A quick Guide to Australians

A few British people have relatives who moved to Austria after the Second World War.  Generally speaking these were people who couldn’t spell.  The more successful non-Oesterreichers went to Oz to celebrate the achievements of their convict ancestors, populate beaches, light BBQs and quietly blame Churchill for Gallipoli.  When they left Blighty the two countries spoke a common tongue, with a few rude exceptions, details of which appear below.  Today the Australian language has new cultural euphemisms,  and politically correct speech has replaced the old working class, plain speaking Aussie vernacular.

Euphemisms for White Australians / Settler Australians

Term

Notes

Mainstream Australia

People who barbecue. 

Ordinary Australians

People without degrees, who barbecue

The Nation’s Founders

Pommy Bastards

Anglo-Celtic Australians

English, Welsh, Scottish and Irish Pommy Bastards

Non-Indigenous Australians

Other Bastards

Post-1788 Australians

Post- (use your own date of birth) Australians

 

Euphemisms Related to Indigenous Australians

Term

Notes

First Australians

People who don’t like being called “Aboriginal”

Traditional Owners

People, who don’t like being called aboriginal, who killed other people, who also didn’t like being called aboriginal,  in order to become new owners

Custodians of the Land

    A spiritual and cultural euphemism invented by degree-holding barbecue fans.

Remote Communities

Areas without Pornhub coverage

The Indigenous Voice

Not White, nor Asian

Indigenous Affairs

What those Pommy Bastards did to us

Euphemisms Around Colonialism, Racism, and National Identity

Term

Notes

Settlement

The first Pommy Bastards arrived

Contact history / First contact

Fighting the Pommy Bastards

Shared history

Pub Fight

Cultural challenges

Warm beer v Fosters

Law and order issues

Code for Pommy Bastard Police Activity

Contemporary Euphemisms with Political Charge

Term

Notes

Boat people

People who get air-sick

Border protection

No Entry!

National interest

It’s our country

Australian values

Aussie Rules isn’t just a game.  It’s a way of life.

Social cohesion

Un-Australian behaviour. 

 

Two Blokes Never Seen at the Sydney Opera House