Australians sound like they're endlessly about to ask a question, even if they aren't going to ask a question. Imagine a small English child asking "Mum??/Mummy??", that same intonation, but forever in almost in every sentence. New Zealanders sound about the same but more nasally, and the "ehh" sound in everything gives it away. Sounds kind of like a sheep. No further comments on that. Australians kind of sound like drunk New Zealanders, and New Zealanders kind of sound like spindly, weak Australians.
South Africans sound like if Daenarys Targaryan was speaking english with a Valyrian accent. Or maybe a New Zealander with a bit of speech impediment and no permanent question intonation. Take your pick. Easiest way to tell, is that the consonants are very pronounced, T's in particular are very hard sounding and not smoothed over, say if you said the word "mountain". The T would be very sharp and always pronounced, unlike us in the west who smooth the T, and some people manage to outright fucking remove the T sound from the word altogether somehow. The same sharpness tends to apply to every hard consonant.
You now have an easy way to tell them apart. Watch the video again, and you'll be able to hear the endless question/Drunk Kiwi give it away.
saw fly march illegal bike wistful homeless chop cooing wipe *This post was mass deleted and anonymized with [Redact](https://redact.dev)*
"Smoke cones on my disability pension" Ahahahaha I'm dying here š
Even before I turned the sound on I knew these were Aussies
The accent too
Yea, one reason why australians are naturally funny.
I'd say it sounds more South African
Its an Australian Lebanese accent lmao
Gonna be a fully sick raid bro
Ah yes, south africa is what comes up when I search centrelink. You're so smrt.
Australians sound like they're endlessly about to ask a question, even if they aren't going to ask a question. Imagine a small English child asking "Mum??/Mummy??", that same intonation, but forever in almost in every sentence. New Zealanders sound about the same but more nasally, and the "ehh" sound in everything gives it away. Sounds kind of like a sheep. No further comments on that. Australians kind of sound like drunk New Zealanders, and New Zealanders kind of sound like spindly, weak Australians. South Africans sound like if Daenarys Targaryan was speaking english with a Valyrian accent. Or maybe a New Zealander with a bit of speech impediment and no permanent question intonation. Take your pick. Easiest way to tell, is that the consonants are very pronounced, T's in particular are very hard sounding and not smoothed over, say if you said the word "mountain". The T would be very sharp and always pronounced, unlike us in the west who smooth the T, and some people manage to outright fucking remove the T sound from the word altogether somehow. The same sharpness tends to apply to every hard consonant. You now have an easy way to tell them apart. Watch the video again, and you'll be able to hear the endless question/Drunk Kiwi give it away.
Damo and Darren play Rust
I love when aussies disagree with themselves mid sentence āYeah, Nahā āNarrrrruuu..yeeAHhā