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The questionable Australian accent

March 4th 2011 02:49
: Vyoos news
let stalk strine

VYOOS EDITORIAL
In the news this week was a story which rated the Australian accent the world's fifth sexist. It's a safe bet there were no Aussies on the voting panel. I know no fellow Australians with particular affection for our accent. We call it Strine, which sums up the nasal twang which characterises our speech.


World's fifth-sexiest? Sexiness, it seems, is in the ear of the beholder.

It brought to mind a magazine article I read last week which quoted an Englishman describing the Australian accent as one which turns all statements into questions.

As anyone who has been in the country recently will know, this is now the accepted way of speaking in Australia. You can hear politicians, academics, TV show hosts and every 20-something in the land putting an upward inflexion on just about every sentence. I have no doubt that chief executive officers, civil celebrants, nuns, kangaroos, koalas and dingoes have adopted the habit.

It's a habit I am in a unique position to hate.

My position is that I left Australia 20 years ago, when Aussies did not speak this way, to live overseas. Sometime between then and four years ago when I returned, most spoken Aussie statements became questions. It's a major upheaval in Ocker culture. I'm still dealing with the shock. It's just not my lingo any more.

At least I have always been able to seek consolation in the written form of the language. It has always been my favourite form, perhaps because it is more difficult to corrupt.


Enter David Meagher, Editor of wish magazine, a hugely glossy insert in The Australian newspaper and so cool it doesn't use a capital letter in its name. Or is that retro-cool? Surely the gimmick has been around so long it's cliched.

Anyway, Mr Meagher has on Page 14 of today's issue a column in his name which starts: "There is something about London that seems to allow creativity to flourish. Maybe it's the weather that keeps people indoors with their thinking caps on? Or maybe it's something more ingrained in the city's culture?"

Did you spot the Aussie accent in Meagher's writing? Yes, the question marks on the second and third sentences - sentences which aren't questions.

It's spreading. It's another cane toad.

Stop it. Despite what they say overseas, it's not sexy.


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William Safire, 1929-2009

September 27th 2009 23:39
william safire
William Safire receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2006

William Lewis Safire, Pulitzer Prize winner, language expert, long-time columnist for The New York Times and speech writer for President Nixon, has died at the age of 79. The Baltimore Sun newspaper described him as a conservative columnist and word warrior who feared no politician or corner of the English language.

Author Eric Alterman, in his 1999 book Sound and Fury: The Making of the Punditocracy, called Safire an institution. "Few insiders doubt that William Safire is the most influential and respected pundit alive," Alterman wrote.

He was born William Lewis Safir (he added an e to his surname later for what he described as pronunciation reasons) on December 17, 1929. A Jew, Safire was throughout his life a staunch and vocal advocate of Israel. The young William attended the Bronx High School of Science and then spent two years at Syracuse University before dropping out. He worked as a radio and television producer, in public relations and as a publicist before joining the Nixon presidential campaign in 1960.

In 1973 Safire joined The New York Times as a political columnist, beginning a 32-year stint as one of America's most respected political pundits and its mostly widely read language expert. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1978 for commentary on the alleged budgetary irregularities of Bert Lance, an adviser to Jimmy Carter (and widely acknowledged as originator of the saying, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it").

Safire described himself as a "libertarian conservative", defined by Wikipedia as, "A term adopted by a broad spectrum of political philosophies which advocate the maximization of individual liberty and the minimization or even abolition of the state".

Bill Clinton was more interested in Safire's nose than his prose. Clinton said he wanted to punch that nose after Safire called his wife "a congenital liar".

Safire also wrote several novels and was chairman of the Dana Foundation, a philanthropic organisation which supports brain science, immunology and arts education.

Upon announcing the retirement of Safire's political column in 2005, Arthur Sulzberger Jr, publisher of The New York Times, said, "The New York Times without Bill Safire is all but unimaginable. Whether you agreed with him or not was never the point — his writing is delightful, informed and engaging."
Image: UPI.com




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Family's Fielding fluffs his fiscal

September 9th 2009 02:51
mary whitehouse
Mary Whitehouse: at least she could spell

Australian Senator Steve Fielding is apparently taking, as his yardstick for political performance, the career of former American vice-president Dan Quayle. Fielding is paying particular attention to Quayle's inability to spell.

The Australian is a member of the Family First Party, which is, in its own words, "the only party that has as its top priority the well being (sic) of Australian families and the success of small businesses". According to their web page, they also believe, "Australia should be the best country in the world".

So, to hell with everyone else and do you think the portrait of Mary Whitehouse would look better over the mantlepiece?

The noun well-being should, of course, be hyphenated or one word, not two, and this brings us back to Senator Fielding and his language flaws. He has had an ongoing problem, when offering opinions on economic matters, in confusing the words fiscal and physical. "Physical policy" has become something of a catchphrase for the good Senator, and good journalists are giving him every opportunity to repeat the malapropism.

This week, however, he went a step further along the Quayle trail. Dan famously couldn't spell potato. Fielding decided to mangle the word fiscal even more than he has by proving that, not only does he not know how to use it, he doesn't know how to spell it.

Speaking to journalists on Monday, he was asked about his regular mispronunciation of fiscal. "I'll make it quite clear," Senator Fielding replied, "fiscal: F-I-S-K-A-L."



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