"Strine" is a parody of Australian English. Try saying "Australian" with a tightly clipped and compressed Australian accent. It comes out sounding like Strine.
Australian English
There is no specific Australian slang for language, other than "Lingo" perhaps. Australians sometimes refer to their own slang language as "Strine", being an extremely corrupted pronunciation of "Australian". "Strine" was once described by a very English Brit as "holding a cigarette between your lips and speaking while moving your lips as little as possible". Nobody but an Australian born and bred person who was brought up within the strict character defining and educational influences of Uncle Harry and Aunty Beryl from the family farm at Tangambalanga, would be able to speak Strine convincingly, or understand it well enough if listening to an expert.
language
isA query language is a procedural language.
The mother language is the language you have been speaking since childhood. The foreign language is a language which is not of your country.
Eugene Samuel Strine has written: 'Structural analysis of the written composition of intermediate grade children' -- subject(s): Children, Language, Writing
hi my first language is strine i am currently learning English to say bye and hello in strine you say hello = "guae bye/goodbye = gonggua\ have fun learning stine to say my name in stine is kialya my name in English is karla gonggua\
The Australian word for the Australian language is English. Or if you mean "G'day" and "Bonza, mate", we call that Strine.
Charles Strine died in 1907.
Charles Strine was born in 1867.
Leroy Strine was born in 1915, in Maryland, USA.
Australians usually just refer to language as 'language'. However, one Australian term for language is lingo.The general term for Australian slang is "strine", but it is rarely used anymore.
Australian English
J. J. Strine has written: 'Personal marriage records of Reverend J.J. Strine, 1815-1870' -- subject(s): Archives, Genealogy, Lutherans, Marriage records, Registers
There is no specific Australian slang for language, other than "Lingo" perhaps. Australians sometimes refer to their own slang language as "Strine", being an extremely corrupted pronunciation of "Australian". "Strine" was once described by a very English Brit as "holding a cigarette between your lips and speaking while moving your lips as little as possible". Nobody but an Australian born and bred person who was brought up within the strict character defining and educational influences of Uncle Harry and Aunty Beryl from the family farm at Tangambalanga, would be able to speak Strine convincingly, or understand it well enough if listening to an expert.
Colloquial Australian is known as "Strine" by some. It is not slang, it is just the Australian drawl butchering the English language. To say "Have a good weekend" comes out as - "Ava-good-wee-gend" in Strine (no pauses).
Afferbeck Lauder has written: 'Nose tone unturned' 'Nose tone unturned: people, predicaments, [and] poems' -- subject(s): Australian wit and humor, Humor 'Let Stalk Strine / Nose Tone Unturned' 'Let stalk strine'