You don't have a general Sydney accent. You have a "Wog" accent, which is typical of areas with Mediterranean communities in parts of Southern and Western Sydney. In fact, your accent's just like my sister's.
@@zaco21_ nah it's very easy to pick out. Sydney alone has quite a few distinct accents, with one of them being the 'wog' or Western/Southerwestern Sydney accent. It's very obvious to a Sydney native that his English sounds a bit different to Anglo English
Pretty accurate, especially with first nations, I'm a first nations person from SA living in NSW and told all the time I sound kiwi, we SA people do have an english pronunciation more like plants and not like NSW say in American way, I feel NSW is more americanised
Thanks for the information, really useful for me. Now i'm working in one of best hotel in Bali so i could make a good relation with Aussie guests! Cheers 💯
how about some samples?, when I lived in Sydney, apart from bogan and ethnic, I only noticed the North Sydney female accent which sounded sooo cute, cant remember. as its been awhile, all I remember is that I really liked it
There is only one group that has been here in Oz for generations but insists on adopting an accent that simply doesn't exist anywhere else in the world ..... ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-PQsIf9lb0bc.html Their parents don't speak like that - even their sisters usually don't speak like that. In a massive country that has almost NO regional accents, this lives in certain suburbs in just two cities. The Greeks and Italians I grew up with in the Western suburbs of Sydney usually just adopted the same (relatively broad) Aussie accents as their schoolmates, but it all changed with the mass influx of Lebanese from the 80s on. Even Asian Australians havent leapt on this 'gangsta' persona with the same enthusiasm - I close my eyes and this could be almost any milennial Aussie guy. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dJUN52oQNVg.html
@@jimmyrustles358 Sure but MLE isnt confined to a single ethnicity. Even second and third generation Lebanese roll their eyes at some of the 'fully sick' cliches that their younger relatives have adopted. Thankfully 'innit' doesn't appear to be part of the lexicon, bruv ;)
They need to do more videos on accents of the Sydney Melting pot, it’s amazing that no one has pick it up cause it’s so interesting that I can hear when someone is from the western suburbs or the south western suburbs
I grew up in Sydney the inner west the less posh parts lol Sydney with all these accent was around Asian, Indian just ur general white accent and probably the biggest 2 I heard where the Lebanese and Greeks Aussie accents they hung out together and I stayed tf outta the way super nice people tho
The general accent you do doesn't sound American, but it sounds surprisingly similar. I've met other people from Sydney who sound almost American as well.
Platonick: can you learn how to pronounce your words/sentences before posting video about Australian accents. Take elocution lessons like people who work as journalists, voice over artists and radio announcers do. The subject matter about Sydney accents is pretty accurate for the most part...
@@shaunmckenzie5509 You think someone is racist because they said someone looks turkish, when this guy very well could have turkish heritage. You very much sound like the one with the issues here.
@@boulevardsound5137 yes, he may have Turkish heritage, but that's not what the original comment meant and you know it. "He doesn't even look Australian".