Your looking a bit green there mate
Apart from a few borrowed expressions that the Yanks were good enough to share with us, Australian and American slang have almost nothing in common other than that they are written (should the need arise) using the same alphabet. Most Australian slang is uniquely Australian, but may have had some of its origins in English slang.
The "correct" Australian slang term is strine.
The term yobbo is Australian slang for an uncultivated person.
The Australian slang term for girls or women is sheila.
"G'day" IS Australian slang - it's short for "Good Day."
There are many different Australian slang words. Some examples of these slang words include "cya this arvo", meaning "see you in the afternoon", "daks" which means trousers, and "dunnie" which means bathroom.
"Aussie" is short for "Australian" "Bird" is Australian slang for a girl Thus, an Aussie bird is slang for an Australian girl
The Australian term (not slang) for French fries is "chips".
In Australian slang, women are referred to as "sheilas". The term is not usually applied to girls, but to grown women.
G'dayThere is no specific Australian slang word for 'welcome'. G'day is a greeting, but does not mean 'welcome'.
what is the slang name for the Australian wallabys rugby union sport
''Dill'' means ''idiot'' as australian slang.