Variation in Australian English
is relatively homogeneous when compared with British and American English. The major varieties of Australian English are sociocultural rather than regional, being general, broad and cultivated Australian.
There exist a number of Australian English-based creole languages. Differing significantly from English, these are not considered dialects of English; rather, they are considered separate languages. Notable examples are Torres Strait Creole, spoken on the Torres Strait Islands, Northern Cape York and South-Western Coastal Papua; the Norfuk language, spoken by some inhabitants of Norfolk Island, and Australian Kriol language, which developed in and around the Sydney region in the days of early settlement, and now exists only in rural areas of the Northern Territory.
Sociocultural variation
Broad, general and cultivated Australian
Three main varieties of Australian English are spoken according to linguists: broad, general and cultivated. They are part of a continuum, reflecting variations in accent. They can, but do not always, reflect the social class, education and urban or rural background of the speaker.Broad Australian English is recognisable and familiar to English speakers around the world. It is prevalent nationwide but is especially common in rural areas. Examples of people with this accent are Steve Irwin, Julia Gillard and Paul Hogan.
In Australia, this dialect is sometimes called Strine, and a speaker of the dialect may be referred to as an Ocker. Tests indicated that the Broad speakers demonstrated a greater tendency for syllable assimilation and consonant elision, were more likely to use weak consonants or restricted intonation, were more likely to speak slowly, and further, showed a greater tendency to exhibit pervasive nasality. Diphthongs are usually pronounced longer as well. Along the East Coast, there is an approximate correlation between latitude and accent, being the further north one is, the more nasal/broad the accent. Nasality is already evident at the NSW/QLD border.
General Australian English is the most common of Australian accents. It is especially prominent in urban Australia and is used as a standard language for Australian films, television programs and advertising. It is used by Hugh Jackman, Ian Thorpe and Eric Bana.
Cultivated Australian English has in the past been perceived as indicating high social class or education. Additionally, a study in 1989 reported that Cultivated Australian English speakers were being rated higher than Broad Australian English speakers in intelligence, competence, reliability, honesty, and status. In comparison, Broad Australian English speakers are rated higher in terms of humorousness and talkativity, similar to what was found in a study in 1975 comparing regional British accents to RP. Cultivated Australian English also has some similarities to Received Pronunciation and the Transatlantic accent as well. In recent generations, it has fallen sharply in usage. However, the cultivated usages of in "face" and "price" have been integrated into the speech of some of the speakers of General Australian. Cultivated Australian is spoken by Cate Blanchett, Geoffrey Rush and was spoken by Malcolm Fraser.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander English
Australian Aboriginal English refers to a dialect of Australian English used by a large proportion of Indigenous Australians. It is made up of a range of forms which developed differently in different parts of Australia, and are said to vary along a continuum, from forms close to Standard Australian English to more non-standard forms. There are distinctive features of accent, grammar, words and meanings, as well as language use. The dialect is not to be confused with Australian Kriol language, which is not mutually intelligible with Australian English but in fact a separate language spoken by over 30,000 people. On the Torres Strait Islands, a distinctive dialect known as Torres Strait English, the furthest extent of which is Torres Strait Creole, is spoken.Ethnocultural varieties
The ethnocultural dialects are diverse accents in Australian English that are spoken by the minority groups, which are of non-English speaking background. A massive immigration from Asia has made a large increase in diversity and the will for people to show their cultural identity within the Australian context. These ethnocultural varieties contain features of General Australian English as adopted by the children of immigrants blended with some non-English language features, such as the Afro-Asiatic and Asian languages. In the 1960s, major cities such as Sydney and Melbourne received large numbers of immigrants from Southern Europe and the Middle East, the second generation of these immigrants can also have a distinct accent, in a similar situation as the east coast of the United States with descendants of European migrants having the "Jersey accent".Regional variation
Although relatively homogeneous, some regional variations in Australian English are notable. The dialects of English spoken in the eastern states, where the majority of the population lives, differ somewhat to that spoken in South Australia and Western Australia. Another notable dialect is Torres Strait English, spoken by the inhabitants of the Torres Strait Islands. Torres Strait English, as distinct from Torres Strait Creole, developed separately to, but has been significantly influenced by, General Australian English.The regional varieties of English can be distinguished in terms of vocabulary and phonology. With each local dialect taking words from various sources such as British, Irish and American English as well as local Aboriginal languages, it is in vocabulary where regional varieties are most distinct from each other. Regional phonological features may be inherited due to differing settlement patterns or may have developed locally.
Vocabulary
Regional variation in Australia consists primarily of differences in vocabulary rather than tone or accent.There are differences in the names of beer glasses from one area to another. In the 2000s, however, the range of glass sizes in actual use has been greatly reduced. In New South Wales, is known as swimmers or cossie and, in Queensland, it is togs. In most other areas, the term bathers dominates. What is referred to by schoolchildren as a bag in most parts of Australia is known as a "port" by some Queenslanders. Further, the processed meat known as "devon" on the East Coast is known as "polony" on the West Coast, while in Central Australia, the term "fritz" is used.
Many regional variations are due to Australians' passion for sport and the differences in non-linguistic traditions from one state to another: the word football refers to the most popular code of football in different States or regions, or even ethnic groups within them. Victorians start a game of Australian rules football with a ball up, Western Australians with a bounce down; New South Wales people and Queenslanders start a game of rugby league football or rugby union football with a kick off, as do soccer players across Australia.
From 2004, the national governing body for Association football,, has promoted the use of "football" in place of "soccer". Several media outlets have adopted this use, while others have stuck with "soccer". However, use of the word "football" to mean either Australian football or rugby league, depending on the major code of the state, remains the standard usage in Australia. In all places, the specific name or nickname of the code can often be heard used for disambiguation.
The slang word footy has been traditionally associated with either Australian rules football or rugby league football. Prominent examples in popular culture are The Footy Shows; also FootyTAB, a betting wing of the NSW TAB.
For many Australians, the verb barrack, is used to denote following a team or club. Barrack has its origins in British English, although in the UK it now usually means to jeer or denigrate an opposing team or players. The expression "root for a team", as used in the United States, is not generally used in Australia.
There are many regional variations for describing social classes or subcultures. A bogan is also referred to as a bevan in Queensland. These variations, however, have almost completely been replaced by the term bogan.
Distinctive grammatical patterns also exist such as the use of the interrogative eh? and the position of the word but at the end of a sentence in Queensland.
Phonology
;Variation between andThere exists significant regional variation in terms of the extent to which the trap–bath split has taken hold particularly before ,,, and. In words like chance, plant, branch, sample and demand, the majority of Australians use . Some, however, use in these words, particularly in South Australia, which had a different settlement chronology and type from other parts of the country.. In parts of Victoria and South Australia, castle rhymes with hassle rather than parcel. Also, some may use in grasp, gasp, plaque and rasp. The table below, based on Crystal, shows the percentage of speakers from different capital cities who pronounce words with as opposed to.
Word | Hobart | Melbourne | Brisbane | Sydney | Adelaide | Ave. over all five cities |
graph | 0% | 30% | 56% | 70% | 86% | 48% |
chance | 0% | 60% | 25% | 80% | 86% | 50% |
demand | 10% | 78% | 78% | 90% | 100% | 71% |
dance | 10% | 35% | 11% | 30% | 86% | 34% |
castle | 60% | 30% | 33% | 100% | 86% | 62% |
grasp | 90% | 89% | 89% | 95% | 100% | 93% |
to contrast | 100% | 100% | 100% | 100% | 71% | 94% |
Ave. over all seven words | 39% | 60% | 56% | 81% | 88% | 65% |
;Centring diphthongs
In Western Australian English, the centring diphthong vowels in near and square are typically realised as full diphthongs, or and or respectively, whereas in the eastern states they may also be realised as monophthongs, and respectively.
;L–vocalisation
When occurs at the ends of words before pauses and before consonants it sometimes sounds like a vowel sound rather than a consonant. This is because is made with two different articulations. One of the articulations is like a vowel articulation and the other is more like a typical consonant articulation. When occurs at the ends of words before pauses and before other consonants, the consonantal articulation can be obscured by the vowel articulation. This makes the sound like.
The tendency for some sounds to become vowels is more common in South Australian English than that of other states. Milk, for example, in South Australia has a vocalised, leading to the pronunciation, whereas in other states the is pronounced as a consonant.
;Salary–celery merger
In Victoria, many speakers pronounce and in a way that is distinct from speakers in other states. For many younger speakers from Victoria, the first vowel in "celery" and "salary" are the same, so that both words sound like "salary". These speakers will also tend to say "halicopter" instead of "helicopter", and pronounce their capital city as. For many older Victorian speakers, the words "celery" and "salary" also sound the same but instead both sound like "celery". These speakers will also pronounce words such as "alps" as "elps".
;Variation in
The vowel in words like "pool", "school" and "fool" varies regionally.