as well. Okay.

              So, to me, I'm Australian through and through. But for reasons that were outside of my control, obviously, my parents were in the UK when they got married and when I was born, but then they pretty much came back to Australia straight away. They couldn't go back to their hometown, which was Brisbane, because my Dad had a job in Adelaide. So, we went straight to Adelaide and my childhood was in Adelaide.

              I feel like when I was growing up- Maybe the older I got, maybe once I was in my 20s, there was always this feeling- I don't know if you had it, but this sort of like, I am Australian but I'm still made to sort of realise that I'm not Australian, like Indigenous people are Australian. I'm somewhat of a- It doesn't feel like you're 100% the same as those guys because you do have this kind of ancestry in another country.

              Did you ever feel like any kind of connection with Great Britain or with England or like when you went there for the very first time that, you know, you could remember, maybe the first time after you were born, did you feel like this is the homeland, this is the ancestral homeland?

              Like, I would imagine an indigenous person from Australia or- An Australian indigenous person, if they'd grown up overseas, would feel coming back to Australia or coming to Australia for the first time. Did that ever hit you? I feel like that would hit me.

              ...Mean going back to England?

              Yeah, I feel like if I went to England for the first time, I would be like shit, you know, for thousands of years, my, effectively, all of my ancestry was in here, Scotland and maybe a little bit of East Germany. But this small region of the world is where my DNA comes from. And like, I'll be like, you know, the soil has the bones and the blood of my ancestors in this soil.

              They've died over wars, they were, you know, had children, they'd fallen in love in this location.

              I think maybe over the last few years since I've been doing my family history, I might have had those feelings. And in fact, I've only been back to the UK twice in recent years. So, I never went back as a young person. We simply didn't have the resources for me to be able to do that.

              I feel you.

              I never went back. Even when we first travelled, when we had enough money to travel, we went to the United States and Canada because that's where Ian's sister lives and that's where your cousins are. And he was working for a Canadian company, so most of our travel or most of my travel has been in North America and Canada.

              And subsidised.

              And subsidised.

              By work, right?

              My frequent flyer points.

              That's it, too, by Dad. Yeah.

              Exactly. So, visiting the UK, really, I visited for the first time on my parents- In the year of my parent's 60th wedding anniversary. So, that's like- That's 60 years since my birth.

              So, that would be like me doing it in another 25 years.

              And so, it was interesting to me, it was fascinating to me, and I loved going to English places. But apart from- Apart from the little village where I was born, which I've now been to 3 times. I don't...

              It's the most visited place for you in England, is it?

              Pretty much. I don't know that there's any other place that I felt a particular association with. Now that I've been uncovering my roots a bit more and particularly the roots that go back to medieval times. Now, that is interesting to me. And that means that there are buildings that have been there for hundreds of years, even more, that I could visit, and I could have some sense of...

              My great, g-g-g-g-g-g-great grandfather own this place.

              Something like that. But apart from that...

              Yeah.

              ...I'm Australian. I've never felt anything other than Australian.

              Really?

              My generation, I guess we were a privileged generation. We saw ourselves as Australian. There wasn't- I don't know, I'm not even sure how to put it. But we identified very strongly as Australian, we didn't feel guilty about being Australian, we were Australians.

              And in- The interesting thing, though, is in probably two generations before that, in my grandparents' time, they still saw themselves as English and they still saw England as the home country.

              Even if they'd never been there.

              Yeah. And all those soldiers who fought in WWI and WWII from Australia were defending the motherland.

              Yeah.

              So, two generations ago, there was quite a different feeling and a different relationship with Britain, particularly Britain.

              And I guess that would have been about the time that federation took place. So, it's not surprising then that, you know, two generations ago, like my grandparents, grandparents would have been born in the late eighteen hundreds. Right. Maybe the early nineteen hundreds. So, it would have been either around the time or just after Australia actually became a country prior to which it would have seen itself...

              Probably, yeah, maybe a generation after. But they still lingered a long time, this colonial attachment to Great Britain, particularly Great Britain. Now some of my ancestors are German, but, and perhaps this is a legacy of wars as well. There isn't that connection with Germany, although there are places where there are lots of Germans that live like in South Australia, in the Barossa Valley, like in Toowoomba, where my ancestors came.

              Where it's a very big German community and they probably do feel strongly German. But that wasn't my upbringing. That kind of- By the time- It's all distilled out of me, I'm Australian. That's all I am.

              So, would you call your parents royalists?

              Yes, I would. My mother particularly, yeah.

              Do you want to describe what that is and how it manifests itself? Because it's something for me I still find very peculiar.

              So, obviously in Australia, we are still part of the Commonwealth. We're not a republic. And...

              So, we have no prep- for me that effectively means we have no president, we have a prime minister, and the head of state is the queen.

              That's right.

              And she does nothing.

              Though, it's a titular- It's a ceremonial position, but it's still a reality that Australia is- Yeah. I know it's governed by Britain, even though in reality we govern ourselves and there's been a referendum and there's lots of debate about whether we should be a republic or not. It usually falls down because people don't want to change the status quo.

              And there are real fears about what kind of a president would we have and, you know, the queen- We can deal with the queen. She's kind of distant. She has a representative in Australia. In- For the most part, they don't interfere in Australian politics, although there have been at least one celebrated occasion where that happened.

              Was this Gough Whitlam?

              Yeah, this was the dismissal of Gough Whitlam by the Governor-General.

              Who is can only be fired by the Queen, right?

              Well, yeah, by the Queen, through...

              But he can get rid of the leader of Australia.

              Yes. And it was a very complicated situation, and it was very politically driven, but it happened. But for the most part, we can deal with the Queen, you know, she's distant, she doesn't really interfere with our politics.

              She's got other shit to deal with, yeah.

              We look to countries that have presidents, I think, and we go, well, this is really kind of giving somebody, one person a lot of power in our government. And I think that a lot of people are not sure about how that would actually...

              Really?

              ...Work.

              I hadn't really thought about it, apart from the fact that I assume that people just didn't want to let go of the British ties.

              Well, you know, it sells itself as that. But it's more. It's more, what is having a president mean? And...

              It would be weird, I think, for me at least. Probably you, too, being like, yeah, we have an Australian president. Like that change, that initial switch. Right. Like from going from pounds to dollars must have been a real shock to the system. I would imagine it'd be the same if it's like, oh, he's the leader of a party, but they can, you know, the prime minister can be ditched, or the party can change things.

              But at once it's the president, if he's voted in, it's like, no, no, no, there's no ditching him.

              Yeah. And, you know, there are different... ...There are different models around the world and they're not all good examples of what we might like to follow. But I think it is the great unknown for people who are nervous about what it would be like to be a republic.

              So, what does Nanna and Grandpa, what do they really do in terms of being royalists? What does that- What does that look like on a yearly basis, I guess?

              I think, well, perhaps it means they have a more of an attachment to Great Britain than I do...

              Yep.

              ...A generation later. And, you know, they've grown up in an era where there was much more attachment. But I think my mother has a real attachment to the royal family and- I don't know, perhaps it's a bit of a fairy tale. I'm not quite sure what it is.

              Bring this a little bit closer.

              I don't know.

              Yeah.

              I don't know.

              Well, she got the letter from the Queen, right? For her sixtieth wedding anniversary.

              Yes. We organised that.

              Yeah.

              It doesn't come out of nowhere; you actually have to...

              Oh, I would imagine the Queen is not in a rush to by default, have to write a letter for every single person who has their sixtieth wedding anniversary. I'm sure she's like, you ask, and I'll sign my name.

              You have to go through your member of parliament who goes through, you know, whatever channels they go through to get the letter from the Queen. And in fact, they ended up with a letter from the Queen, a letter from the prime minister and a letter from their local member. So, everybody was excited about his sixtieth wedding anniversary.

              Yeah. That's just nuts. So- But, yeah, it is a weird thing, isn't it, right? Did you think the same growing up? Seeing a lot of people making so much fuss over the royal family, watching weddings on TV, having the full thing televised, where I would imagine in America they would be like, what.

              But it's like a movie. It's like a fairy tale. It doesn't- It's not that real in our lives, if that makes sense.

              No.

              It's interesting. And again, now I go back in my history, I am more connected than I thought to royalty. And so, it's actually more fascinating to me than it used to be. But, I don't know, it's an interesting institution.

              So, what got you so interested in family history, Mum? Take us down that road.

              What got me interested in family history?

              Why is it such a kick? Right. Like, quite often I come over and you have these diagrams of people's names and family trees written out on the table on different pieces of paper with highlighters and notes, and it looks like you've been- You haven't slept for days, you haven't showered in a week. Like, why is it such a fascinating thing? I'm not making fun of you. I'm sort of playing it up a bit. But I know how much you love it.

              And it seems to give you a great kick and you find out really interesting stuff. So, what is it about?

              Because, you know, at the heart of it, what it is, is a puzzle.

              Yeah.

              And I'm a puzzler. And I have a brain that sees patterns and likes to put things together. And so, it's putting together where we came from, and it gets really interesting. And you hit places where you have to actually be quite clever to figure out how, you know, what relationships there are and what's the next step back and- Because I can only do it from a distance and I rely on online resources when I'm researching British history...

              As opposed to being an actual historian that's in the- On the ground in Germany or Britain.

              Yeah. And going to archives and actually getting out the microfiche and the documents and going through them page by page. There's a little bit of that that you can do online, but there's a lot of things that you rely on indexes, and you rely on the search engines of things like ancestry to actually pull up the records that might be useful to you.

              And then you have to use your own common sense and understanding to decide whether it fits with the puzzle that you're putting together in terms of putting your family together.

              When you say some of the stuff that's a real headache is when other people have put things together in a sort of half arsed manner and you're like, a lot of this is so wrong.

              Don't even get me started. There are some really sloppy researchers out there, let me tell you. But yes. And honestly, I've made some good connections, I wouldn't say- They're not people I keep up with all the time.

              Yeah.

              But there were a couple of people who I met through corresponding in ancestry. And because I had my DNA tested and a few people got thrown up. Well, lots of people. But...

              That you linked with, as in, family members.

              Yeah, they were family members and it looked like they could tell me about places where I had gaps. And in fact, I met a couple of them when I went to the UK. And that was a really great experience. And we explored some towns where, you know, where certain branches of my family came from. Went around churchyards, had a look at lots of headstones. Nah, it was fun.

              Let's get to the interesting part then. You ended up finding out that we were related to royalty and a lot of famous names in great British history, and I guess Western Europe, European history. How did that- How did you make that connection? And then who did you find out that we were related to?

              Okay. So, I followed the family back in Lancashire...

              Yeah.

              ...Through births, deaths, marriage records. There's actually some really good indexes outside of ancestry in Lancashire, and you just follow the family back. And I think I took it back to about 1700. And this isn't going to make sense to a lot of people, but it threw up a name that was unusual. So, the name Cordelia came up in my family...

              As a surname?

              No, as a first name.

              Okay.

              Girl's name.

              Yeah.

              And when unusual names come up, it actually helps you research because they're not common. And when you find matches in other lines and you investigate whether it's your line or not- I mean, it gives you leads to follow, essentially. Whereas if it had been a common name...

              John Smith.

              ...It wouldn't necessarily have had a lot of leads to follow. So, I guess I'd go through the normal channels of births, deaths, marriages, I got back to about 1700. And then because it was unusual, I kind of made a bit of a leap to a family of a baronet in the area which had similar names. And then I found some other references that actually had pedigrees in them that were, I guess, supplied by families to readers at particular times.

              So, for historians out there, they're not primary sources, they're secondary or tertiary sources, but they're based on records from the town. And that took me back another few generations. And I tapped into the family of this baronet, so not descended from a baronet, but hooked back into the family a generation or two before that. And once you hook into somebody who has their family documented...

              Yeah. The aristocracy.

              ...The aristocracy, then you can go back a lot of generations. And so, as part of that, I investigated some of the women who married into the family. And one of them, there's quite a bit of data out of it or quite- Or some trees that have been done for her, which show her descent from medieval royalty.

              And then if you trace that back in detail, I pretty much discovered that the medieval royalty or medieval knights, they intermarried so much that you pretty much become related to every major family in the medieval period.

              So, who was some of the big names that you were kind of like blown away to find out you were related to or descended from?

              Of course, William the Conqueror is the big...

              Yeah.

              ...It's the big name and it appears- So, I have to say, you know, I'm 99% sure that I'm on the right track here.

              Yeah.

              But I'm only basing my research on...

              God damn it, Joanna. My daughter in the background. Jesus.

              ...Secondary resources, so I'm pretty certain I'm on the right track, but I'm open if somebody said, no, no, you got it wrong for this reason.

              Yeah.

              But I'm pretty certain I'm on the right track here.

              ...To be debunked.

              I'm quite open to being debunked. If somebody wants to challenge me, go right ahead. But no William the Conqueror. But even more interesting is the fact that I can trace my- Or can trace us back to 12 of the 15 known companions of William the Conqueror who were there at the Battle of Hastings.

              Really?

              So, you know, William the Conqueror is kind of fun, but it's the other people who he brought or who were his mates, and most of them were related to him in some form, the major names that I remembered anyway. And so, they- And they all intermarried and, whatever, through time.

              This is a big thing, right? You end up being related to all the other royal families because they all intermarried in order to keep the wealth in the family, so.

              And forge alliances. It was all about forging alliances and keeping control of assets. And so, from William the Conqueror, we follow down through to Edward the first, and then after that we drop off into lesser lineages.

              Yeah. Yeah.

              But, no...

              Wasn't the first sort of king of England in there, too, was it Alfred the Great or...

              Oh, yes. And again, see William the Conqueror...

              He's the one that did it, huh?

              He married a descendant of Alfred the Great and Charlemagne, the big French- The French king who's well known for leaving lots of descendants. And so, through that marriage, that kind of ties us into Saxon's, ties us into French royalty and then, of course, they intermarried across Europe. So, lots of different lineages.

              Well, you got to Rollo, right? The Viking king.

              That time, because he's the ancestor of William the Conqueror...

              Yeah.

              ...Who came into Normandy and was allowed to establish in Normandy.

              It was so funny when you were telling me this, because when I started learning about this, I was watching the TV shows, The Last Kingdom, which is about Alfred the Great and his interaction with the Danes and Wessex and fighting amongst themselves and everything like that.

              As well as Vikings, the TV show, which is sort of a weird mishmash of historical fact and fiction, because you've got like Ragnar Lothbrok, who's this- I don't know if he's- I think he was an actual person, but I think a lot of everything that he did is a bit mythical now. But his brother in the TV show is Rollo and in real life, I don't think they were anywhere near connected.

              I don't think so either.

              But Rollo does go to France, and I think Charlemagne- Is it Charlemagne who's there, and he marries into- In the TV show he marries his daughter and ends up becoming a Frank.

              I don't think it's that simple.

              Yeah.

              Think, Charlemagne was a few generations before that...

              That was how the TV show was all done. So, it was like these big names are all coming up and I was like, okay, so these- I'm like, holy crap. I'm actually theoretically potentially related to some of these huge names that did these things.

              Yeah. And you go back, but you get to a point and realise the furthest you can go back in that line and other lines track about that far back. So, that's, what, about the eight hundreds or something.

              Yeah.

              Well, period of the Vikings. Right.

              Yeah. And then then before that it becomes more the stuff of legends, you know, people have recorded history. They don't tend to be contemporary sources and they're romanticising and mixing up a whole lot of stuff that happened and perhaps gelling it around certain names that have become legendary. So, I'm no- I have to say, I'm no historical expert, I'm no historian.

              But my feeling is that many of the lines you can pretty reliably trace back- Many of the major lines, to about the eight hundreds. And then before that, it becomes more the matter of legend.

              Cloudy and foggy.

              Yeah.

              What happens with, say, Rome? I mean, this might be out of your wheelhouse in terms of what you dabble with. But are there people today who can claim direct lineage from, say, you know, Augustus Caesar and a bunch of these other famous Romans?

              Or did we lose a lot in between that period of Rome ending, you know, in the first few hundred years AD and then the sort of dark ages and then only later the kind of royal families end up recording things properly again?

              I don't know, because I've really only been following British history.

              Yeah.

              The closest I've come to a Roman ancestor, I suppose, is following through the line of our history. And I'm pretty sure it's the one that goes back through the Welsh princes. And the Welsh princes at some point claimed descent from a Roman centurion.

              Whether or not that's true, though.

              That's right.

              Yeah.

              But that, I think is the closest I've come to a line that might claim descendant- To be descended from Romans. But again, if you're doing your history closer to Rome and those, you know, maybe there's more information and not the big gap. I don't know enough. Yeah.

              I can't imagine what it's like living there.

              There's a lot of years in between the Romans and when history started to be more reliably recorded and records taken, and people named in a way that can actually trace.

              So, out of these historians- I don't mean historians. Figures in history to sort of finish up with, which one would you like to have met?

              That is a very good question.

              And why?

              Yes. I think that some of the women I would like to have met because they're more shadowy figures and yet their histories are still there, and I'm sorry, I can't remember the names off the top of my head. But there's women who were- There's one particular woman who was abducted from an abb- Basically she became a nun at a very young age and lived her life in an abbey became the abyss.

              But her family all died around her and she suddenly found herself the heiress to a huge fortune and lots of land. And this guy came and abducted her from the abbey...

              ...Marry me. Give me your stuff.

              Who knows? But they had kids, so.

              Oh, yeah. Okay. Thanks.

              So, he wanted her land and her resources, and she was abducted or escaped from the abbey. Who knows what actually happened and had a family life.

              That'll be an interesting story.

              And there's a few stories like that where women were either forcibly or with their consent abducted. Because one of the interesting things, I guess, I found in looking at medieval families is that particularly with the barons, it was the king or the pope who- But mostly the king who controlled marriage rights. And they could be sold to families.

              So, some other family could have control of the marriage of your children, or the travels of your children. So, it was all a complex web of alliances and making sure nobody had too much. And- So- what did I start this with?

              Well, that's who you'd want to know about. Yeah, who you'd like to talk to about.

              That's right. So, often, you know, often marriages were set up without the consent of the two people involved. Yes, so there were situations where people took their lives into their own hands. The other person I would really like to meet is a woman called Lucy of Bolingbroke. Lucy of Bolingbroke, and you can Google her. She's a fantastic woman. She had three husbands and probably children by them all, certainly by the second and third...

              I'm assuming all these husbands died before- Well, at least the first two.

              Yes. All three of her husbands, she outlived... ...All three of her husbands. And there is a record of a letter that was written to the king asking not to be remarried...

              Please, for the love of God.

              So, I think she had to pay a fine. So, women were married multiple times, but they could, in fact, pay their way out of being married.

              What was the benefit to the king of making sure that someone like this woman kept having husbands? Was it because he didn't want a woman to have the ultimate control of the estate or the money or...?

              This particular woman was descended from a Saxon family, so she was a Saxon heiress, and the three husbands were Normans in succession...

              So, it was all political.

              So, it was all about managing control of her assets.

              And, what, I would imagine he would be like, well, we've got this, you know, bachelorette widow, again, we might as well marry her off to some other guy who...

              She can't look after her own estates. Heaven forbid. We need one of our allies in charge of that particular part of the country, so...

              Yeah, yeah. So, it's in my interest to make sure these two get married.

              That's right. And they will have children, sons, presumably, who will then take over running of the property and be allies to the king, as well.

              So, through your sort of family research, what have you kind of learnt about the lives of these people in terms of their daily life? Was it a life that you would be like, you know what, I would love to have lived this person's life? Or is it the kind of thing where you're like, I am so fucking happy that I am born today because this sounds like a shit way to go? Like...

              Yeah, I'd like to do more reading because, you know, obviously dates and family groupings or whatever tell you one part of the story, but they don't tell you a lot about people's lives. So, I'd like to do more reading. And there is more written now about medieval lives. I'd like to do more reading about what their lives were actually like, but that seems like, you know, they were at the whim of their superiors. Pretty much.

              And it was a harsh life and a brutal life in many ways, for both men and women. I think women had more power than you think. I see stories...

              I've always thought that.

              I've seen stories over and over again of men who died quite young, leaving their sons too young to be able to manage their property...

              And the evil overlooking woman comes in...

              ...Their mother- Their mother would be- Would look after their interests until they came of age...

              And never wants to give it up.

              And then often the woman would then go and spend the rest of her life quietly in an abbey. So, I feel like they had their... ...They had their marriage organised for them...

              Yeah.

              ...They did their duty by having lots of children...

              Oh, okay.

              ...They may have done their duty by looking after their son's assets until they became of age. But once the sons took over, what job was there for the woman?

              I was wondering if the sons were just like, there's not enough room for the two of us.

              Quite possibly so.

              You're going to have to go to the abbey and become a nun.

              And so, they just kind of tapped out and had a quiet life after that.

              Yeah...

              Paid another fine so they didn't have to get married again and headed off.

              But did you- You saw quite a bit in this sort of research of the same generation doing the same job, too, right. It was not like you had a lot of opportunities. It was your dad did this, your grandfather did this, so you're going to do this...

              Oh, alright. So, we're talking about- We're talking more about in the seventeen and eighteen hundreds now.

              Well, recently, yeah, we can talk about that. Obviously, it's a little harder the further back you go. But I would imagine you know a little bit more about that because there's more people, too.

              Yeah, and it seemed like particularly before the...

              Industrial revolution.

              Industrial revolution. Thank you, Peter.

              See it in your eyes. I can see it in your eyes. And I know where the story's going. Yeah.

              Yeah. So, before the Industrial Revolution, you know, our ancestors were weavers and their father before them was a weaver. And as far back as you can trace...

              What do they do?

              I think they wove. Pretty much they sat in their little room at the top of their house, with their loom. And...

              Made...

              ...Wove fabric, that they then sold on. And that was their job. Or we have one branch of the family who were Cutlers and they made... ...They made... No.

              Probably similar to the word Cutlass.

              They made pen blades for penknives. Pen blades.

              Yeah.

              And in fact, one of the family was a scissor-putter-together, that was his job.

              Togetherer.

              The scissor-putter-together. And he must have put the pairs that make up scissors together for the entire- His entire working life, census after census after census he has the same job.

              Well, I guess once you're good at something your like, I'm not re-educating myself or upskilling, you know. The towns already got a blacksmith.

              Yeah. But then in the Industrial Revolution, there was a lot of movement of people, particularly from towns into cities and other jobs. While the mills in the area where our family came from, which was a textile area. Instead of having people who just were in their houses with their loom making fabric, things were made in mills and people started to work in mills and factories and all of those sorts of things.

              I always find it so interesting how the more modern we got throughout history, the less quality we had in our lives, at least up until probably the, I don't know, maybe the eighteen hundreds, nineteen hundreds. It seems like when you had hunter gatherers, they had a healthier diet than when agriculture was formed and people started living in groups that were, you know, farming things because all of a sudden, they had a great deal less food.

              And so, I think from some of the things I've been watching and reading recently, I was learning that the diets actually became much worse when they suddenly were living together and developing agriculture. But it was obviously a trade-off where they were like, well, now we have surplus food, it's just not much of a variety. And we've got safety in numbers, and we can...

              And the security of living in one place and fencing it off, so that you can fight off your neighbours more easily.

              Well, you don't have to move from place to place to place, you know, but it's interesting health wise, you know, you then have all of these diseases that come with living together and these other issues like, you probably coming into conflict more often with other groups.

              And then when we get up to the industrial revolution and people moving out of the country into cities, we're obviously dealing with much worse conditions in terms of health. Right. With pollution...

              Well, the squalor.

              ...The disease, the squalor, yeah, of living in just horrible conditions.

              ...Horrible conditions. But the other thing that really got me in learning about these kind of professions is that there must have been so much injury to do with RSI. Imagine you're a weaver and the loom is propelled by your foot. So, you spent a lot of time standing on one leg, just pressing the loom with the- Or the loom lever with the other leg.

              And that's what you have to do. And you have to do it fast because you actually want to...

              Move the wheel.

              ...Move the way and make a lot of money. A lot of these in the cutlery industry, there was a lot of, you know, there were Filers who spent a lot of time filing and they would have got metal file things in their lungs and all sorts of horrible disea- And miners.

              Yeah, well, black lung, right, in the mines. Did you hear about monkey shoulder?

              No.

              Heard of that? That's a type of whisky, but it's named after the guys who used to do the physical shovelling of the barley as it was being moulted. So, it's effectively- The barley's been wet, you know, so that it would germinate, create all these different proteins and everything inside of each, you know, little husk.

              And then they need to stop that with either heat or smoke or both in order to prevent the thing completely turning into a plant, right, a little seedling. And so, whilst they're moulting it, the guys have to get up, the smoke or the heat would come through the ground in, well, the roof and they would be on top of it shovelling this stuff.

              But because they were shovelling it, obviously the same way constantly, day in, day out, they end up with this shoulder that's lower than the other. That's kind of like deformed because they're having to do this repeated...

              Yeah.

              ...Movement. And it was the same with archers, right. I think archery, they end up with a deformed back where one side is much more muscular than the other because they're not switching from side to side. They pick one side where they're holding it out straight and the other one's pulling. So, you have this Push-Pull tension that's not symmetrical. So...

              There must have been so many of those kinds of injuries.

              The just deformed bodies and...

              That's right. And, you know, people died a lot younger, so...

              Often in horrific ways.

              Yeah, we won't even go there.

              Yeah, well, and they had children in working in these factories. Right. You know, that may be something worth talking about. What would life have been like as a child in the eighteen hundreds?

              Well, I think it depends very much on where you were, but certainly in the...

              Well, you wouldn't have been playing in the streets though, right. You didn't have a teenage year or period...

              ...Probably were playing in the streets, kids were out in the streets the whole time. But certainly, in the mills, the cotton mills and the silk mills, which is where a lot of our family came from, the children were used to collect all of the bits that fell off underneath the looms. And so, they could do that while they were very little.

              So, from a very young age, they became workers in the cotton factory to bring home a bit of extra for their family. And in fact, it was the mills who ran the schools, so the kids would work in the morning or the afternoon and do schooling in the alternate time when they finally brought in schools for these kids.

              But that they were doing a job that was potentially lethal, too. Right. It wasn't uncommon for them to have limbs ripped off or die because of these machinery in these factories where there was no health or safety regulations, it was just, get underneath the huge moving parts...

              I imagine it was a very dangerous thing to do. And if you are not careful, you could easily get injured. Although I haven't seen many records in our family or in the research that I've done where people have...

              Children have died at work.

              Well, or it's not recorded. Yeah. It's even- When infants die, generally, it's not recorded as... Well, you'd have to after about the 1840s, you can get the individual records, but you've got to pay for it, so.

              Would you have had a teenage period of life? Like, that seems to be a sort of luxury that we have today, right. Back in those sort of industrial revolutionary times, you would imagine, and well, and beforehand, as soon as you're able to move around and carry things, you're pretty much set to work on the farm or in the factory or something.

              Because a lot of the time the families require- They can't sustain the family of a single person's income. They need any children that they have to be bringing in income as well to pay for rent and food and whatever else, right.

              For sure. And in other places, like in the towns, particularly, a lot of the kids, if they weren't working in a mill, if it wasn't a mill town or anything like that, they'd be servants. A lot of the young people in the families that I've looked at are servants from a very- From quite an early- Well, as teenagers they become servants.

              Bring this closer. You wonder how much abuse they'd cop then, too, because not only would they have been in a position of, you know, not a position of power, in a position of vulnerability, but also probably a lower class, right, to people that they're serving.

              So, we see all these TV shows coming out about what it's like to be a young woman or a young man in these, you know, the sixteen hundreds, seventeen hundreds, eighteen hundreds. It must have been, yeah, you know, pretty difficult.

              Who knows. But maybe it was also a mark of- A pride to actually be a servant in a well-to-do house. I don't know enough about it to actually be able to say, but I'm sure the servants had their hierarchy and there were, you know, you started at the bottom as a scullery maid or something and worked your way up.

              What's a scullery maid?

              I think scullery is more like kind of cleaning the floors or...

              Yeah, okay.

              ...To do with laundries.

              Yeah. All the really hard labour stuff.

              Google scullery everybody...

              Yeah.

              ...Because I'm not sure.

              ...Spell that. Is it scullery maid?

              With a "C". "S-C".

              Oh, there we go. Okay, duties of the scullery maid included the most physical and demanding tasks in the kitchen, such as cleaning and scouring the floor, stoves, sinks, pots and dishes.

              Yep, there you go.

              Damn. Yeah, that would have been brutal.

              And then you work your way up to a lady's maid and all you have to do is help someone get dressed, do their hair. Nice.

              Those would have been the times. Well, we can probably finish up there, Mum. I think, I probably kept you enough, but yeah. So, you recommend other people listening to this if they are interested in family history, that it's a pursuit worth following?

              Look I- Yes. Yes...

              Hesitation.

              Well, I think you have to be interested. And for me, like I said, it's a big puzzle. And I like- I'm a researcher, that's my training. And so, I get a kick out of solving problems and finding tricky situations. And even if it's not my direct family and actually putting together trees that might help...

              I'll have to do Kel's family in Brazil, that'll be a different level of difficulty.

              Yes. I don't know what Brazilian records are like. German records I've got into and they're, of course, all in German, old German.

              Bet you can start recognising different words and titles...

              And you can find resources that help you translate certain words. So, you start to know what you're looking for.

              But do you think everyone's pretty much got an interesting story at some point in, you know, if you dive into your ancestry and you can get 2 records, there's going to be something in there you're going to find that's going to be like, wow, I had no idea that was lying there.

              I think so. Yeah. There are lots of surprises.

              Yeah.

              And it is- It's fascinating to find out the kinds of occupations your ancestors had and to start to think about what their lives might have been like.

              When to put today into perspective. Right. To sort of have a better understanding...

              It does, and it makes you realise how lucky you are, how lucky we are.

              All good. Mums recovering from a lot of different diseases and the...

              Not COVID. Not COVID.

              ...Just diseases from Noah's day-care.

              Three negative COVID tests later. I'm fine.

              I had one last question. What were we talking about?

              We were talking about researching family history.

              I know, but more specifically, just then. I had a good question. There was something there, it was- We can't leave the episode on me just saying, I had an awesome question.

              We talked about finding out the kinds of jobs that your ancestors did. We talked about researching Brazilian family history and how difficult that would be.

              That would be hard. I've- It's totally lost me, unfortunately. Yeah, totally forgotten. Totally forgotten. But it would be interesting to do Kel's because she's got a mix of indigenous, South American, five different African countries...

              Probably you would have to go back. Yeah, but you'd probably have to go back quite a few generations to actually find all those separate lines, because I suspect that the- It's been a mishmash for a long time.

              That it's been a pot full of things mixing together. I remember what the question is. What do you think of the TV show, who do you think you are? Would you recommend people check that out? That's a really good question, my son.

              Mum's loving being on the podcast.

              That's because I'm pretending that nobody's even watching.

              Wait, wait, wait. People are watching?!

              Oh no. I love the British version, which was the first version.

              Yeah.

              And the thing I love about it is that they tend to talk a lot about social history and not just about the trees and the people that are in the celebrities' backgrounds, but they talk a lot about the social history and what was going on at the time. I find that the American and the Australian versions focus much more on the person and their wow factor and how excited they get about finding out what they find out.

              Yeah.

              And to me, they're less interesting. And they've also taken what I find infuriating in TV shows. They've taken this approach of telling you what's going to happen...

              Before it happens.

              ...Before it happens. And your like, the whole point that I watched this is for the suspense.

              And then you go on a break, and you come back from the break, and they tell you again everything that they've found to that point. I hate being treated like a two-year-old when I'm watching TV.

              Yeah, that was a good show. I guess that effectively the premise is that they get a person and they dive into their history. It's usually a famous person that you'll know from TV.

              Well, it's always a celebrity of some sort and some you know, and some you don't.

              Yeah.

              And they focus on a particular part of their history. And there've been some absolutely fascinating stories on the British show. I find the Australian ones tend to focus on convicts.

              Yeah.

              Everybody gets so excited about having convicts in their ancestry that that has been a lot of the shows that I've watched.

              Whereas back in the day, your grandpa- Or your parents probably never wanted to talk about that kind of...

              No convicts in our family.

              Jesus Christ. No one...

              Absolutely none.

              ...No one, no one.

              No.

              Yeah. The other show I was going to recommend is, what was the worst job in history? I'm trying to work it out. Wait a second. It is the worst jobs in history. So, this is by- What's his name? Baldrick? What's his name, again?

              Oh, yes, that's his name.

              I've gotta give you his actual name. I always forget, but Baldrick, is Tony Robinson. That his name?

              Could be.

              Yeah, it's- Yeah. It's Tony Robinson. He's the British actor who played Baldrick in whatever TV show it used to be, but that's what I always know him...

              Blackadder.

              Blackadder, there you go. Yeah, so he's really interesting. But yeah, he goes through all of these horrible, horrible jobs generally throughout...

              There's a woman who's done it recently, as well.

              Oh, okay. I've only seen the old one from like the early 2000s.

              There might be a guy and a woman more recently who have kind of done dirty jobs.

              Yeah.

              They're not quite the historians that he is.

              Yeah.

              But- No, they're fun.

              Sweet. Pizzas here, guys. We've got to bail. Sorry. Dads come in and just giving us the thumbs up, so. Thank you for joining us Mum. Thank you so much for being on the podcast.

              No worries.

              Thanks for sharing your knowledge, dropping these knowledge bombs and overcoming your fear and anxiety and sitting in the hot seat.

              The very little I know about history.

              The whole point is just get on here and talk and give people access to Australian English. So, thank you. Thank you very much.

              Yes, but you, my son, are a descendant of William the Conqueror. Do not forget that.

              99% chance, yeah. According to Mum. Thanks, guys.

              And Charlemagne, and Alfred the Great.

              See ya.

              Among others.

              Bye. Bye.

              Bye everyone.

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                    The post AE 982 – Discovering Our Family Descends From European Royalty with Jo Smissen appeared first on Aussie English.

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                    AE 962 – The Goss: 2 Naked Men Scared By Deer Get Lost In Bush and Fined $1000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-962-the-goss-2-naked-men-scared-by-deer-get-lost-in-bush-and-fined-1000/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-962-the-goss-2-naked-men-scared-by-deer-get-lost-in-bush-and-fined-1000/#respond Wed, 14 Jul 2021 09:00:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=162808 AE 962 – THE GOSS: 2 Naked Men Scared By Deer Get Lost In Bush and Fined $1000 Learn Australian…

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                    AE 962 - THE GOSS:

                    2 Naked Men Scared By Deer Get Lost In Bush and Fined $1000

                    Learn Australian English by listening to this episode of The Goss!

                    These are conversations with my old man Ian Smissen for you to learn more about Australian culture, news, and current affairs. 

                    pete smissen, host of aussie english podcast, naked men lost in the bush in nsw, the goss, ian smissen, australia news opinion

                    In today's episode...

                    We are going to talk about two Aussies who got caught naked in the bushes!

                    Yes, two buck-naked men recently got lost in the Royal National Park. SES (State Emergency Services) had to called in and search for them. And so they got fined $1000 each for breaching travel restrictions.

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                    Transcript of AE 936 - The Goss: The World's Most 'Instragrammable Bird' & Australia's Oldest-Ever Person

                    G'day, you mob. Pete here, and this is another episode of Aussie English, the number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. So, today I have a Goss' episode for you where I sit down with my old man, my father, Ian Smissen, and we talk about the week's news, whether locally down under here in Australia or non-locally overseas in other parts of the world.

                    Okay, and we sometimes also talk about whatever comes to mind. Right. If we can think of something interesting to share with you guys related to us or Australia, we also talk about that in The Goss'. So, these episodes are specifically designed to try and give you content about many different topics where we're obviously speaking in English and there are multiple people having a natural and spontaneous conversation in English.

                    So, it is particularly good to improve your listening skills. In order to complement that, though, I really recommend that you join the podcast membership or the Academy membership at AussieEnglish.com.au, where you will get access to the full transcripts of these episodes, the PDFs, the downloads, and you can also use the online PDF reader to read and listen at the same time.

                    Okay, so if you really, really want to improve your listening skills fast, get the transcript, listen and read at the same time, keep practising and that is the quickest way to level up your English. Anyway, I've been rabbiting on a bit. I've been talking a bit. Let's just get into this episode, guys. Smack the bird and let's get into it.

                    So, the other day I was walking around, I'm trying to smash out 10,000 steps a day, you know, about 8 kilometres. And the good thing about new development zones like this one in Curlewis is that they put parks everywhere.

                    Yeah, there's green corridors everywhere.

                    Yeah, things for nature. I mean, and the other thing that I've noticed about Curlewis is because they put banksia plants throughout all these streets, we get heaps of these black cockatoos, yellowtail black cockatoos. You can just hear them constantly and they're just eating the banksia things. I don't know if it's seasonal, but at the moment they're all over the place. It's probably the same group that I see every day.

                    ...Also eat the cypress pinecones, which are not native. And so, there's a lot of the old farming land that used cypress because it grew quickly, and it was dense. And you make this effectively tree height hedges.

                    Wind wall, right?

                    Yeah. And for wind protection, so there's a lot of those around as well. And that is seasonal whenever they've got the new cones coming up.

                    Yeah. So anyway, I was going for my walk, and I noticed this huge shadow sitting on the top of a sign when I was wal- It was at night that I was walking through one of these little areas and was like, Jesus Christ, what the hells that? And, you know, sort of move myself around so that I could see what it was in the moonlight, and it was a huge tawny frogmouth, you know. So, yeah.

                    Anyway, so I found this article and these guys are just really cool animals. I think they're just the weirdest looking, shocking...

                    They are.

                    ...Face birds, like just...

                    Yeah. They're basically a mouth and eyes with legs.

                    That's it. That's it. So, yeah. Pretty much like a snake, right. Except with a mouth and eyes and a bum.

                    Yes.

                    So, researchers find that the frog mouth is the world's most Instagrammable bird.

                    Instagrammable.

                    That's a nice word there.

                    That's bizarre...

                    Able to be Instagrammed.

                    Yeah. This is one of these ones where a brand name becomes a noun. It's a proper noun. Then it becomes a noun...

                    ...This would be an adjective. Right.

                    And then it becomes a verb, the verb to Instagram. And then we turn the verb into an adjective by making it the ability to do something that- So, yeah. It's sort of this Instagram evolution of language where you go from a proper noun to an adjective.

                    YouTubable.

                    Yeah. YouTubable.

                    Googable.

                    Well the verb to Google. Let's Google that.

                    Yeah, well YouTube it.

                    Yeah.

                    Facebook it.

                    Facebook it.

                    So, to read out a little bit here, study of likes on the photo sharing app has perhaps surprisingly deemed the Australian and Southeast Asian native most aesthetically appealing. That's surprising in and of itself, more so than it's this bird.

                    Looks like a baby.

                    You reckon?

                    Yeah. Well...

                    It looks like a baby?

                    But it's got baby features.

                    Yeah. As in huge eyes.

                    ...The big, huge eyes and that's, you know, you look at dolls, teddy bears, you know, baby animals. Even the adults just look like the most ridiculous things. But they're- They got the big eyes and the big smile.

                    So, if someone were to ask what the most instagrammable bird in the world would be, it's unlikely that the frog mouth, whose main aesthetic goal is to look like a jagged tree branch, would be front of mind. But it seems science says otherwise. The dishevelled looking Australian and...

                    Dishevelled.

                    Brutal.

                    That is brutal. They're not dishevelled.

                    ...It's like homeless.

                    Look up the meaning of dishevelled. Dishevelled means- Hang on.

                    Yeah, like hair everywhere, scruffy.

                    I can't do dishevelled now because I don't have long hair anymore.

                    Unkempt, right. Messy.

                    Yes, messy. But they're not.

                    So, the dishevelled looking Australian and Southeast Asian native taking out the top spot in a study from Germany's university hospital Jena. Why on Earth was University Hospital Jena studying this? Which aimed to see which bird species reigned supreme on the photo sharing app. The study, published last week by German researchers, sorry guys, Dr Katja Thömmes and Dr Gregor Hayn-Leichsenring...

                    Leichsenring.

                    ...Leichsenring set out to analyse nearly 30,000 bird photos from nine popular avian photography Instagram accounts, using an algorithm to record which photos comparatively attracted the most likes on the photo sharing platform. And there you go, the tawny frogmouth won.

                    Yeah, they don't- What they don't say is how they did the numbers.

                    I guess they would have just worked out...

                    Yeah. Is it proportional?

                    Yeah.

                    But if there was one...

                    How many likes? Which got the most likes? Total likes or was it one photo that just got all those likes?

                    ...One photo gets a million likes or there were 10,000 photos of tawny frogmouths and they all got one like each, but there were no other photographs.

                    So, are tawny frogmouths owls, Dad?

                    No, they are not.

                    But they look like owls, and they hunt at night.

                    Well, in fact their scientific name...

                    This was pretty cool.

                    ...It comes from- Yeah. I...

                    You got it in front of you?

                    I do. Podargus strigoides. Strigoides actually means, looks like an owl and podargus comes from a Greek word meaning Gout and...

                    Brutal.

                    Gout, for those of you who don't know the word in English, it's a disease typically used to be thought of as a fat old rich man's disease because it's basically where uric acid crystals form in the joints of particularly the feet, you know, big toes and so on. So, it's very difficult to walk if you've got really painful feet. And so, their called that because they actually don't walk very well.

                    They very rarely walk; they fly and then land on a branch and hold on.

                    Because people with gout.

                    People with gout, yeah. People with gout with wings, no.

                    That's it. People with gout, they just- They can't walk so they fly.

                    ...End up looking like tawny frogmouths. No, so tawny frogmouths don't walk very well. So, I think the original person who obviously looked at it walking went, oh, its, you know, its bumbling along...

                    Dudes got gout.

                    ...gout. Yeah.

                    Oh, man. Yeah. They're awesome birds, though. They are really cute. Look these guys up if you haven't already guys.

                    They are really good. So, yeah, they look like owls but they're not.

                    So, what does it say here? They got an IAA score, works by taking the absolute number of likes from a post and then factoring in the size of the account and the time the post has been public. It then produces an expected number of likes the post should receive and scores it based on the percentage of likes it received over or under this. And the tawny frogmouth averaged nineteen leaving with a respectable margin.

                    The IAA score.

                    What is it? While on the other hand, the Sandpiper was given a negative twenty-three. Brutal.

                    Sandpipers, are cute.

                    This is almost like, you know, face dating apps where you judge people based on their appearance, but for birds.

                    I'm surprised like, yeah, I think twenty frogmouths are great, but I'm surprised it's not a parrot.

                    You don't reckon?

                    Yeah.

                    Just too many parrots, Dad. I think the tawny frogmouth, though, probably also is just a weird looking bird. So, people see that and their like, well, Jesus. Give that a like.

                    Yeah.

                    Whereas they see a parrot and they're like, oh, yeah. It's a parrot.

                    Exactly.

                    So, what would you do then if you got to vote on Australia's most, you know, cute or attractive or Instagrammable birds, what bird would you be most likely to share a photo of on Instagram?

                    If I wanted the most likes?

                    Meh, what about pelicans?

                    Pelican I...

                    They are fricking weird looking birds.

                    ...Not that I'm trying to get people to look at my Instagram account. Look at my Instagram account, and I probably got more photographs of pelicans than any other bird on there.

                    Well, they're big and they're freaky looking and they've got these big eyes that are just, you know, don't...

                    But that big bill, well, it's just a basically a, you know...

                    Paddle.

                    ...Pouch of skin.

                    Especially when they catch something, and they try and eat it and they just look so uncoordinated. I saw a bunch down at the Queenscliff boat ramp a while back and I think...

                    ...Hang around there for the fishermen.

                    Yeah, some- A fishermen came in with his boat and tossed over a fish that obviously, for whatever reason, he didn't want and it was too big for any of the pelicans, so they just kept fighting over it and trying to swallow it and then having to, you know, just puke it up or whatever, because it was like one of these ones that was like flat, but really sort of tall, the fish.

                    So, it was like just it couldn't obviously fit in its throat. Yeah, but- Yeah, they're weird looking birds. So, what would you pick?

                    A pelican.

                    Yeah. You reckon.

                    Yeah. I reckon their pretty good. Well, that and a parrot. I, you know, they're a- but, yeah, you know, you're right, there are so many Australian parrots, but I think sulphur-crested cockatoos, they're the funniest birds.

                    Why is that?

                    Because they're idiots, but they're intelligent idiots. Because they're just smart arses.

                    What do you reckon makes parrots so clever, especially cockatoos? What is it that underlies that?

                    ...Evolutionary trigger...

                    Yeah.

                    ...Decided that an entire order of birds was going to be smart. Now, you could argue that corvids as a family, totally unrelated family, are smart as well.

                    But it's almost like corvids don't have a sense of humour.

                    No.

                    It seems like parrots have a sense of humour...

                    Corvids are clever like a fox.

                    Yeah.

                    Parrots are clever like a stand-up comedian.

                    Yeah. And they know it.

                    They know it, exactly.

                    Like, that's the thing that blows my mind, I think about a lot of these parrots.

                    ...Cockatoos and African parrots, African greys and things like that.

                    Yeah. Just how it seems like they're really switched on.

                    ...Sense of humour.

                    Yeah. And you wonder what selected for- I guess, sociality in these animals...

                    Well, they're social, yeah. Cockatoos are very social. You get very large groups of...

                    Yeah.

                    ...Of them and who knows. But you get very large groups of starlings, but starlings aren't particularly smart. I had no idea, that's one of those mysteries of sort of avian evolution as to what was that little trigger that somewhere in, you know- Particularly the Cockatoo family, but the, you know, the just the whole order of birds...

                    See what we find here on Google.

                    What was the trigger to make them so smart.

                    I love this. When you type this sort of stuff in. Why are cockatoos so, and then it says loud, crazy, expensive, funny, cuddly, needy, dirty, pink, loud?

                    But if you want to- Do yourself a favour, if you want to look up stupid parrots, there are several, in fact, there are a lots of YouTube videos of Australian cockatoos, sulphur-crested cockatoos dancing. Just Google or YouTube the verb, to YouTube, sulphur- Cockatoo dancing. They are ridiculous.

                    Yeah. I'd love to get one as a pet, but I know it would out live me.

                    A long way.

                    Yeah.

                    Yeah. Well, one of our local wildlife rescue places has cockatoos there that have, you know, just been donated to them by, you know, estates after people have died.

                    Yeah.

                    These people who've lived into their 80s and got a cockatoo as a pet when they were kids and the cockatoos still alive and they're not. Just- They can live for 100 years. It's just crazy. And again, what's the evolutionary thing to- You know, these are big birds. Your average little budgerigars, if you get 10 years out of a budgerigar, you've done very well.

                    What have we got here? We've got a whole bunch. Yeah, same with galahs. So, white cockatoos 40 to 60 years, galahs are 40 years, sulphur-crested cockatoos 20 to 40 years, Carnaby's black cockatoos 25 to 50 years ago...

                    This is just the average lifespan in the wild. Yeah.

                    Yeah, exactly. Yeah. That's crazy. Sydney's old croc of a cockie was a legend at 120.

                    Yeah.

                    A cockatoo lived to 120 years. Jesus. Well, I guess that leads us on to the last part of this story, we could talk about...

                    Yeah.

                    ...The oldest ever Australian.

                    The oldest ever Australian.

                    That's a good segway. Good job, Pete.

                    Good job. Well done.

                    Yeah. This is crazy...

                    Thanks to Kruger. Good on ya, Dexter. Happy Birthday a while ago. He's gone past his 111th birthday, three months into his 112 year.

                    Jesus. So, he was born in 1910. I think we've spoken about him on the podcast before, actually. Yeah, we have.

                    Yeah. I think maybe, yeah, when he turned 111. Yeah. In January. So...

                    Insane.

                    But yeah, he's still going on. And look, the one takeaway which wasn't in the thing...

                    ...Was doing yoga, I think.

                    There's two takeaways, he does his daily exercise, which is a bit of yoga, and he goes for a walk and the manager of the old people's home that lives in says he's a lot fitter and brighter than most of our 80- and 90-year old's...

                    Jesus. You wonder if they just look at him and they're just like, God damn.

                    Yeah. And look, there's a couple of ones that I think his son, his 74-year-old son said his father's simple lifestyle and balanced diet, complete with plenty of salt, sugar and fat and a lot to do with his age.

                    Yeah.

                    But I also love the one line about his weekly delicacy he credits to his longevity, chicken brains.

                    Jesus.

                    So...

                    They always say that and then it turns out it's genetic and they have the genes that allow them.

                    You know, chickens have a head and that in...

                    Their brains.

                    ...Is some brains and they are delicious little things. There's only one bite. So, chicken brains is the secret to long life, if you believe Dexter. What do you think it would be like getting to 111 years? Do you reckon you'd be able to remember much of what actually happened when you were, say, a 10-year-old, a 20 year, 30-year-old?

                    ...Clearly, Dexter's still got his wits about him, he's not suffering from any forms of dementia or something.

                    He's 80 years older than me.

                    Yeah.

                    Like, that's- It's insane. I highly, highly doubt that I will be 111.

                    ...Become an old person at 80. Yeah, so. Well, that would be me at what? So, if that was 80 years from now, it would be 2101. Right. So, that's I've got to get to 111, or 110 to get into the next century. Now I've got to do it, all right. There's a target. There's a target. What do you think his-?

                    I always wondered, and I worry about sort of talking to my grandparents about this, although ironically, I think Nana and Grandpa, my mother's parents are a lot more open about death and age and being old than they were when I was younger.

                    Yeah. Well...

                    When they were younger.

                    ...Well, you know, every day anybody lives you're a day closer to dying. And I think when you live a long time- If you get into the 90s, you've got to realise that, you know, there's no long-term plans here. I'm not going to go out and get a 30-year loan to buy another house, you know, this is- So, I think people are much more open to that and accepting that, you know, the inevitable It's probably just a reality of things, but...

                    It just...

                    ...Doesn't mean you want to die, it's just that...

                    No, for sure.

                    ...You just accept that there's a fair chance that I'm going to die in the next few years.

                    Well...

                    Which is different until you get- I'm sure until you get into your 70s or 80s, you don't think like that. No. Well, how do you think about it?

                    I don't think like that.

                    But as in like, I'm going to die soon.

                    Well, you don't think you're going to die soon. I don't, you know, have a real- I don't want to die, but I don't have a fear of death.

                    Yeah.

                    I don't have a fear of being dead because I don't...

                    I don't think many people have a fear of being dead, unless they're worried about going to hell.

                    Yeah, well, I have no religious beliefs at all. So, in fact, my religious beliefs are anti-religious. But that's- It's...

                    The transition between living and death that I freak out about and I just hope it's quick and painless.

                    ...Dying process is the- And again, it's not a fear, it's just that, you know, you don't want to go through something that is going to be long and painful. Yeah, exactly. So, but yeah, somebody like Dexter- Yeah, imagine what he can remember, the things that he's seen, and they mention it here...

                    ...He's lived through the First World War...

                    ...Lived through the First World War, the Second World War, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Middle Eastern Wars...

                    The Cold War.

                    ...Involved in, the Cold War.

                    Well, he was alive before we had planes right or around the time the very, very first planes were, you know, just flying a few hundred metres? Yeah, he was around before cars or at least, you know, combustion engine cars right on the roads...

                    There were a few around.

                    But that wouldn't have been widespread. That would not have been...

                    Your average person didn't own them until the 1930s.

                    And he was a cattle grazier. Right. So, it's crazy to think...

                    ...Horse around and...

                    He was living a pretty rough life as well, you would imagine. It wouldn't have been a kettle of fish, just- I mean, kettle of fish. Something easy where it would have been a completely different kettle of fish to someone who, like myself, is just living by working in a studio, chilling out.

                    Well, his son, he says he lived through a period that it was a lot less stressful than what we as a society face today.

                    Yeah.

                    And so, you look at that and go, it's probably true. And even, you know, Dexter himself talks about, you know, computer age and, you know, technology and he says just makes life more stressful because it's just quicker and you don't get time to relax.

                    Yeah. Do you ever get nostalgic about the past in Australia and wish, you know, for instance, would it been really cool to have been a cattle grazier 100 years ago where you just get to hang out with your animals, with your horse, with your nearest family?

                    Bloody hard work, though.

                    Physically.

                    Physical Work.

                    Yeah, but it's simpler in terms of...

                    Yeah. Not a lot of stress other than drought and flood and fire, you know, natural disasters are about the only stress that you have.

                    Well, Indigenous people that you're potentially encroaching on the land of theirs...

                    Well, if you go back far enough, yeah.

                    Bush rangers.

                    Bushrangers.

                    Yeah. But yeah, congratulations, Dexter. That's absolutely insane. I can't imagine getting to 111...

                    And 124 days.

                    Yeah, and 124 days. I guess you count it at that point. Do you get another letter from the queen at 110?

                    I don't know. I don't know. Well, you had to, I wonder whether the queen will send herself a congratulatory letter on a 100th birthday.

                    If she makes it.

                    Well, I think she'll live till she's, you know, she'll outlive her children, I reckon.

                    Prince Charles is just like, God damn it.

                    Too bloody stubborn to die like her mother.

                    All right. Well, I guess we're finishing there, guys. But thanks for joining us. See you next time.

                    Bye.

                    Peace.

                    Alrighty, you mob. Thank you so much for listening to or watching this episode of The Goss'. If you would like to watch the video, if you're currently listening to it and not watching it, you can do so on the Aussie English Channel on YouTube. You'll be able to subscribe to that, just search "Aussie English" on YouTube.

                    And if you're watching this and not listening to it, you can check this episode out also on the Aussie English podcast, which you can find via my free Aussie English podcast application on both Android and iPhone. You can download that for free or you can find it via any other good podcast app that you've got on your phone. Spotify, podcast from iTunes, Stitcher, whatever it is.

                    I'm your host, Pete. Thank you so much for joining me. I hope you have a ripper of a day, and I will see you next time. Peace.

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                          AE 952 – Expression: Scaredy Cat https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-952-expression-scaredy-cat/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-952-expression-scaredy-cat/#respond Sun, 27 Jun 2021 03:30:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=161515 AE 952 – EXPRESSION: Scaredy Cat Learn Australian English in this expression episode of the Aussie English Podcast. These episodes aim to teach you…

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                          AE 952 - EXPRESSION:

                          Scaredy Cat

                          Learn Australian English in this expression episode of the Aussie English Podcast.

                          These episodes aim to teach you common English expressions as well as give you a fair dinkum true-blue dose of Aussie culture, history, and news and current affairs.

                          pete smissen, host of aussie english podcast, english expression, what is scaredy cat, scaredy cat meaning,

                          In today's episode...

                          I am going teach you all about the English expression “scaredy cat”.

                          Listen in and watch as I tell you the origin of the expression, give examples on how to use the expression, and run by a pronunciation exercise.

                          Also, learn the story of a lost Maremmano-Abruzzese Sheepdog or Maremma.

                          And lastly, I give you cat facts about Australia!

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                          Transcript of AE 952 - Expression: Scaredy Cat

                          G'day, you mob, and welcome to Aussie English. I am your host, Pete, and my objective here is to teach you guys the English spoken down under. So, whether you want to sound like a fair dinkum Aussie or you just want to understand what the flipping hell we're on about when we're having a yarn, you've come to the right place. So, sit back, grab a cuppa and enjoy Aussie English. Let's go.

                          G'day, you mob. Pete here, from Aussie English. How you going? Welcome to this episode, another expression episode of the Aussie English podcast, which is the number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. Man, I'm glad to be recording again because for the last few weeks my voice has been cactus, it has been kaput, it has been non-existent because Noah brought some ungodly disease back from day care yet again.

                          And it has been hanging around like a bad smell. Right. It has been in the house for weeks now and I've just had this cough. It's been horrible. I had to postpone interviews. I lost my voice. It was just- Yeah. It's been unpleasant, to say the least.

                          And as a result, I haven't really been able to record many episodes like the one that you're currently watching because, yeah, I imagine it would be distracting to try and learn English whilst listening to someone with a very croaky, croaky, croaky voice.

                          Anyway, before we get into today's news story, guys, don't forget, if you would like access to all of the transcripts, all the downloads, all of the lesson videos for these podcast episodes, you can get access to them at Aussie English when you become a premium podcast member. So, just head over to AussieEnglish.com.au/podcast, sign up and you will have instant access. Anyway, let's get into today's weekly story.

                          So, a family is celebrating with their three-year-old scaredy cat, Maremma, named Xena, after the dog got scared during a hailstorm and ran off into the Australian bush in the Lockyer Valley, west of Brisbane. For six long months, the dog disappeared and was on its own in the bush. Xena's owners didn't think that the dog would survive, let alone return home after such a long stint in the outback.

                          However, after six long months, the dog showed up on her owners' doorsteps. And despite her ordeal, Xena was in great condition, albeit a little dog tired. Although the normally white Maremma needed a bath or two to get the matted reddish grey fur back to its original colour. Though exhausted and a little on the thin side, her owners made sure that she had a full belly of food and a little TLC and hugs that she desired after her miraculous return.

                          This has been a lesson for poor Xena's owners, who said they never gave up hope after the dog was lost. Xena, on the other hand, probably never wants to talk about the ordeal again. She'd rather let sleeping dogs lie. All right, guys, so as usual, let's get into today's joke, okay. Smack that kookaburra and let's make you laugh. All right, so today's joke is, what does the cat say after making a joke? Right.

                          So, you've got a cat and the cat for some reason is able to speak English. It's telling someone a joke, after it's told the joke, what does the cat say? What does the cat say after it's told a joke? Just kitten. You get it? Just kitten. It's a play on the word kidding to be joking, to be mucking around. Right. So, if I tell you a joke, I might say afterwards I'm only joking, I'm only kidding, just kidding. Look, just kidding.

                          And the word kitten, right. A baby cat. A kitten. A kitten. Kidding and kitten. So, what did the cat say after making a joke? Just kitten. Gosh. All right, so today's expression is "scaredy cat". I wonder if you've heard this one before, "scaredy cat", to be a "scaredy cat". Before we get into the expression, what it means, where it came from and some examples, though, let's break down the words in the expression "scaredy cat".

                          There are only two words here. "Scaredy", and this is kind of like baby talk that we would use informally to talk about someone who's afraid of something, someone who's frightened, who's scared. Right. They are a little "scaredy". Right. They're a little "scaredy". But it's only really used in the collocation "scaredy cat".

                          We don't really use it outside of that and adults don't tend to use this unless they're kind of making fun of or belittling someone for being afraid. Right. We'll get into that shortly. A "cat". I'm sure you guys know what a "cat" is. Our feline friends, it is a small, domesticated carnivorous mammal with soft fur, a short snout and retractable claws. It is widely kept as a pet or for catching mice and many breeds have been developed.

                          And did you know, I think the only "cat" that can't retract its claws, that is to pull those sharp nails back into its paws, are cheetahs. Go figure, right? The reason is they have to be able to run really, really quickly and grip onto the ground. And so, I believe as a result, their claws are always poking out. What's the opposite of retracted? It's not contracted. Yeah, they're always bare. Right.

                          So, it's kind of like- It'd be like being Wolverine, except that your claws are always out. All right. So, a "scaredy cat" and you may hear this sometimes as a "fraidy cat". This is someone, especially a child, who is easily frightened, so they can be a "fraidy cat". They can be a "scaredy cat". And it has a bit of an interesting origin. Right. So, the phrase "scaredy cat" likely originates from the way that cats are so easily frightened at times.

                          And I'm sure that you guys, if you have access to YouTube, will have seen the numerous videos with cats shitting themselves. Right. Usually someone puts a cucumber behind the cat, the cat suddenly turns around and thinks that it's a snake, it might jump in the air. Or if someone comes in and, you know, drops something and scares the cat, it might jump up.

                          But the saying "fraidy cat" is the original one and it first appears in a newspaper called The Chronicle all the way back in May of 1897. In the following passage, I shan't tell you what's his name, when we want to play a game always thinks that he'll be hurt. Soil his jacket in the dirt, tear his trousers, spoil his hat. Fraidy cat. Fraidy cat.

                          "Scaredy cat" appeared some nine years later in a book called Billy Bounce in the following passage, that is a "scaredy cat" and she will never come back. All right, so as usual, let's go through three examples of how I would use the expression "scaredy cat" or "fraidy cat" in English, but before we do that. Did you know that reading whilst listening to English is the best way to learn new vocabulary?

                          Research shows that this is much more effective than just reading material or just listening to material in English. It's the best way to learn and remember vocab, read and listen at the same time. That's why every single episode of the Aussie English podcast comes with a full transcript, so you can do exactly that, read whilst you listen. In fact, there's over 900 episodes and transcripts to go with them.

                          You can download the PDF, you can print it, you can write notes on it, you can highlight new vocabulary and most importantly, you can read whilst you listen to each episode. Also, members get access to the premium podcast player that shows the text and moves it up the screen whilst you are reading and listening on your phone, your tablet or your computer.

                          So, if your goal is to learn and remember more vocabulary, to expand your vocab in English, make sure that you sign up to become a premium podcast member today at AussieEnglish.com.au/podcast. Let's get back to the episode. All right. So, example number one. So, my parents have a cat called Max. And the funny story is my mum found this cat at the university that she was working at, so there was a wildcat there that gave birth to a bunch of kittens.

                          The kittens were sort of roaming around walking around the gardens and, you know, it wasn't going to be much of a life for them, so mum and a bunch of other workers at the university decided to adopt them. So, mum adopted this little cat. We called it Max, and he turned into this really big cat. Yeah. He grew up, he was obviously from good stock. His parents were feral cats, and he grew up to be a really big cat.

                          Anyway, he was brought into the house, and I already had a cat called Merlin, which was a Burmese cat and Merlin was top dog or top cat. He was the boss in this example. Anyway, Merlin ends up dying, you know, ten or so years later and Max, the entire time that Merlin was alive was always a "scaredy cat". He was always a "fraidy cat". He would disappear under the bed if someone showed up.

                          You know, new people would come over and they would just never know we had a cat called Max. They would think we only had Merlin because Max was such a "fraidy cat". Anyway, after Merlin died, all of a sudden Max, you know, found his balls and although he had them removed, he was desexed. And became the top dog or the top cat and was no longer scared. So, it was a really interesting story.

                          Example number two. So, my son, Noah, is- He's now a fan of Slide's, but a few weeks ago he used to be terrified of slides. So, he would go out to child's playgrounds, you know, we were in a COVID lockdown, we would try and take him out, though, and play a little bit on these playgrounds to give him a bit of exercise. He'd always climb up, be climbing around and love it. But he was a bit of a "scaredy cat" when it came to the slides.

                          You know, I guess he felt a bit of, you know, lack of control, he couldn't control the speed with which he would go down these slides. He was afraid. He was a bit of a "fraidy cat". He was a bit of a "scaredy cat". But now all of a sudden, he actually really, really likes slides. So, yeah, good on ya, Noah, for not being a "fraidy cat" or a "scaredy cat" anymore.

                          Example number three. So, I remember being a bit of a "scaredy cat" or a "fraidy cat" when I was a young kid, probably a few years older than Noah, in fact, quite a few years older than Noah, because it was when we had moved down to Ocean Grove. So, I would have been about 9 or 10. We were living in Ocean Grove right near the ocean. Go figure. Ocean Grove, right. The name of the suburb kind of tells you that.

                          And my dad would take me to the beach, and he would want to go bodyboarding, so he would, you know, put his wetsuit on, his wetty and take his bodyboard out and he would encourage me to come out into the waves with him. But I used to sort of only like the depth of the water where I could still feel the ground. I was a bit of a "scaredy cat" when I couldn't touch the ground with my feet inside the- Or insi- In the surf, right, in the water.

                          I was a little afraid. I was a little bit of a "fraidy cat". I was a little bit of a "scaredy cat". So, I didn't like going out the back where my dad would go and catch the big waves. So, there you go, guys. Now I'm sure you understand how to use the expression "scaredy cat or fraidy cat". It is just used to refer to someone, usually a child who is easily frightened, who's a little bit afraid of things, who's scared of things.

                          So, as usual, let's go through a little pronunciation exercise where you guys can practise your pronunciation, listen and repeat after me. Okay, let's go. "To. To be. To be a. To be a scaredy. To be a scaredy cat. To be a scaredy cat. To be a scaredy cat. To be a scaredy cat. To be a scaredy cat. I'm a bit of a scaredy cat. You're a bit of a scaredy cat. He's a bit of a scaredy cat. She's a bit of a scaredy cat.

                          We're scaredy cats. They're scaredy cats. It's a bit of a scaredy cat." Good job, guys. Now, the reason I've had to use "we're scaredy cats, they're scared cats" is because it doesn't really make sense for those plural pronouns to be used with "a bit of a", right. If you said we're a bit of a scaredy cat, just sounds weird because you've got "we", which is plural and "scaredy cat", which is singular.

                          Same for they're a bit of a scaredy cat, you would just say "they're scaredy cats, we're scaredy cats." So, guys, finishing up, I thought I would go through some cat facts about Australia. So, in Australia, around 30% of households are home to a cat, there the second most common pet after dogs, despite only being found in around a third of houses, though, the average house has 1.4 Cats.

                          So, clearly, there are a lot of crazy old cat ladies out there doing their bit to own a bunch of cats and skew the statistics. Cats first arrived in Australia around the year 1804 and by the time of 1820 there were feral cats roaming the bushland around Sydney. Unfortunately, Australian wildlife was caught blindsided by the arrival of cats as they hadn't evolved in their presence and therefore became easy targets for hungry cats.

                          As a result, cats proved to be a great deal more environmentally destructive in Australia than elsewhere in the world. In the early nineteen hundreds, the pervasiveness of the cat problem was starting to cause public concern. Both domestic and feral cats predate on native Australian animals and have played a huge role in the extinction of numerous Australian species.

                          For example, cats are estimated to have significantly contributed to the extinction of at least 22 endemic Australian mammals since the arrivals of the first Europeans. This is included species like the rusty numbat, the desert bandicoot, the broad-faced potoroo and the Crescent Nail-Tail Wallaby. Research over the last ten years now estimates that a single feral cat kills 740 wild animals every year, about two a day.

                          So if, like me, you're a cat lover who loves having their furry friends around them at home, but you also have a soft spot for native wildlife and the Australian environment, be sure to put a bell on your cat's neck and keep it indoors at all times, if possible. That way, it's a win-win for both you, the cat and Australia's fauna.

                          Anyway, guys, I hope you enjoyed this episode. I hope that with regards to your English, you are no longer a little bit of a scaredy cat or a fraidy cat and you can go out there and speak confidently after learning this expression. I'm Pete, this is Aussie English. Thanks for joining me and I'll see you next time. Peace.

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                          Cats facts in Australia!

                          • Around 30% of Australia’s households are home to a cat.
                          • They’re the second most common pet after dogs.
                          • Despite only being found in around ⅓ of houses, the average house has 1.4 cats. So, clearly there’re a lot of crazy old cat ladies doing their bit to skew the statistics.
                          • Cats first arrived in Australia around the year 1804, and by the time of 1820, they were feral cats roaming the bushland around Sydney.
                          • Unfortunately, Australian wildlife was caught blindsided by the arrival of cats as they hadn’t evolved in their presence and therefore became easy targets for hungry cats.
                          • As a result, cats proved to be a great deal more environmentally destructive in Australia than elsewhere in the world.
                          • In the early 1900s, the pervasiveness of the cat problem was starting to cause public concern.
                          • Both domestic and feral cats predate on native Australian animals and have played a huge role in the extinction of many species.
                          • For example, cats are estimated to have significantly contributed to the extinction of at least 22 endemic Aussie mammals since the arrival of Europeans.
                          • This has included species like: the rusty numbat, the desert bandicoot, the broad-faced potoroo and the crescent nailtail wallaby.
                          • Research over the last 10 years now estimates that a single feral cat kills 740 wild animals every year.
                          • So if like me, you’re a cat lover who loves having their furry friends around them at home, but you also have a soft spot for the native wildlife and Australian environment, be sure to put a bell on your cat and keep it indoors at all times if possible.
                          • That way, it’s a win-win for both you and Australia’s fauna.

                          Further reading / viewing

                          Today's Vocab:

                          Here is a glossary of all the important vocabulary from today’s lesson.

                          Don’t forget, you’ll be able to see when and where the vocabulary was used in the transcript PDF for this episode, which you can download above.

                          • Cactus – (Aussie slang) Dead; broken.
                          • Hang around like a bad smell – Linger; not go away.
                          • Croaky – (Of a person’s voice) deep and hoarse.
                          • Give birth – Bear a child or young.
                          • Adopt something – Keep an animal as a pet.
                          • From good stock – Having parents with good genetics, wealth, or other favourable characteristics.
                          • Top dog – Someone or something in a position of authority; the boss.
                          • Find your balls – Discover your courage; become brave.
                          • Go figure – Said to express amazement; used here sarcastically because it’s obvious Ocean Grove is near the ocean.
                          • Bodyboarding – The water sport where you catch waves using a foam board that you lie on.
                          • In the surf – In the waves at the beach.
                          • Out the back – Far out in the surf where the waves are breaking.
                          • Crazy old cat ladies – An older woman who lives alone with a large number of cats, to which she is thought to be obsessively devoted.
                          • Skew something – Make something biased or distorted in a way that is regarded as inaccurate, unfair, or misleading.
                          • A feral cat – A once domesticated cat that is now living wild.
                          • Catch someone blindsided – For someone to be caught unaware of off-guard by something.
                          • Pervasiveness – The degree to which something is widespread.
                          • Play a role in something – Be involved in something; have an effect on something.
                          • Endemic – (Of a plant or animal) Native and restricted to a certain place.
                          • Have a soft spot for something – Have a sentimental weakness for something; have a strong liking of something.
                          • A win-win – A situation where each party benefits.

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                                The post AE 952 – Expression: Scaredy Cat appeared first on Aussie English.

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                                AE 949 – Aussie Slang: Out the Back of Bourke https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-949-aussie-slang-out-the-back-of-bourke/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-949-aussie-slang-out-the-back-of-bourke/#respond Fri, 25 Jun 2021 03:30:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=161183 AE 949 – AUSSIE SLANG: Out the Back of Bourke Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the…

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                                AE 949 - AUSSIE SLANG:

                                Out the Back of Bourke

                                Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie English Podcast.

                                This is the Aussie Slang series where I teach you slang that is commonly used Down Under.

                                pete smissen, host of aussie english podcast, aussie slang, australian slang, out the back of the bourke, where is bourke australia, back of bourke meaning, learn english online free, learn english with pete

                                In today's episode...

                                I am going to teach you the Aussie slang phrase “out the back of bourke”

                                Learn what it means and how you can use it in your daily conversations.

                                Improve your listening skills today – listen, play, & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!

                                Watch & listen to the convo!

                                Listen to today's episode!

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                                Listen to today's episode!

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                                Transcript of AE 949 - Aussie Slang: Out The Back of Bourke

                                G'day, you mob, how's it going? Welcome to this episode of Aussie English, it's another Aussie slang episode where my goal here is to teach you Australian slang words and expressions so that when you're speaking English down under, in the land of Oz in Australia or with Australians, with Aussies, you can communicate more effectively. You can sound like one of us. You can put a smile on their faces and also so that you can understand when Aussies are using these words or terms.

                                So today's term is "out the back of Bourke". "Out the back of Bourke". This is similar to the "back of beyond" which you can check out up here. But if you say "live out the back of Bourke", the idea is that you live a long way away that is remote or inconvenient. It is far away from civilisation. It's in the bush. It's rural. It's a long, long way away. It's out the back of Bourke. Right.

                                So where did this come from? It's based on an actual place in rural New South Wales that is called Bourke. That is a long way away. And it's extremely hot country and it's known for its dust storms and cotton farms. OK, so I wonder if any of you guys have been to Bourke.

                                Maybe you guys live out the back of Bourke. But you could use this expression to say, "Oh, mate, my my mate lives so far away from the city. It's effectively out the back of Bourke". "He lives so far away. It's out the back of Bourke. It's ages away".

                                So another one could be I went on a trip recently into Central Australia. And the whole time it was crazy being out the back of Bourke. You could see the stars. There were no people around. It's awesome. I love being out the back of Bourke.

                                So, guys, don't forget, I release a second episode in this series every single week that you can get access to. If you are a Premium Podcast or Academy member, you can get access up here or you can go down below to sign up. When you become a member, you will get access to a lot more English learning content both for Australian English, but English overall. So I really recommend that you check it out. And besides that, guys, I would love to see you use the expression "out the back of Bourke" down below in a comment. Have you been somewhere that is out the back of Bourke recently? Let me know below and I'll see you next time, peace!

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                                • Downloadable transcript PDFs & audio files for every episode

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                                  Join my 5-Day FREE English Course!

                                  Complete this 5-day course and learn how to study effectively with podcasts in order to level up your English quickly whilst having fun!

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                                      Have you got the Aussie English app?

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                                      Download it for FREE below!

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                                      English pronunciation, use of phrasal verbs, spoken English, and listening skills!

                                      Leave a comment below & practice your English!

                                      The post AE 949 – Aussie Slang: Out the Back of Bourke appeared first on Aussie English.

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                                      AE 948 – The Goss: Drawing Eyes on Cow Bums Prevents Lion Attacks in Botswana https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-948-the-goss-drawing-eyes-on-cow-bums-prevents-lion-attacks-in-botswana/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-948-the-goss-drawing-eyes-on-cow-bums-prevents-lion-attacks-in-botswana/#respond Wed, 23 Jun 2021 03:30:00 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=161160 AE 948 – THE GOSS: Drawing Eyes on Cow Bums Prevents Lion Attacks in Botswana Learn Australian English by listening to…

                                      The post AE 948 – The Goss: Drawing Eyes on Cow Bums Prevents Lion Attacks in Botswana appeared first on Aussie English.

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                                      AE 948 - THE GOSS:

                                      Drawing Eyes on Cow Bums Prevents Lion Attacks in Botswana

                                      Learn Australian English by listening to this episode of The Goss!

                                      These are conversations with my old man Ian Smissen for you to learn more about Australian culture, news, and current affairs.

                                      pete smissen, host of the aussie english podcast, ian smissen, the goss australia, drawing eyes on cow butts, i cow project botswana, how to prevent lion attacks on cows, cattle farmers botswana, botswana cow farmers

                                      In today's episode...

                                      We get to talk about cattle farmers in Botswana who have been drawing ‘eyes’ on the bums of their cows to prevent lion attacks – and it’s working!

                                      In a project they aptly named the “I-Cow Project”, they have come up with this idea to prevent large predators from attacking their cattle.

                                      Improve your listening skills today – listen, play, & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!

                                      Watch & listen to the convo!

                                      Listen to today's episode!

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                                      Listen to today's episode!

                                      Use the Premium Podcast Player below to listen and read at the same time.

                                      You can fast-forward and rewind easily as well as slow down or speed up the audio to suit your level.

                                      Transcript of AE 948 - The Goss: Drawing Eyes on Cow Bums Prevents Lion Attacks in Botswana

                                      G'day, you mob. Pete here, and this is another episode of Aussie English, the number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. So, today I have a Goss' episode for you where I sit down with my old man, my father, Ian Smissen, and we talk about the week's news, whether locally down under here in Australia or non-locally overseas in other parts of the world.

                                      Okay, and we sometimes also talk about whatever comes to mind. Right. If we can think of something interesting to share with you guys related to us or Australia, we also talk about that in The Goss'. So, these episodes are specifically designed to try and give you content about many different topics where we're obviously speaking in English and there are multiple people having a natural and spontaneous conversation in English.

                                      So, it is particularly good to improve your listening skills. In order to complement that, though, I really recommend that you join the podcast membership or the Academy membership at AussieEnglish.com.au, where you will get access to the full transcripts of these episodes, the PDFs, the downloads, and you can also use the online PDF reader to read and listen at the same time.

                                      Okay, so if you really, really want to improve your listening skills fast, get the transcript, listen and read at the same time, keep practising and that is the quickest way to level up your English. Anyway, I've been rabbiting on a bit. I've been talking a bit. Let's just get into this episode, guys. Smack the bird and let's get into it.

                                      Eyes painted on cows' butts for lion attacks. The end. Nothing more needs to be seen.

                                      Yeah, I thought you'd like that one.

                                      That's a winner.

                                      That is not an Australian one.

                                      No.

                                      Although it would be pretty interesting if lions lived in the outback here. Right? That would be pretty crazy.

                                      Well, maybe there'd be a few less camels and goats.

                                      Well, not if you painted eyes on their bums, apparently.

                                      Well, yeah, I don't think lions would be too concerned about eyes on camels' butts, they're a bit too high up.

                                      Well, that would be like a giraffes face, right.

                                      Yeah, exactly.

                                      So, you want to read this one out?

                                      Oh, no. You can go for it. Go for it. This one's yours, I just had to read the title.

                                      Yeah. This is an article from Big Think. So, an experiment in Botswana suggests a non-lethal deterrent for predatory lions. As opposed to non-predatory lions?

                                      Yeah, again...

                                      Lions that don't predate.

                                      Yes, there is a...

                                      Vegetarian lions.

                                      There is an element of gilding the lily here with the language. But yeah.

                                      So, I'll read out a little bit of this, but it was pretty cool. For cattle owning subsistence farmers in Botswana, lions pose a threat to the livestock on which they depend. Attempts to keep cattle safe often result in the shooting or poisoning of the big cats.

                                      Aside from the obvious moral discussion of what makes the life of one animal more worthy of preservation than the other, large predators play a vital role in preventing a trophic cascades in which the loss of one species throws an entire ecosystem dangerously out of balance.

                                      We talked about that in another episode.

                                      We have. We have. So yeah, you take out the large predator at the top, the things that it protects upon can sometimes go crazy, you know, like if you were to kill all the wolves in Yosemite National Park or Yellowstone National Park and all the deer suddenly breed up and start destroying the environment, that's a trophic cascade where it ends up screwing up all of the ecosystem and the animals below it.

                                      ...Eat all of the plants...

                                      And then the animals below them have trouble surviving. Yeah, exactly. So, the African lion population is in decline with the estimated number of adults ranging from 23,000 to 39,000, as opposed to more than 100,000 in the 90s, which is crazy. I didn't realise that they'd almost dropped three thir- Three thirds? Three quarters.

                                      Yeah.

                                      That's...

                                      About- Between a quarter and 23% to 39%.

                                      Yeah. So, as part of the search for a non-lethal remedy to the farmer's problem, a collaboration between the Botswana Predator Conservation Trust in Africa and the Centre for Ecosystem Science at the University of New South Wales and Taronga Conservation Society, both in Australia, recently completed a programme they called the i-cow Project.

                                      Except its the letter I, -cow.

                                      Like iPhone.

                                      Yeah.

                                      It's tongue in cheek, pun intended, moniker might just as easily be spelled eye-cow, as in your eye that you can see with, e-y-e, since what it involves- What it involved was painting large eyes on the hindquarters of cows to see if lions would be deterred from attacking them, and it worked. So yeah, it was interesting, apparently the experiment involved- What have we got here?

                                      So, 683 cows had eyes painted on their bums and these are like black and white eyes, literally painted one on each cheek.

                                      I'm just laughing. This is the stand-up comedian in me. I can just see the sort of- That herd of cattle sitting in a pen somewhere going, did you draw the black card or the red card? I drew the black card. What's happening to you? Oh, they're painting eyes on my butt. Well, they're not painting eyes on my butt, what's going to happen to you? Oh, I'm supposed to be protected from lions. What about me?

                                      What, have I got eyes on the back of my head?

                                      The control group is sitting there going, wait a minute.

                                      Yeah, this is dodge. So, 683 cows had eyes painted on their rumps, a cross was painted on the posteriors of 543 cows to learn if a natural eye shape was required to deter predators and 835 cows were left unpainted. So, I guess they've done the eyes to test...

                                      ...There was a black, red and a blue card.

                                      Yeah, they've done crosses to make sure it's not just that you've painted a circle on the bum of the cow, and then they're the ones that have just been left alone. So, most lion attacks occur during the day. Cattle are more likely to be securely penned at night. So, the test cattle were painted in the morning and released to forage as usual, there were 49 painting sessions with each lasting 24 days.

                                      So, here we go, while 15 of the unpainted cows were ultimately taken by lions. So, that's 15 out of 835. Not a single eye painted cow was killed and unexpectedly a painted cross seemed to help a bit as well, with only 4 cross painted cattle being attacked. So, I thought that was pretty cool. So, I think the basic idea here is that lions won't attack something when they think it can- It's looking at them.

                                      Particularly animals that have horns on their head.

                                      Yeah, exactly.

                                      They don't want to attack at the pointy end.

                                      Well, and you see this all the time. Right. In these, like, documentaries where you've got a lot of buffalo or something and they're trying to chase- They're trying to grab one of them. Usually, they're waiting for the animal to turn and run, so that they can grab the bum. And as soon as the animal turns around, if it's getting chased, usually the lion will stop and kind of wait to see when are you going to turn and run again.

                                      Exactly.

                                      And I think the guy was saying, the guy from UNSW, Neil Jordan, I think he was saying that he'd seen something where an antelope was being chased by a lion and effectively it turned around and the lion stopped and just gave up as soon as it knew the antelope was like onto it.

                                      If you're going to defend yourself, it's a different proposition.

                                      Yeah.

                                      Because for one side of that equation, it's life or death. But for the Predator, it's, eh, I'm just going to go after a dumber one. I'm not going to take you on.

                                      Well, and its...

                                      The give up cost- Yeah. The give up cost for a predator is fairly low.

                                      Yeah.

                                      Whereas the don't give up cost for a prey animal is 100%. If you get attacked by a lion you're going to die, you know, you're not likely to survive. But if so, if you can stop them attacking, yeah, it's an interesting little experiment. So, not only are they putting eyes on them, but if you're putting two big eyes on a cows butt it must look like a pretty bloody big animal with this giant head.

                                      Two heads, right? Yeah. Yeah. But it was interesting today we're talking about two- What have we got here? There's also support for this deterrent effect in nature. We're having markings that look like eyes staring back at a predator appears to provide a distinct evolutionary survival advantage for a range of species, including butterflies, moths, reptiles, fish and birds.

                                      So, this is why, especially with things like butterflies, and I've definitely seen caterpillars that look like snake heads, their bums look like snake heads, I think. You know, it's really crazy...

                                      A lot of caterpillars just have bums that just look like heads as well, you know, two headed animals.

                                      It blows my mind how much evolution has impacted the, you know, adaptation of these animals. So, it's like the predators are effectively, constantly picking off individuals of a species. And then as a result, the individuals that don't get picked off, you know, have these mutations where they may have different pigments or colours or limbs or whatever it is...

                                      They can run faster or yeah, whatever it happens to be.

                                      Well, and in the case of eyes that these moths slowly develop these markings on their wings, they're the only ones that the predators don't attack. And the more and more that they look like eyes, the more they're left alone.

                                      Exactly.

                                      And beyond that, the cool thing is like mimicry, right. Where animals- One animal will evolve to be very deterrent. It may have markings like the eyes, or it may be toxic or venomous or something. And then you'll have another species that looks similar, and predators will start avoiding the individuals of that species...

                                      But all it has is a flag, it doesn't actually have the deterrent.

                                      Yeah, well, that's- It's got the holster, but not the gun, right. So, it looks like it's carrying, but it's actually got no bullets.

                                      Yeah. So, evolution's cool. I definitely love these sorts of things. So, what do you reckon is going to happen with these cows? You reckon they're going to have this widespread, I don't know, new job of painting eyes on the bums of cows in Botswana?

                                      Well, maybe they will be. The question is going to be, is to how quickly the lions learn.

                                      Yeah. Well, that was one of the caveats, I think, in this article. Right.

                                      Because then there's going to be- It's probably going to take less than one generation of lions to have a few smart ones go, no, that's a fake. They'll pick the fake.

                                      It would be interesting to see if that was passed on culturally, like...

                                      I'm sure it will be.

                                      ...The Lions would just say, go for the ones with the eyes on the bum.

                                      Yeah, well, you know, because their- And their cultural evolution is obviously in a single generation, it can change the entire behaviour of a population in a single generation. It doesn't rely on, you know, individual genes getting, you know, increasing in numbers over, you know, potentially hundreds or thousands of generations.

                                      So, it can happen instantaneously because all you need is, you know, a couple of smart females, particularly, who just teach their cubs.

                                      Well, they don't even have to be smart, right. They just for whatever reason, they just ignore the eyes and start attacking these cows and then as a result, you know, they're constantly attacking these cows with eyes on their bums. It turns out they're easier prey than the wild animals and then they're like, well, just go for the ones with eyes on their bums. They're a sure thing.

                                      You'll fatten up, although you'll probably piss off quite a few Botswana farmers and they may poison or shoot you.

                                      ...High velocity lead poisoning, to the next problem, but...

                                      What do you think's going to happen with lions in the future? Do you think we're going to lose those in Africa?

                                      I think there are now, and this is again, with no expertise in African wildlife management, but I think there are now enough large parks where populations of large predators are going to be potentially far enough away from the boundaries of these parks, because it's the boundary animals that are the problem, it's the ones that are actually going to be out hunting domestic livestock rather than, you know, out hunting wild wildebeest and antelope.

                                      And so, I think there are now enough large parks where some will survive, but clearly that needs to be managed and there will be far fewer of them. Because, you know, lions will be perfectly happy, I'm sure, over a generation to pick themselves up and move themselves a few hundred kilometres if there's a lot more food hanging around, you know, you've got to try pretty bloody hard to go out and catch an antelope. But...

                                      Yeah.

                                      If you've got, you know, a paddock with a few hundred cattle sitting in it, then it's just smorgasbord for lions...

                                      Yeah. I hope they end up, you know, not being wiped out because they're definitely something I'd like to see in the flesh.

                                      Well, it's the last one on my bucket list is South Africa or southern Africa and east Africa...

                                      ...To go on safari.

                                      ...To go on the safaris.

                                      Did you ever hear of the Tsavo man-eaters?

                                      Yeah.

                                      How crazy is that story? Can we go through that a little bit? So, the...

                                      ...You go. Yeah.

                                      Tsavo man-eaters were a pair of man-eating male lions in the Tsavo. This is spelt T-S-A-V-O region, which were responsible for the deaths of a number of construction workers on the Kenya Uganda railway between March and December 1898. And the significance of this lion pair was their unusual behaviour of killing men and the manner of their attacks.

                                      So, I think this was sort of like going on from what you say, these lions learnt very quickly that these men were working on a railway, they were laying sleepers and creating this railway in Uganda and Kenya, going between the two, I guess. And they- The lions would just pick off, you know, people relatively frequently once a week or two, right.

                                      People are fairly, you know, indefensible. They don't have a lot of defence.

                                      So, yeah. What does it got here? In 2001, a review about causes of man-eating behaviour among lions revealed that the proposed human toll of a hundred or more was most likely an exaggeration. But the actual death toll was probably 28 to 31 victims from these two lions. And so, they ended up getting shot and killed, and now they're in the Field Museum in Chicago. You can go and see these animals...

                                      Been there, but not when the lions were there.

                                      I can't imagine how terrifying that would have been. To be like, I'm not working at night or I'm not working with these things nearby. Jesus.

                                      Fortunately, there- It's- There's a bit of luck there in a sense that these were, and they would have been brothers, the two lions. But the fact that they were males is fortunate because if they had been a couple of females, they would have been teaching their cubs.

                                      Yeah.

                                      Hey, these two-legged animals are much easier.

                                      Well, and it is- This is that sort of issue we have with a lot of predators around the world. Right. Once they learn of a certain food source being readily available, they tend to continue to exploit it, whether it's a crocodile, a bear, or, you know. They have that massive issue in North America with bears, not necessarily killing humans, but just getting into trash and coming into suburbs and stuff.

                                      Yeah, we, you know, humans provide all sorts of food from them, either directly or indirectly.

                                      Did I send you that video of the crocodile...?

                                      Yeah.

                                      ...Coming up on the beach in northern Australia.

                                      Yeah. Eating sharks.

                                      Yeah, good God.

                                      Yeah. With all due respect to my friends who are fishermen, there's a lot to answer for, you know, this story was, without stealing your thunder, was...

                                      No, go for it.

                                      ...Was basically, you know, fishermen capturing or catching sharks, and clearly...

                                      These were small sharks.

                                      ...Small sharks, but clearly slaughtering them, filleting them and just tossing the carcases on the beach and these crocodiles just, you know, coming up on the beach and going...

                                      Okay.

                                      ...Okay, you're just providing food for me, so that beach is now going to be unsafe for a long time.

                                      Well, and that's the thing people don't think about, especially with these predators. It takes one idiot to encourage them to try to continue to manipulate easy food effectively. Right. And then endangering other people. Because what happens if you have a small child or a dog or something or you get too close...

                                      Crocodiles are long lived, they're intelligent, they form long term habits and they're patient. So, crocodile's not going to come up on the beach the next day and go, oh, no, no sharks on the beach, so I'll never come back here again. they'll do it every week for years.

                                      Well, I had this story from someone, when I was doing turtle research up in Queensland, I remember someone telling me that when they were doing turtle research on one of these islands, they had to carry a rifle because of the crocodiles that would go around the water. And he was saying, oh, yeah, whatever, you know, yeah, there's crocs here. I know there's crocs here. But what really, like they're not going to be that bad.

                                      And he was telling me that the first night that he walked around the island, he was like, I could see a crocodile just slowly swimming about 20 metres out in the ocean, just following us the whole time.

                                      And now the crocodile knows that it takes 20 minutes to walk around the island...

                                      Yeah. And then he was like, the next night I had the gun. He was like, I couldn't believe it. I'm like, Jesus Christ. That would be- Yeah. That would be a very bad way to go. But it was funny because I shared this with my group in the academy. I was like, check this out. This is what happens if you're an idiot with fishing in, you know, far north Queensland or northern Australia.

                                      Make sure, you know, if you're on the beach, especially like this, where you're at the water's edge and you're fishing, pull the fish in and get away from the water's edge as soon as you get the fish, like get- Get the F away from the water's edge. Because if you fuck around, if you leave bait, you're going to attract things like crocs, which are just, that's why they're called saltwater crocodiles.

                                      And it was funny, even these guys, I was chatting to them, and they were like, wait what? There's crocodiles in Australia? I was like, dude, like, this is why as soon as you get past about Bundaberg in Queensland, you just stay away from the water's edge. You just stay away from- Don't get in the water, just stay away from the water. And it goes all the way around the northern coast and down Western Australia. Yeah.

                                      Yes. So, predators.

                                      I know they're pretty cool. I wish, though, I do wish we still had the marsupial lion in Australia.

                                      Thylacoleo.

                                      Thylacoleo. I would love to have seen that thing in the wild, not because I would love to- I mean, you know, it's a predator, so it would have been badass to see that.

                                      Yeah.

                                      But like with the thylacine, the Tasmanian tiger or Tasmanian wolf, for me as an evolutionary biologist the thing that really would have blown my mind is seeing the thylacoleo in the flesh at a zoo next to an exhibit of actual lions. Because they convergently evolved effectively the same body type, but one's a marsupial with pouches and the other ones a eutherian mammal that gives birth to live animals...

                                      Well...

                                      ...More developed young.

                                      ...Thylacine, even though it was called the Tasmanian tiger, it was really a Tasmanian wolf.

                                      Yeah.

                                      It looks...

                                      It had the stripes, so it got a tiger name.

                                      ...Looked like a wolf for everything else.

                                      Well, at least we have video of that, right?

                                      Yeah.

                                      So, that's what blows my mind. But Thylacoleo was here with indigenous people, and so, you know, indigenous people in Australia would have been up against effectively lions, not to mention a lot of these other huge megafauna in Australia, like megalania, the huge 6-metre-long goanna that would have been eating humans, like- Insane stuff. But yeah, Thylacoleo would have been cool because it had these huge thumb claws, unlike Velociraptors.

                                      And I think, too, they had just one large molar tooth on the top and the bottom of their jaws, which were like scissors...

                                      Yes.

                                      ...For just shearing flesh off.

                                      Which, funnily enough, is what big cats have- Well, all cats have.

                                      Well, they have got multiple teeth, though...

                                      Yeah, they do but, yeah, they're actually...

                                      ...Weird one single tooth that's just really, really big.

                                      So, that's the convergent evolution thing, that's...

                                      For shearing...

                                      ...It's a different version of the same solution.

                                      Yeah.

                                      Yeah.

                                      Well, and that's the same with the claws thing, right. It didn't get- I think cats don't tend to have thumbs...

                                      No.

                                      ...Right. Well, they have like a small finger, like a- What would you call it? Like a residual- Dew claw, but the real grabbing tools are the main claws, the four fingers.

                                      But they're not- They're not opposable. They don't- They can't do this.

                                      Yeah.

                                      They can do that.

                                      Yeah. So, it just would have been so cool to have seen some of the megafauna that theoretically should still be here, right. Like, the environment hasn't changed, that-

                                      It has changed to some degree in that we have, you know, different species in different areas, but, you know, 35,000 years ago, Australia wouldn't have looked that much different from what it does currently, and yet it would have had massive wombats, all sorts of huge kangaroos, large birds and these lions effectively roaming the place. It just would have been phenomenal to see that.

                                      It certainly would.

                                      Anyway, I've been ranting a lot.

                                      You have, but that's all right.

                                      Yeah. Thanks for joining us.

                                      If in doubt, just remember. Wait a minute. Wait a minute.

                                      What?

                                      Eyes painted on cow butts fought lion attacks. So, if you're a cow out in the wilds of Africa hire someone to paint eyes on your backside.

                                      Well, when you go on safari, maybe something to invest in would be a backpack with eyes on it.

                                      Backpack with eyes on it.

                                      Or just some chapless pants...

                                      It's a big thing now...

                                      With your butt cheeks hanging out and draw some...

                                      I know.

                                      ...Get some tattoos of eyes on your bum.

                                      Yeah, exactly.

                                      That'd be nice.

                                      Safari butt.

                                      All right. See you guys.

                                      Bye.

                                      Alrighty, you mob. Thank you so much for listening to or watching this episode of The Goss'. If you would like to watch the video, if you're currently listening to it and not watching it, you can do so on the Aussie English Channel on YouTube. You'll be able to subscribe to that, just search "Aussie English" on YouTube.

                                      And if you're watching this and not listening to it, you can check this episode out also on the Aussie English podcast, which you can find via my free Aussie English podcast application on both Android and iPhone. You can download that for free or you can find it via any other good podcast app that you've got on your phone. Spotify, podcast from iTunes, Stitcher, whatever it is.

                                      I'm your host, Pete. Thank you so much for joining me. I hope you have a ripper of a day, and I will see you next time. Peace.

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                                            AE 944 – Aussie Slang: Bad News https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-944-aussie-slang-bad-news/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-944-aussie-slang-bad-news/#respond Fri, 18 Jun 2021 03:30:49 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=160073 AE 938 – AUSSIE SLANG: Bad News Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie English Podcast.…

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                                            AE 938 - AUSSIE SLANG:

                                            Bad News

                                            Learn Australian English in each of these episodes of the Aussie English Podcast.

                                            This is the Aussie Slang series where I teach you slang that is commonly used Down Under.

                                            pete smissen, host of aussie english, aussie slang, australian slang, what is bad news, bad news meaning, learn australian english, learn aussie english

                                            In today's episode...

                                            I teach you the Aussie slang phrase “bad news”

                                            Learn what it means and how you can use it in your daily conversations.

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                                            Transcript of AE 944 - Aussie Slang: Bad News

                                            G'day, you mob, how's it going? Pete here from Aussie English, the number one place for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. And welcome, welcome, welcome to the next instalment of the Aussie Slang series.

                                            Now, today, I'm going to be teaching you the slang term "bad news". Someone who is "bad news". Now, "bad news" can be used by all English speakers to be talking about information that you have just received that is obviously not good, right? So if you go to a hospital, you talk to your doctor and the doctor says, I've got some bad news for you. That is obviously not good, right? You would imagine that that is not good news. It's bad news. It is information that is likely to not be good.

                                            You know, I think you know what bad news is, but we can use this in Australian English when describing someone. And it means that they are a troublesome person. Maybe they're a bit dodgy. They are not to be trusted. They are troublesome person. They are "bad news". So maybe you have a friend who comes to a party and you tell your other mates there, you know, he's a friend, but he's a bit troublesome. He's a bit dangerous. He's bad news sometimes. That guy's bad news.

                                            Or maybe you're in town and you see this crazy woman walking through town. You know, she's a total nut job and just a loon, completely crazy. And you say, "Quick, get your family!" You say, "Quick, everyone! Let's get to the other side of the road. This woman is bad news. She's troublesome. She's dangerous. She's bad news."

                                            So thanks for joining me, guys. Hopefully you understood this expression. If someone is bad news, they are troublesome. They are dangerous. Use it in a comment below and show me that you've understood it, right? Make your own sentence using this expression. You know, have you ever come across someone who is "bad news"? Do people think you are "bad news"? Who knows? Right. I'm sure that someone out there thinks I'm "bad news". You just, you know, statistically, there's got to be someone.

                                            Besides that guys, don't forget, I release another episode in the Aussie Slang series every single week for members of the Premium Podcast membership or the Academy. If you would like to learn more about the Premium Podcast and Academy, go up here or check out the links below. And for everything Australian English go to www.aussieenglish.com.au. I'm your host. Pete, this is Aussie English. See you next time!

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                                                  AE 924 – WWP: eBay, Photography, and Penguins https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-924-wwp-ebay-photography-and-penguins/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-924-wwp-ebay-photography-and-penguins/#respond Sun, 23 May 2021 03:30:16 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=158934 The post AE 924 – WWP: eBay, Photography, and Penguins appeared first on Aussie English.

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                                                  Learn Australian English by listening to this latest episode of the Aussie English podcast!

                                                  Finally! It’s been awhile since I actually “walked” while recording this new “Walking With Pete” episode.

                                                  I got a rush of outdoors this day and tell you about these special lenses that I’ve been looking for.

                                                  Have you checked the episodes with the new studio? Let me know what you think!

                                                  Improve your listening skills today – listen, play & pause this episode – and start speaking like a native English speaker!


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                                                    AE 904 – Expression: A Hard Nut To Crack https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-904-expression-a-hard-nut-to-crack/ https://aussieenglish.com.au/ae-904-expression-a-hard-nut-to-crack/#respond Sun, 18 Apr 2021 03:30:44 +0000 https://aussieenglish.com.au/?p=158481 The post AE 904 – Expression: A Hard Nut To Crack appeared first on Aussie English.

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                                                    Learn Australian English in this English Expression episode of the Aussie English Podcast. These are weekly episodes where I teach you how to use English expressions like a fair dinkum Australian!

                                                    For this episode, we talk about the expression “a hard nut to crack”.

                                                    • Breakdown the meaning of the words in this expression,
                                                    • Discover what the expression means,
                                                    • Learn how to use the expression,
                                                    • Listen to real dialogue examples of the expression in use,
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                                                    I tell you about fascinating macadamia nuts — have you ever had one?

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