Chorus: G'day G'day, how ya goin' whatdaya know, well strike a light, G'day g'day and how ya goin' just say g'day g'day g'day and she'll be right. |
Despite appearances to the contrary, 'G'day' is a greeting not a farewell. The poms (British) often use it as a rather snooty kind of farewell, and thats perhaps why Aussies started saying it - to poke their tongues out at the British. 'She'll be right" is a rather dated expression now, meaning 'dont worry, hang loose, chill out.' |
Isn't it great to be an Aussie, Chorus |
Aussies buy things in 'shops' not 'stores'. Havin' a yarn means a conversation, telling a tall tale or two, passing the time of day. The pub is a bar, nearly always part of a hotel, rarely a stand-alone drinking establishment, although in most of the pubs I know, the rooms are hardly ever used by paying guests. They're more a formality really. 'Dinkie-die' is an old fashioned term for true , the real thing.. You're a Dinkie-die Aussie if you behave just as an Aussie would under the circumstances. |
now when Italians speak they all go crazy Chorus |
To an Aussie, anyone from north America is a 'Yank', even if they're from Mississippi. It's sometimes funny to see an American southerner meet Aussies for the first time and hear himself referred to as a Yank. Trust me, it's not any kind of insult. Canadians take it as an insult though. They're often called 'Yanks' too. Until they say "oot and aboot' that is. eh? 'Pommies' or 'Poms' are British. A lot of people think it's a kind of insult, but it isnt. Aussies use what a lot of people think as insults as terms of endearment. In most places it's a supreme compliment to be called a silly old bastard. Australians are very confusing to a lot of foreigners. The Cockatoo - white parrot, found in large numbers flying wild through skies of most parts of the country |
It's a greeting that you'll hear across Australia. Chorus |
Gove is in the far north, way up in the tropics, so far north they dont even have four seasons each year. They only have two. Gundegai is south on the east coast. Geraldton is .. well .. um .. well I've never been there . so it's unimportant where it is. Look it up. Dinkum is another word for real, fair, true. In the 50s, someone would say something and the person he said it to woudl say "really? fair dinkum?" meaning "is that really true?" Over the years 'Fair Dinkum' has become shortened to just 'dinkum'. If an Aussie tells you something is 'dinkum' he means its' real and true. Dingo is a native dog about the size of a labrador. They are not domesticated, becuase it's illegal to own Australian animals as pets. Dahlia is a flower. |
So now you know. Now you can go and sing the song and amaze all your friends with how much you know about that weird land where they seem to speak English, but not a brand of it that makes any sense to outsiders!