Do you know your “yeah, nah” from your “nah, yeah”? Or your “woop woop” from your “wig out”? Australians have long prided themselves on putting their own twist on the English language. Across the ...
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Internet search giant Google has added Australian slang and language recognition to its applications, addressing complaints that its software had difficulty in understanding thick ...
The Aussie tennis season is well and truly upon us, and with it has come the arrival of Morgan Riddle on our shores. For six ...
My husband Brent and I are currently living Down Under in Sydney, Australia. This is Brent’s first trip to the sunburnt country, but I’ve lived here twice, once in my twenties and once as a high ...
As teens develop slang each generation, parents seem to even need the help of linguists to understand the new terms. Experts say the new terminology appears to cover the same preoccupations. (Scripps ...
A neon Google logo is seen at the new Google office in Toronto, November 13, 2012. REUTERS/Mark Blinch/Files SYDNEY (Reuters) - Internet search giant Google has added Australian slang and language ...
Australians have long prided themselves on putting their own twist on the English language. Across the English-speaking world, they’ve become famous for their penchant for shortening words like ...