Publication Date: 2018-07-14
Learn Australian English in this expression episode of the Aussie English Podcast where I teach you to use the expression TAKE IT ON THE CHIN like a native speaker. Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Android | RSS Download MP3 + Transcript AE 465 – Expression: Take It on the Chin G’day, guys! What’s going on? Welcome to this episode of the Aussie English Podcast, the number one podcast for anyone and everyone wanting to learn Australian English. So, whether you want to learn Australian English or just English in general it’s all the same thing really, apart from maybe the odd slang term or expression, but I’ll let you know, I’ll let you know if I use some. But this is the podcast for you guys, and it is brought to you by The Aussie English Classroom. That is my online classroom with all the extra content specifically made so that you can work through it bit by bit to improve your English if you like to study and if you want to learn more, if you want to do more, if you want to partake in activities instead of just listening to the podcast, that is the place to go for you, and that is TheAussieEnglishClassroom.com and it’s just one dollar at the moment for your first 30 days so you’ve got plenty of time to give it a go. On top of that, guys, if you want the transcripts only and the MP3 for these podcast episodes, you can go to theAussieEnglishPodcast.com and you can sign up there for a small monthly fee. It’s about a bit under five bucks in order to get access to or transcripts. Anyway, let’s get into today’s episode. So, that intro scene at the start there was from the Rebel Films a YouTube channel. There will be a link in the transcript to their channel as well as this video. And it was a Pitjantjatjarra woman named, and I’ll see if I can do this right, Nganyinytja. Hopefully I said that right. A Pitjantjatjarra a woman named Nganyinytja from South Australia, and she was speaking about what it was like as an Australian aboriginal living in this area of South Australia in the desert before she had ever met a white man. So, many aboriginals in Australia didn’t lay eyes on, let alone meet, a white person until the mid-20th century. So, go check that video out if you want to hear a bit of Australian Indigenous language being spoken as well as if you want to understand a bit more about what it was like being an Aboriginal in Australia before meeting white men. Anyway guys, as usual, let’s go through an Aussie joke. So, the Aussie joke for today guys, are you ready? Are you ready? Are you buckled in? Are you prepared? The joke is: Did you hear about that guy whose whole left side was cut off? Did you hear about that guy whose whole left side was cut off? He’s all ‘right’ now. He’s all ‘right’ now. Do you get it? Do you get it? So, it’s a pun here, guys. He’s all ‘right’ now. Did you hear about the left side, the left side, of this guy and how it was cut off? Now, he’s all ‘right’. So, that’s a joke there between left and right, right?
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