What do Aussies call flip flops?

In the USA a thong is a piece of underwear. In Australia, it's what they call flip-flops. Sometimes they also call them "double-pluggers".
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What is a flip flop called in Australia?

The shoe known in Australia as a “thong” is one of the oldest styles of footwear in the world.
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What do Aussies call a thong?

The undergarment is usually called a g-string (or colloquially, bum floss) in Australia, however, due to U.S. influences in Australia the word thong is now also used.
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Why do Aussies call them thongs?

Rather than a form of fashion whimsy, Australians take their thongs seriously. Even the naming of them — after the structural make-up of the shoe's fastening rather than the onomatopoeic "flip flop" used by other countries — flies in the face of the Australian preference for shortened diminutives and nicknames.
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What do Aussie call sandals?

"The Australians call them 'thongs', a word which in New Zealand refers to an item of ladies' underwear," said Mr Cryer. In Newzild, he explained, flip-flops are known as "jandals".
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ENGLISH: AUSSIE vs BRITISH vs CANADIAN | Part III



What is a flip flop called in New Zealand?

They are called thongs (sometimes pluggers) in Australia, jandals (originally a trademarked name derived from "Japanese sandals") in New Zealand, slops or “plakkies” in South Africa and Zimbabwe, and tsinelas in the Philippines (or, in some Visayan localities, "smagol", from the word smuggled).
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Why do Kiwis call thongs jandals?

"That's why they are called jandals – it's short for Japanese Sandals." Mrs Harre says Anthony, who lives overseas, sold the business some years ago and the story is part of her family history.
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What do Aussies call Brits?

The terms Pommy, Pommie and Pom, in Australia, South Africa and New Zealand usually denotes a British person.
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What does I'm cactus mean?

defeated. Hence, CACTUS, in Australian slang, means: beaten, finished, ruined, kaput etc. e.g. Jim threw just two punches, and Jack was cactus.
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What is the most common Australian slang?

Here's a list of the 25 most common Australian slang words:
  • See ya this arvo - See you this afternoon.
  • Being dacked – When someone pulls your pants down.
  • Give a wedgie – When someone pulls your pants up your bum.
  • Dunny - toilet, bathroom – D'ya know where the dunny is, mate?
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What are pluggers in Australia?

a pair of thongs (footwear) with only one plug under the foot to hold the footwear together: you just blew the back out of my pluggers.
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What does the Australian slang word hooroo mean?

Hooroo = Goodbye

The Australian slang for goodbye is Hooroo and sometimes they even Cheerio like British people.
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What is a rubber in Australia?

Every Australian knows a rubber is a small stationery item used to correct pencil mistakes, and is more formally known as an eraser.
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What do Aussies call sandwiches?

The word 'sanga' is Aussie slang for a sandwich; not sure when or how the letter 'g' became involved, although one can assume it was adopted from the common mispronunciation of sandwich as 'sangwich.
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What is a Billy in Australian slang?

The billy is an Australian term for a metal container used for boiling water, making tea or cooking over a fire. By the end of the 19th century the billy had become as natural, widespread and symbolic of bush life as the gum tree, the kangaroo and the wattle.
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What do Australians say when drinking?

Plonk, chardy and the goon of fortune

Plonk is perhaps Australia's best-known word for alcohol.
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Why do Australians swear so much?

It's in politics. It's in daily public discourse. “That is something that is typically Australian that you wouldn't find in other English-speaking countries. So it's just more the attitude towards public swearing is more relaxed and more accepted.
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What does whinging pom mean?

The Winjin' Pom (the name is a pun on the "whinging pom", an Aussie expression used to refer to a person of British origin who constantly complains about things he has to face) caravan is famous not only for talking but also for flying, something which occurs several episodes in after a hijack by The Crows.
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What is POM slang for?

A clipping of pomegranate. In reference to the British, first attested in Australia in 1912 as rhyming slang for immigrant with additional reference to the likelihood of sunburn turning their skin pomegranate red. As a cocktail, originally American.
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Why do Kiwis say Chur?

The meaning of chur is essentially thank you. You can use this classic Kiwi slang to show gratitude or appreciation. As explained above, it can also mean "sweet as" or "that's awesome". As in: "I'll help you change your flat tyre." "Chur, bro."
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What is a thong called in New Zealand?

In New Zealand, thongs (the footwear) are called Jandals from a local patent or Flip-Flops as in the UK. Whereas New Zealanders use the word “thong” for a certain type of minimalistic underwear. So if you in New Zealand ask for “a thong” they will give you underwear, not shoes.
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Why do Australians call English whinging Poms?

“Whinging poms” is just part of the vernacular. The most common explanation is that it's a reference to Australia's past as a convict colony. “Pom” is supposedly a bastardised acronym, meaning “prisoner of Mother England” or “prisoner of Her Majesty”.
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What are flip-flops called in UK?

Well, we called them slippers. They were probably not known in the UK then. Thong would still have been available, I suppose.
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What are flip-flops called in Hawaii?

Here in Hawaii, we don't call them flip-flops, thongs, zoris or jandals. No, they're slippers, or slippahs. We wear them at all times and for every occasion. Whether we're headed out to a fancy dinner, around the corner to the grocery store, or to the beach, slippers are usually on our feet.
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Why are flip-flops called jandals?

4 October 1957

Inspired by footwear he had seen in Japan, businessman Morris Yock and his son Anthony began manufacturing this simple rubber footwear in their garage in 1957. The name 'jandal' combined the words 'Japanese' and 'sandal'.
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