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Speaking Our Language: The Story of Australian English

Front Cover
2 Reviews
Oxford University Press Australia & New Zealand, 2008 - Language Arts & Disciplines - 225 pages
For the first time ever the story of Australian English is about to be told in full. As part of our Centenary celebrations Oxford University Press Australia is proud to be publishing this significant contribution to the national landscape.
Speaking our Language is written for people who want to know where Australian English came from, what the forces were that molded it, why it takes its present form, and where it is going. The subtitle of this book, The Story of Australian English, derives in part from the chronological story that the book traces: the story begins with Joseph Banks and Captain James Cook collecting indigenous words such as kangaroo and quoll in northern Queensland in 1770, and it continues from there right up to the present day, when Australian English is firmly established as the natural and national language of Australia. It is a 'story' in another sense as well: the story of development of Australian English is inextricably intertwined with the stories of Australian history and culture, and of the development of Australian identity. Of all the markers of identity, language is by far the most significant. This language we speak, and which gives voice to our Australian English is central to the process of giving voice to our Australian identity: in important ways, we are what we speak, and we are how we speak.
Speaking our Language grew out of the research of the Australian National Dictionary Centre (ANDC) at the Australain National University. The Centre is named after the Australian National Dictionary, which was first published in 1988, and which includes some 10,000 Australian words. The Centre is now busy finalizing a second edition of the Australian National Dictionary, and expects to add about 4500 new words and meanings.

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Review: Speaking Our Language: The Story of Australian English

User Review  - C. - Goodreads

Quite interesting. But some rather odd inclusions and exclusions: an anecdote about a burlesque performer at the beginning of the chapter on the Gold Rush that seemed to be totally unrelated to ... Read full review

Review: Speaking Our Language: The Story of Australian English

User Review  - Ann-Marie - Goodreads

This is quite a fascinating history of Australian English and its formation from the early white occupation of the country to present day. I confess that my interest rather waned during the recounting ... Read full review

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Contents

Chapter One Words from Indigenous Languages l
1
The Natural World
19
The Social World
39
Copyright

8 other sections not shown

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2008)

Dr Bruce Moore is Australia's foremost lexicographer and Director of the Australian National Dictionary Centre, Canberra

Bibliographic information