American vs. British vs. Australian English | One Language, Three Accents
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 9 ต.ค. 2020
- One Language, Three Accents! In this video, we're showing you the differences between American English, British English, and Australian English. First, we'll show you the difference between an American accent, a British accent, and an Australian accent by reading some simple words that are spelled the same in every country. Then, our native speakers will say different words that have the same meaning. And finally, our American, British, and Australian speakers will say words that sound the same, and have the same meaning, but are spelled differently.
This is a brief introduction to the differences in English pronunciation. For more language comparison videos, subscribe to Language of Earth on TH-cam at / languageofearth .
Have an idea for a future video? Is there another language that could be used to show "One Langauge, Three Accents"? Let us know in the comments below! - บันเทิง
American: Spider
British: Spider
Australian: Pet
This is underated af man.
Lol
Lol
Jaja lol literal
😂🤣
American: Check
British: Cheque
Australian: Cheque
Czech: Republic
Ohh brother brother 😂🔥🔥
In indian english it's chek
Filipino: TSEKE
German: Scheck😂
Lol
Hotel: Trivago
America: Water
British: Water
Australian: BEER!!!
i love the aussie accent, it's like a mix between American and British, so it's really comforting to me for some reason since i mostly use both accents 😅
It's just a perfect mix of british ando american accent
@@norrinRadd2149 actually now I just think it sounds more like an evolved British 😀
It evolved from the East London Cockney accent and sounds nothing like an American accent, which is mainly non-rhotic.
Australian sounds nothin like Americans?? WHAT ARE U ON ABOUT MATE 🤔💭
@@squallleonheart3020facts
95% of this video
American: "This"
British: "Actually, this"
Australian: "Yeah, that"
And yet some British actors can't adopt an Australian accent to save their lives.
True ! It's as if the Americans said : "hey, let's change all of the real words and invent stuff".
Hahahaha win!
lol
Mamarika is kreatif GK ada batas
Si Australia pengikut ratu Elizabeth 😂😂😂😂
British guy: you can copy just change a little bit.
Australian guy:
🤣🤣👍
HAHAAHA
Cópia mas não faz igual kk
😂😂
Best comment ever
Actually in bri'ish "Chips" are called "Crispity crunchy munchie crackerjack snacker nibbler snap crack n' pop westerpoolchestershire-shire Queen's lovely jubily delights".
Well that's a rough bit cringe innit, bruv
I love this
That's actually quite embarrassing
British
I grew up in Singapore and moved to Canada when I was 19 to attend university, and I was absolutely lost when the locals didn't understand the words I used. E.g. spectacles, queue, lift, car park, roundabout, traffic junction... And I thought I wasn't learning the proper English until I realized that English has evolved so much in the past hundreds of years.
🇺🇸 That's the spirit.
🇬🇧 Good lad.
🇦🇺 Onya mate.
We say roundabout in Canada.
You were learning the 'proper' English - ie the language of, guess where, England. All the others are dumbed down versions.
@@achitophel5852LOL, nope. Language is suppose to advance, especially based on geographical points. The environment, different customs and culture plays a large role in that. For example, in the U.S. Noah Webster, the inventor of the English dictionary in the U.S is responsible for simplifying alot of words to make better sense in spelling and pronunciation. Lets not sound xenophobe now, imagine how boring it would be if everyone everywhere spoke the same, and language never changed. Dialects especially…is what makes the different languages around the world alot more enriching.
Language naturally changes. As an English person myself, I hate bellends like you ruining our reputation. It's fine to be a patriot and to love your language, not to be a knob about it online.
American: "Missal"
British: "Missile"
Australian: "Missile"
North Korean leader: "Toy"
YES! And His name’s Kim Jong Un
YUP!!! Its just a toy for him!!!
@@regalcartoon3952 thanks for that sherlock
@@vro8868 Your we- Oh! Your being sarcastic...
boom boom ting
No one:
American girl: 😁
English man: 😏
Australian man: 😐
-_-
You mean 👂😐👂
Lol
@@navyabarak9244 childish...
@@TheCreate78 I laughed
I am a Japanese who makes ends meet as a translator. I love English very much though I have never lived anywhere in the Anglosphere. Actually I saw Julie Andrews acting and singing in The Sound of Music decades ago, which sparked my interest in English. I have loved it since then.
Originally I was interested in British English
but I love all kinds of English now. After all these three people speak the very same language with some differences in words and usage. My English has been somewhat Americanized over the last few decades (I am now 48 and I, like most of my Japanese peers of my generation, started learning
English when I became a junior high school student in Japan). I hope I can still love English as both a tool for my job and a language. Thanks a lot!
it's interesting to think how these differences developed 😊 thanks for showing us examples through your videos
American: French fries
British: Chips
Australian: Hot Chips
Mom: Junk food
Underrated
hotel : trivago
@@Cloud-pc8id and the joke dead
@@Eldaviidd.06 no one gives a fuck if its dead or not every comment section is filled with dead memes anyways.
@@Cloud-pc8id I give a fuck so and it is a dead meme
American : Crocodile
British : Crocodile
Australian : Neighbor
Florida : Dinner
😂😂😂👍🏻
Australian can't find a new joke aren't they?
🤣🤣🤣
Yeah good work with the spelling of neighbour
As a Latino living in Mexico I am 100% with the American accent, because it is the closest thing to us and we are more used to hearing it. I once met an Australian girl and it was very difficult to understand what she was saying to me
I'm Australian and I noticed the majority of people in America that couldn't understand me were Latino
Undeeznutz
@@JB-DJWhere did you get that from?
@@justhere4637 urmom
@@JB-DJ I see. I didn't think of deez nutz.
Great video. My accent for the most part always fell somewhere between Britisch and Australian. Never noticed how similar they indeed are!
Americans: Sneakers
British: Trainers
Australian: Runners
Me: Shoes
Shoes arent the same as the other words tho.
Snickers i eat it
"Running shoes."
Tennies? That's what I call them haha
@@JCluvr19 In our country, we call them after tennis as well :D
🇬🇧: Disney
🇺🇸: Disney
🇦🇺: Sidney
Lol nice one
It's spelt Sydney* unless I don't get the joke
@@jameschapman1442 yep you are right it’s a joke actually
Funny.
@Marky Luis Q. Idio AHAHAHAHA tara punta tayo sa Desneyland!
Good content, thank you😊
I'm learning English and this video helped me a lot to understand the difference between accents 😄
im learning spanish
Australia: Can I copy your homework?
UK: Yeah but change it a little bit so it doesn't look like you copied
it's like:
Turkey: Cacık
Greek: Cacık-i
you could have just said
yeah but dont make it obvious
@@esigi omg you turks are so obsessed with us 💀
@@meowpoosaymeow not us, its you
lol
Australian:😐
British:🙂
American girl:😁
th-cam.com/video/sMG1nlQi5bg/w-d-xo.html ,,,
She do be good lookin doe...
Pretty much sums up the countries overall attitudes
@@ethanjeter2069 ew wtf
@@ts-zs2og your ew
that was soo fun thank you!😁🥰🥰❤❤❤❤❤❤
Very good. Thanks
British: Burger
Australian: Burger
American: Healthy Sandwich
- *the 300 pound dude*
As an american, i can confirm
underated
:joy: yeah right you mixed up the American part -
😁😁😁
My English is a mixture of all of these 😅😅😅
@@ismail41208 Or maybe he lives in the USA and his parents are from England and Australia
You can find all these together in Indian english 😂😂
Same here ....! We do no discrimination ....we respect all accents 😄
Mine too :C
@@ismail41208 maybe no..
Fun Fact: American English is closer to old English used in the 1800s than actual English spoken in the UK
Yea I heard, cuz the bri-ish aristocrat decided to come up with a posher accent in London to distinguish themselves from the peasants and working class.
People repeating this over and over doesn't make it true haha. Whilst it's true that the stereotypical British RP accent is the result of significant change over the past few centuries, there are so many accents spoken in the UK besides that one. The west country accent for example, is likely to be much closer to older variations of spoken English than the 'standard' American accent. Not that it matters anyway lol, accents and language have always evolved with time and always will
i think our english is closer to scottish, lol
Maybe an early East coast accent. No one in Britain has ever sounded like a West coast valley girl 😂😂😂
@@benjaminmandeville4430 there is almost no linguistic similarities to old English as far as the young girls speech. One of the key things is ARU also known as "American rising inflection" it's one of the key linguistic pointers. It makes most people not from the west coast of America think that they are always asking a question, even if they're not. Many people are of the opinion that it's down to a Spanish language crossover with English in that area over 200 years ago
American: Sister
British: Sister
Australian: Sister
Alabama: Wife
Sweet home Alabama
American: Castle
British: Castle
Australia: Castle
Disney princesses: Prison
😂😂😂
That was kinda lame tbh
😂😂😂
Lol😂😂😂
Lmao😂😂
British: world
Australia: world
America: America
Lol 😅😂
Lol
British and australian: words
america: stupid nicknames
@bestcomentsyoutube
America is a whole continent...from Alaska to Argentina, just saying 🙄
00:05 Same word, same definition, same spelling but different pronunciation
00:54 Same definition, but different words and pronunciation
01:46 Same definition, similar pronunciation, but difference in spelling
Cheer~~a distinctive mode of pronunciation of a language, especially one associated with a particular nation, locality, or social class.
British : school
Australian : school
American : shooting range
That's exactly correct.🤣🤣
@@EthanLu-sf1fn
Correction:
American: Pro-Authoritarian talking point
We gotta start using torch for flashlight here in the states. Its a good one
The American Girl:
*S M I L E*
th-cam.com/video/b9FunEkhTNo/w-d-xo.html ....
Lol fr
Yeah
That´s why we excuse her pronounciation.
@@SuperLeica1 what's wrong with her pronouncation?
for me this the best english video that i found in yt.
Interessante as diferenças!
USA: Winter
UK: Winter
Australia: summer
During Christmas 😂😂😂
USA: Pew pew pew. People screaming.
UK: Ah, what a lovely day.
Australia: Ah, what a great day.
True
Lol
LMAO HAHAH
The british's face is so self-satisfied. Lol. Like saying: "after all mine is the classic English!"
Mm i dont think so. Everyone in the video is smiling.
So what english is itself known as 'the language of lone words' it has nothing on its own 😂
Its true lol, my favourite type ♥️
😂😂
😂😂😂😂
English: Check out how many accents and dialects we have!
Spanish: that's cute
yeah after watching this video I get to know that my English is mix of American, British and Australian 😂😂
American: wah-der
British: Wuh-ter
Australian: Wotaaa
Nah its wotaaa
Wader
Water
WATAA
Wota
wah-ter :americans
For me it’s woda
*Indians: American accent with British spellings.*
So like... Canadians?
@Night Yep
😂🤭
I think more British
Lol true😂
I was surprised to realize that even when using the same language, accents can vary. I personally prefer a British accent because it has an elegant sound to it. I want to understand why accents are different in the same language. It's incredible how, even though we all use English as a universal language, we use different words to express the same idea. Because I’m from Korea, I'm curious about how Koreans speak English with their accent.
it's very culturally dependent. Even "British English" is composed of many different accents (think Manchester, Liverpool scouse, London cockney, and "posh" Attenborough/royal accent, among many).
Evrensel dil Türkçedir😊
America has come to have an accent that is very influenced by the German accent. It sounds weird to say because German is very throaty language, yet were they to just read English words, it would sound very American accented. America is a melting pot of cultures, yet Germans had the most influence in the language. There is a video featuring all the US presidents speaking that they have recordings of, and only in the recent 60 years, has the accent we know today sort of become as it is. You can hear the presidents lose the British accent over time which is really cool, if you want to see the slow change.
@@Cashimathow cool, do you know the specific name of that video? Also, keep in mind geography, environment, the customs within each society and culture plays a role. Moreover, Noah Webster, the inventor of the dictionay in the U.S, simplified alot of words by tweaking the spelling and pronunciation. He is one of the reasons, why the spelling of some words in slightly different. Like “check” as seen in this video. Usually some people that are learning English prefer American English because it sounds the easiest, or the most neutral and the dominance the American film industry and the popularity American Hollywood movies provoke around the world. The music too.
can you make a video of nordic countries , as a finn it's always fun to see how different our language is
Australia: Hey British, can I copy your homework?
British: Yeah, just change it up a little bit.
I was going to say the same mate
@@adirajvanshi Bruh?
@@adirajvanshi …
@@adirajvanshi so true
😂 when Aussie English naturally falls between the two and also have their own slangs.
American: sneakers
British: runners
Australian: trainers
Me: shoes.
Runners?! No. We call them trainers in the UK. ;)
It was the Australian guy who said "runners". But isn't that the name for someone who runs rather than shoes?
I’m Australian and I’ve never heard someone say runners in my life. Maybe it’s just cause of the state I live in but we call them sneakers most of the time
Me too.. 🤣🤣
Shoes is general guys but the sneakers ,runners and trainers is special for sport shoes call
Proud to see Melissa Kristin here 💯
The U. S. Navy term for underwear is "skivvies", for a door it's "hatch", for a window it's "portal", for the bathroom it's "head",
and for a kitchen it's "galley"!
American : Cookie
British : Biscuit
Australian : Biscuit
Indians : Biskoot 😂😂
🤣🤣👏👏
Nepali too Biskoot😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂😂
What do the Brits call what Americans call Biscuits?
American: "Is it pronounced like this?"
British: "No, thats so wrong, it,s like this"
Australian: "Yes, mate youre right"
A:Thank u CHAMP
B:NO WORRIES MATE...
What that american women name?
please tell
@@alakkantideb8942 lol
@@alakkantideb8942 are you kidding 😂😂
@@zteach1357 I really want to know the name I am not doing any prank
Я русская и учу английский, при этом говоря на всех этих диалектах рандомно
being from the east coast in vermont, speaking means without R’s and T’s a good chuck of the time.
American : "colony"
Australian : "colony"
British : "yes"
😀
American: Vanguard
Windsor family: 💩
Cologne
Lol😂😂
Cringe
The british guy sounds like he's correcting the american lady and the australian guy sounds like he's mocking the British guy by slightly overly exaggerating what he says.
Edit: before you comment and tell me "oh that's not original", just know that 1, 10 other people have beat you to it, and 2, I didn't look at the comments section before typing and posting mine.
😆😆😆😆👍👍
🤣LOL!
Literally me and my English teacher 😆
OH MY GOD! Thank you for this! 😂😂😂
@@pbjsmutton7823 I litterally didnt look at the other comments when I typed mine out.
This is music to my ears
My English is Australian, British and New Zealand mixture
"Color"
"Colour"
"Koala"
😂
That brings tears to my eyes! Aaaa
,😂😂😂
Lmao
Kala
Australian agrees with british on every word
- british: Trousers,
- australian: Pants
British:👁👄👁
🤣🤣
Im british and everyone I know uses pants
I've heard both in Australia, maybe trousers actually more often. Maybe it depends where in Australia?
@@cameroncharnley2078 lol what I’ve never heard anyone refer to trousers as pants
@@ZainabProductions idk maybe trousers is like a southern thing but everyone I know in the north says pants
Can anybody tell me where I can find these types of videos more?
Australian are so chill yet there accent is so aggressive lol gotta love em for that you know
And let's be honest Australia's slang is better like they say things with style lol just complimenting you know lol and British and Australians speak English with style
Americans: sneakers
British: trainers
Australians: runners
Indians: mom's best best weapon
So trueeee😂😂 without them they have their belt
Also Turkish
@@ahgq7 yeah and Pakistan tooo
Accurate 🤣
@@vedanshipatel8113 all Asian relate
as a person that have english as a second language, i didnt realize that im using all these three accents and slangs
How can you didn't realize you've been learning english in ur whole life
@@rizkirahmatullah6406 what i meant is that ive been using all three slangs at the same time when im talking
@@ainazuhara1046 I knew it, english is not your native language right? usually beginner when they learn language always using american accent
same-
@MrLewisbate h0w caN yOu KnOw eVEN YoU dUnno wItH my Life 😂
Bhot bdya Bhai 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉😮😮😮😅😅😅😂❤❤❤😂😂😂🎉🎉🎉😅😅😅🎉🎉🎉🎉
This is exactly what I am looking for...
The british guy is so proud of his accent the way he pronounce the words and how he looks while he is saying the words hahahaha 🤣👌
@@shanechristian8332 Why are you gay ?
@@alcapone2560 *Geh
@@alcapone2560 You're hot af
Hehehehe???? I use half American English and half British English 😁
I just realize I have my own accents *wow I created a new language 😳 *dies from proud*
@@sujhilmin8581 Ameritish
American: Candy
British: Sweets
Australian: Lollies
Indians: Toffy 😁
No
Indians: Lojens
Chocolate
@@swastikabasak9309 whoa that's what u say in Bangla more often than in Hindi
@@zaeidanis Yes..
My mother tongue is Bengali..
Wait a min, am I tripping or is the lady that youtuber that does the "Californiaaaaa" Cinematic Universe, also does those shorts about 90s and 2000s kids?
Its crazy how similar british and Australian accents are
The Aussie dude looks like the most Aussiest Aussie that’s ever Aussie’d.
The Aussie dude looks like the Aussie-like Aussieing Aussieful Aussie that's ever Aussily Aussie'd.
Americans be like “haha OGH-SEA”
Mate he looks like he lives in Perth, a real Aussie has long for a boy blonde or brown hair with a nice 6-pack and says the word sequence "Yeah, nah" a lot
@@Petrol_Sniffa Yeah nah
@@Petrol_Sniffa well that's a good old stereotype bud
Love how Australians just sounds like surprised British people 😂
Their accents came from the first Australian settlers being drunk all the time
@vanya as an Australian I can absolutely 100% confirm the Australian accent is just drunk British people and convicts at the time, we learn about it history class and everything lmao 🤷
@vanya ok first off, buddy it’s not that deep, calm down please.
Second off, we’re both right about the origins of the language. Originally it started off with lots of convicts and lower class and eventually a few rich in NSW eventually caused more British people to move to Australia overtime and the accent adapted.
Idk what being drunk has anything to do with anti colonialism as if you’ve moved to pretty much nowhere for various reasons would you not get drunk all the time and fuck around? Not much else to do (getting drunk isn’t always a negative thing. I’m not saying it is.).
Also by denying the start of the accent’s full story it feels like you’re completely missing over the long history of abuse and neglect to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders. British people weren’t invited here, they stole it and continue to make laws against the original owners of the land, not even making them citizens until 1967.
Anyways, none of that was meant to be mean spirited or anything but please take your bad attitude and clear lack of knowledge about Australian history ✨elsewhere✨
Thank you 🥰
P.S. also not reflective of what I have previously said but also yeah, fuck colonisation it’s ruined the lives of so so many people. 🥰
@@ri3n._18 okay fran eat ‘em up -nosey american
@vanya sheesh lighten up. You're rather uptight for an Aussies. Aussies tend to be extremely laid back
EDITED TO ADD: I see you might be from Ireland. The same applies since I just went to Dublin and the Irish people were not only laid back but super nice and just awesome.
As a english learner, i love this, it's very hard hear every words, in my opinion i like the english american, but, british accent is great to audiobooks.
1:21 for some reason I laughed very hard when she said FRENCH FRIES
It's so stereotyped 😂😂
The American is the hot one.
The British is the proud one.
The Australian is the chilled one.
Australians are not chill I'll give you that /j (because some guy didn't understand)
@@steaphenry3851 I literally cannot handle people like you. The religion of Islam is peaceful and I love every one of my Muslim friends like my brothers and sisters. But why must you go everywhere and push your beliefs onto others even when there is literally no relation to the topic others are talking about? It's a misunderstood and oftenly prejudicely stereotyped religion. But people like you are all to blame. Please stop, you are giving your religion a bad image.
@@buonopesci I am a Muslim and I agree with you. This is not the way tought by our religion. But some so called muslims actually don't understand
@@buonopesci agreed bro I’m Muslim myself and I find this hella annoying.. like there’s a time and place for that lol
@@buonopesci I'm a Muslim and agree!
El inglés de Reunio Unido suena muy bien, tan agradable a los oidos y el de Australia suena parecido.
1:16
Bell pepper the proper term for the kind of pepper that is
Pepper the word for what that is
Capsicum is legit the part of the pepper that makes it burn, but the problem is that a bell pepper has super low amounts of capsicum that it doesn’t matter in this coxtext
american: informal
british: formal
australian: who cares, im gonna say it however i want
So True Lmao..
Cockney: hold my beer
Cockney (britain): I will speak British but Simon Cowell cannot understand
Cock-knee rhyming slang Apples and Pears = stairs, the Germans could not figure out the uh code used by British during war was … Cockney [my gran was born within hearing of Bow Bells [ St. Mary-le-Bow, Cheapside, London]
American: Kangaroo
British: Kangaroo
Australian: Man's worst enemy
You mean emu
@@obi-wankenobi1312 even kangaroos
hhahahahahahahahahahahah
What about magpies
@@bricktopian that’s a bit racist don’t you think
I didn't expect to see Melissa here😃
i love her
The British speaker is looking very confident, love it.
American : Flashlight
British : torch
Me : torchlight😂
Lol
Same😂😂
Me: toslight **left the chat~
*fleshlight*
@not Lexi HAHHAHA
I live in a country where english is not the mother tongue. Now that I've seen this, I now realize how messed up my spellings and pronunciations. It's a mix of all of these.
It doesn’t really matter if your accent has elements from multiple accents. Britain and the US both have many accents within themselves. Normally accents can understand each other without any problem, and the only thing an accent tells you is where someone lives. Slang between accents can get pretty weird but slang changes daily and new terms always pop up so I wouldn’t worry about that.
Crying in Indian
Lol same
Same.
Same...india here
1st of all, I like all three accents
2nd of all, What’s the name of that song?
I learning this english🇬🇧 and this too🇺🇸
American: sneakers
British: trainers
Australian: runners
Indians like me : SHOES
im indian we do not call sneakers shoes we call it sneakers
😂
@@stacchk64dta37 Please we call it 'juta'. Most people can't even distinguish between various footwear.
Bro chappal not shoes
Nahi yrr hum toh chappal hi bolte hai
This honestly looks like the American girl and the British guy are arguing to prove what saying is right and the Australian guy is telling them which is correct. 😂
And he's right.
Indeed man lol😂
most of the time the Australian and British accent seems to be the same
Correct
@@prabaharanaece Yep, the general Australian accent hasn't strayed too far from its roots~
America: this
British: no, that
Australia: yea, that
I'm really southern and I don't sound like none of them 😆 I've traveled a couple times and I've had people tell me I sound like "cornbread" and some have said I sound so southern it's hard to understand me sometimes😬
America: **says anything**
UK: **corrects**
Australia: *“What he said...”*
American English is more crisp than the mumble English of the Britt's or Aussie's.
@@juniorthird7952 lol look,an American
@@car6426 ikr, and I'm American lol
🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@juniorthird7952 I thought we like to make the words easier to pronounce. We cut sounds and blend them.
american: candy
british: sweets
australian: LoLLieS
fbi: excuse-me
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
I don't get it
@勇樹 yeah, but people still draw hentai of it. Search it up, if you dare
Me, an Australian, have grew so much to just saying “lollies” normally, lmao. I find saying “candy” and “sweets” so weird... 😅
Hahah I thought the same 😂
"Lollies" because lollipop?
But this sound like a ... bah nothing, idk
I'm mixed English, so in my mind lollipop are candy with stick like this 🍭, while candy are small thing made of sugar base like this 🍬, and sweets covered many types of different dessert, candies, snacks, chocolates etc
Oh my goodness my English is a complete mixture between British and an Australian accent.
I'm from South Africa and I have never been to England or Australia but a lot of people including my family, friends and strangers have said that I don't sound like I am from SA (South Africa) and that I sound more like I am from Britain or Aussie 😅
And watching this video makes it extremely crystal clear to me.. I really don't sound South African and I have never seen this video before.. What a kicker 😂😂😂❤
American: "ta may doh"
British: "ta mah tohh"
Australian: "to mah toh"
Hakuna: "matata"
😂😂 Okey thats good
lol u made me laugh hard
Well that is a good one
Yes
*American: "ta may dow"
Nobody:
My english: A combination of all above ✨
When you learn english from the internet
@@mohamedelhediissa289 That's the way to go... Even Top University Teachers in China/Japan/Korea/India can't speak fluently, so you have to learn from Internet.
Wow funny nobody comment
Me too
@@KingoftheApes Getting tedious isn't it?
G'day mate! 'ere from Australia!
Is that Melissa Kristin tv the one who always does old school throwback vontnets?😍😍😍
I wonder
American Woman: **Says Anything**
Australian and English Guy:
*That's what she said*
Lol 😂
Shut up 😡😡😡😡😡😡
How dare you
A holE creepy 🤧😡😡😡
@@mr.mufasa1195 🤧😳😳✌🏻
AHAHHAHA
as an Australian, seeing the Australian man looking like he's about to burst out laughing after every word is just amazing
Cause he's not an asshole.
@@robjackson5245 what does that got to do with anything??
@@Major.P210 LMAO!
Oh boy I remember watching this
Australian here. Hearing these together makes me realise how similar australian and british accents are