Strine
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From a pronunciation spelling of Australian spoken with this accent. Coined by “Afferbeck Lauder” (Alastair Ardoch Morrison) and popularised with his 1965 book Let Stalk Strine. Australian from 1965.
Pronunciation
- (General Australian) IPA(key): /stɹɑen/Category:English 1-syllable words#STRINECategory:English terms with IPA pronunciation#STRINE
- (UK) IPA(key): /stɹaɪn/Category:English 1-syllable words#STRINECategory:English terms with IPA pronunciation#STRINE
- Rhymes: -aɪnCategory:Rhymes:English/aɪn#STRINECategory:Rhymes:English/aɪn/1 syllable#STRINE
Noun
Strine (plural Strines)Category:English lemmas#STRINECategory:English nouns#STRINECategory:English countable nouns#STRINECategory:English entries with incorrect language header#STRINECategory:Pages with entries#STRINECategory:Pages with 1 entry#STRINE
- (informalCategory:English informal terms#STRINE, humorousCategory:English humorous terms#STRINE) An Australian.
- 2025, Lynne Tillman, Thrilled to Death: Selected Stories, page 220:
- The Strines I met were fierce about having a good time […]Category:English terms with quotations#STRINE
Proper noun
StrineCategory:English lemmas#STRINECategory:English proper nouns#STRINECategory:English uncountable nouns#STRINECategory:English entries with incorrect language header#STRINECategory:Pages with entries#STRINECategory:Pages with 1 entry#STRINE
- (AustraliaCategory:Australian English#STRINE, New ZealandCategory:New Zealand English#STRINE, UKCategory:British English#STRINE, informalCategory:English informal terms#STRINE, humorousCategory:English humorous terms#STRINE) Broad Australian English.
- 1982, J. C. Wells, Accents of English, volume 3: Beyond the British Isles, page 595:
- Several Strine forms depend on an assumed equivalence between Strine fortis consonants and Cultivated/RP lenis ones, thus garbler mince (couple of minutes), egg jelly (actually). It is doubtful whether this reflects any real phonetic difference.Category:English terms with quotations#STRINE
- 1989 July 8, “Ariadne”, in New Scientist, page 120:
- A TEAM at Griffith University in Brisbane is working on the development of what the university’s newspaper calls a bionic snorter. Translating into English from Strine, this is a bionic hooter, conk, bugle or nose.Category:English terms with quotations#STRINE
- 1992, Gillian Bottomley, From Another Place: Migration and the Politics of Culture, published 2009, page 133:
- Dell’Oso describes the encounter of an Asian woman with a surly bus driver whose only language is Strine (a form of Australian English, barely intelligible to many of the native-speakers).Category:English terms with quotations#STRINE
Coordinate terms
Related terms
See also
Anagrams
- estrin, Estrin, inerts, insert, Insert, inters, niters, nitres, retins, sinter, Stiner, terins, Tiners, triens, trines, Trines
