Category:

South-east European culture

Bulgaria

Big Bulgarian wedding – no! Big Bulgarian graduation ball – da!

Graduates in their glad rags posing on horses in central Sofia, Bulgaria

Bulgaria, and the Balkans as a whole, have survived yet another gruelling graduation season. Chestito! That was yet another hard slog.

Every year at the end of the academic year in the Balkans, which is around the end of May, the whole region becomes focused on one thing – high school graduations. Convoys of rented luxury cars clog city thoroughfares, teenagers in fancy suits and sequined gowns emulating celebrities parade through city and town centres, restaurants and reception centres host all-night celebrations, professional photographers and (Roma) musicians work overtime… and lots of money (that everyone claims not to have) is spent.

Plus, as it’s 2026, there’s also plenty of social media and tabloid footage and commentary, ranging from pride to snickering, often to do with the excess it has become. Let’s have a look of it here and you can judge for yourself. All of these are images and clips from graduation celebrations in Bulgaria this year… (care of the X profile Една българка)

The red carpet awaits! The usual parade of the graduates through the town centre on their way to the prom ball. But before they get to this, you need to make a splash of sorts. Cue the car parade to rival Dubai!

Note this clip is not in a big city such as Sofia or Plovdiv but in the provincial town of Kardzhali in Bulgaria’s south.

But turning up in a flashy car has soooo been done. So every year, the transport options to the parade become… erm… more inventive…

And how about this?

Social media influencers use this opportunity to the max, with this one gaining particular attention this year for his entrance…

and for his, well, dancing…

While such celebrations can be found all over the Balkans, it’s in Bulgaria where there has been the greatest fundamental shift affecting, or effected by, economics and the changing social environment in the country.

Traditionally, June heralds the transition into another season: weddings. But increasingly, the wedding season pales in comparison.

For much of the past decade, Bulgarian graduation celebrations have become bigger, louder and more emotionally significant, while weddings have quietly shrunk… or disappeared altogether. The “big fat Bulgarian wedding” still exists, but it’s no longer the social default. Many young couples now opt for small civil ceremonies, minimalist receptions or (clutch pearls!) simply never marry at all.

And nowhere is this transformation clearer than within my own Bulgarian family.

The era of the big Bulgarian wedding

The first out of my Bulgarian cousins to marry was in 1989 in the final summer of Communist Party rule (no-one could predict that daddy Zhivkov would be gone by the end of that year). OK, it was a shotgun wedding – everyone in the village knew that – but that was the socially conservative code at the time, for it was otherwise shameful on the family to have a daughter who was pregnant and not have the father marry her. Photos arrived in Australia showing the entire extended family gathered outside the “Ritual Palace” as they were known in communist Bulgaria at the closest town near their village, for the obligatory civil marriage ceremony, where both comrades pledged their matrimony in loyalty to the party and state. Everyone was there: grandparents… well, minus our grandfather, who had been in exile in Australia for forty years and would’ve faced imminent arrest and time and certain death in a prison camp had he attempted to return; all the cousins, neighbours, family friends… and the whole village. The clothing they all wore smacked of poor quality, indicative of the dire state of Bulgaria’s planned economy, but the event itself was a big social event and a brief respite of joy in what otherwise was borrowed time.

The second out of my Bulgarian cousins to marry did so in 1992. Her husband was 33 — considered unusually, even scandalously, late for marriage at the time. Bulgaria was deep into its chaotic post-communist “transition” by then, and weddings had become fascinating hybrids of old traditions and newly recovered freedoms. There was now a church ceremony after the civil one, something discouraged and subject to repercussions (particularly on career advancement) under atheistic communism. The wedding was professionally videotaped, another novelty of the era. Again, the entire extended family was in attendance.

Then came the wedding of another cousin in 1994.

This one was truly big!

Again, we received a VHS tape of the entire event. There was the traditional procession from the groom’s house to the bride’s, accompanied by Roma brass musicians. But the reception itself was pure 1990s Bulgaria: the band played almost entirely chalga, the newly dominant Balkan pop-folk genre that exploded during the post-communist years, and the fashions were… of its time.

In honour of our absent grandfather in Australia, the musicians also performed several patriotic songs associated with the Macedonian independence movement a few years earlier in the dying days of Yugoslavia. These songs advocated a separate Macedonian identity, a major sticking point to this day in Bulgaria. One relative, who had lived during the time when the local Bulgarian authorities had taken violent measures to combat such sentiment, felt compelled to go on stage, grab the microphone and publicly reassure everyone that Macedonia “was, is and always will be Bulgarian”.

Again, the whole extended family was there.

As it turned out, that was the last time.

Above: clip of a Bulgarian wedding in 2010. Note how much smaller an event it is compared to the 1990 clip before.

The weddings that never happened

Fast forward to the 2010s.

Those same cousins who married in the 1990s now have adult children of their own, and without thinking, we expected this generation to continue the tradition for big weddings. Importantly, my relatives don’t live in big cities such as cosmopolitan Sofia or Plovdiv, but are clustered around two provincial towns – one being best described as a depressed post-industrial apocalypse located in one of the most polluted areas in the entire EU, and the other quite quaintly isolated in one of Bulgaria’s most socially conservative and yet ethnically diverse regions, where the population is roughly split evenly between Orthodox Christians and Muslims.

Yet something fundamental had changed.

The first sign came when I saw a Facebook photo of the eldest daughter of the cousin who married first. The daughter (who happens to be a redhead – yes, they exist in the Balkans) standing in a brilliant blue dress beside a man in a suit, while two Roma zurna musicians serenaded them.

I contacted her mother to ask what had happened.

It turned out the couple had already been living together for some time. Now that she was pregnant, the families had hurriedly organised a small engagement party involving only immediate relatives. Like mother, like daughter then.

Several things about this were once unthinkable.

First, engagement parties were not traditionally a thing. Historically, engagements were often followed by big weddings within weeks.

Second: she had been openly cohabiting with her boyfriend before marriage.

“How was that allowed?” I asked.

My cousin rolled her eyes. “That’s what young people do these days.”

Only a few years earlier, this would have been treated as scandalous. Now it was accepted with weary resignation.

Naturally, my family in Australia had been waiting eagerly for news of a big wedding so we could finally attend one of those enormous Bulgarian celebrations we had seen on the VHS tapes they sent to us in the 1990s.

But that big fat Bulgarian wedding never came.

The couple eventually formalised the relationship with a simple civil ceremony and nothing more. To add further shock, my second cousin did not even take her husband’s surname.

This is happening in provincial Bulgaria!

Has this world gone mad?

At first, my whole family assumed this was an exception… but by 2026, it had become clear that it was the new normal.

The daughter of another cousin met a guy while studying in Sofia. He, like her, also came from a provincial Bulgarian town. The young lovers soon moved in together, finished their studies, found work in the same government department, had twins… and more than a decade later still remain unmarried.

Another cousin’s daughter also moved in with her boyfriend shortly after meeting him. They later had a child together, followed eventually by a small civil ceremony attended only by immediate family and close friends.

Another cousin’s son, now 33 – exactly the same age his father was when he married, has been with his girlfriend for seven years. When I asked earlier this month whether there might finally be a wedding, the answer was simple:

“No.”

Why Bulgaria stopped having big weddings

The reasons are predominantly economic.

For decades, Bulgarian families saved for years to finance enormous weddings. In provincial communities especially, weddings were public performances of family respectability. Everyone judged everyone else. A large wedding demonstrated status, stability and social belonging.

But younger Bulgarians increasingly see things differently.

Today, many couples know they themselves, and not their parents, will ultimately pay the bill. After decades of economic insecurity since 1989, many simply choose not to spend tens of thousands on a single day.

At the same time, Bulgarian society has become more accepting of cohabitation. Couples living together outside marriage, once deeply frowned upon, are now commonplace even in conservative regions.

Smaller weddings also better fit the urbanised lifestyle most Bulgarians now lead. What once was solely a Sofia, Plovdiv or Varna thing has spread nationwide. If weddings happen at all, they are often intimate affairs of 50–100 guests, focused on close friends rather than sprawling extended kin networks.

Large banquet halls are increasingly replaced by restaurants, boutique venues or, for those with the means, destination ceremonies.

The stereotype of the gigantic Balkan wedding survives partly because older generations still remember a different social reality.

Historically, rural extended families lived close together. Under communism, rapid industrialisation scattered relatives across the country, turning weddings into rare opportunities for family reunions. But now, with roughly a third of Bulgarians living abroad, gathering everyone together has become vastly more difficult.

Older Bulgarians often lament this shift bitterly. “We knew who were our second cousins, but now people don’t even speak to their siblings.”

I have to emphasise again that’s it’s wrong to say that there are no more “big” weddings in Bulgaria – they certainly still exist, but they’re not the standard anymore.

The dreaded Bulgarian “gishe”, where bureaucracy declares war on your very being.

The bureaucracy doesn’t help

Like so much of Bulgarian life, marriage too is somewhat unnecessarily over-bureaucratic.

At a minimum, couples are required to provide the local municipality identity documents, civil marriage declarations, premarital medical certificates (Bulgarian bureaucracy loves these!), proof of payment for municipal fees…

If previously married, additional divorce or death certificates are required.

And because this is Bulgaria, municipal officials often request further paperwork of wildly varying relevance depending on mood, office or municipality.

The costs for all these documents do add up, not to mention the “joy” of dealing with Bulgarian public officials through the little openings of their counters and their arbitrary and countless coffee and smoke breaks. So why bother with this hassle!

So when are you having babies?

The other big pressure that Bulgarian couples face is to have babies. There is a saying said at Balkan weddings that there’ll be a christening in a year’s time, so when you get married, you’re expected to provide your parents with grandchildren post-haste. With many young couples either unable to afford a new child or having other priorities in life, a loophole has been found. In a situation also found in other socially conservative and traditionally family-oriented societies, engagement periods now last for years – just like that of my cousin’s son and his seven-year relationship. Italians and Greeks know about this, and now with the taboo of pre-marriage cohabitation gone, it has also come to the Balkans. But there’s only so much time the wider family, or even one of the people making the couple can put up with this limbo period. A confrontation is almost inevitable, and the light-hearted backhands turn into outright shade. The most extreme example of this was when couples like this used to appear trash TV shows such as on Greece’s Erotodikeio in the 1990s, where parents would confront long-term engaged children embarrassing them nationally by telling them that the clock is ticking – what are they waiting for?

But having children is essentially a vote of optimism for the future… and for many in Bulgaria who have only known of economic turmoil, there’s very little incentive to bring a new mouth to feed into their chaotic world. Bulgaria’s population has been rapidly declining, going from 9 million in 1990 to now barely over 6 million. And with fertility rates so low, plus with an ageing population and still mass migration, the predictions are catastrophic.

The new great Bulgarian celebration

But economics and bureaucracy alone do not explain the decline of weddings.

The deeper reason is that weddings are no longer the most emotionally significant rite of passage in Bulgarian life. Given that many Bulgarians are not under obligation, as dictated by the judging eyes of the neighbours, to live with their parents until marriage and then become fully fledged, independent-ish adults, there’s been another ceremony that has taken that role…

High school graduation.

This transformation has deep historical roots.

Graduation photos from communist Bulgaria: 1974 (top) and 1989 (bottom).

When the communist regime took power in 1944, Bulgaria was overwhelmingly rural and poorly educated. According to the 1934 census, fewer than 3 per cent of Bulgarians had completed secondary education. However, under communism, mass literacy campaigns and universal schooling transformed society within a generation.

For most Bulgarian (and Balkan) families, having a child graduate from high school, let alone attend university, represented unprecedented social advancement. Graduation therefore had enormous symbolic importance.

Today, that symbolism has only intensified.

For many young Bulgarians, graduation now also marks the moment they leave home: usually moving to the big cities such as Sofia, Plovdiv or Varna, or even abroad, for university or work. Emotionally, it now carries much of the weight weddings once did.

And so, Bulgarian graduations are the new weddings, with just as an elaborate, and highly expensive, celebration culture to go with it.

The Abiturientski Bal

The centrepiece is the abiturientski bal — the graduation ball aka prom.

Held after final exams in May, it marks the completion of 12th grade and has evolved into one of the biggest social events in the Bulgarian calendar.

Students wear fancy suits and extravagant gowns, often emulating the chalga stars or celebrities they admire. We are rivalling the Met Gala here! Hair and makeup are professionally done. As seen in the videos above, luxury cars, limousines, retro vehicles, sports cars and, as has been a trend showing on the socials, semi-trailers complete with Roma musicians, are rented for ever dramatic arrivals. The whole town will gather outside of schools and squares to greet the graduates as they parade through before they’re greeted by the obligatory red carpet leading them into the restaurant, hotel or hall where all-night celebrations await. Oh, and the graduate chant is counting up to 12 to signify completing 12 years of schooling, with chalga songs to go with it.

There are speeches, dancing, DJs, live music, drinking, endless photography, and traditions such as everyone staying up and gathering to see the post-party sunrise.

Unlike the relatively modest prom traditions of many countries, Bulgarian graduation season can stretch across multiple days. There are separate celebrations with classmates, friends and family; elaborate professional photo sessions for the school album, often featuring multiple costume changes; farewell ceremonies for teachers (bring out the bouquets and guitar!); school rituals and processions, originating from communist-era ceremonies though now stripped of their ideology; and post-prom holidays abroad or on the Black Sea coast.

The season also overlaps with 24 May celebrations honouring Saints Cyril and Methodius, linking graduation directly to Bulgarian national identity, literacy and culture, so there’s a nationalist element to it.

In effect, the graduation ball has become something larger than a school event. It also transcends any ethnic or religious differences, becoming a ceremony and experience shared by everyone in Bulgaria.

It is now the great public performance of entering adulthood.

Graduation as status performance

The irony is striking.

Communism unintentionally created the cultural conditions for this shift. By massively expanding education, the socialist state transformed high school graduation into a profound marker of upward mobility.

Post-communist consumer culture then amplified it.

Today, families who would never spend lavishly on a wedding may spend extraordinary amounts on a child’s graduation. Professional photographers, designer dresses, imported suits, luxury vehicles, drone videography, post-prom trips to the Black Sea coast and even abroad (Greece and Turkey being the most popular destinations) are not options but all mandatory… and this all adds up. One statistic going around the net at the moment is that the average monthly Bulgarian wage is 720 euros, and yet the average spend on graduation celebrations per graduate is 1680 euros… which I personally, and many others, think is a gross underestimate.

In many ways, graduation celebrations now perform the social function weddings once did: they gather extended families, publicly display status, create community spectacle, provide one final collective ritual before dispersal and, above all, mark the start of true adulthood.

The difference is that weddings once celebrated the creation of a new family unit. Graduation balls celebrate the collective departure of the community’s 18-year-olds into an uncertain modern world. Perhaps, that says everything about contemporary Bulgaria – this is now the prime rite of passage for Bulgarians.

But then again, you have this couple who combined their graduation ceremony with a wedding proposal….

Wishing all of our graduates all the success in the world!

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Nick Nasev smiling

Hi, zdravo, bok, zdravei, g'day! I’m Nick Nasev, an Aussie of Balkan background living in the UK. I’ve been a translator and editor for 20+ years. If you have an interest in languages and all things Balkan, Eastern European, Australian and beyond, along with a dash of corny and irony, then stick with me as I rant about my experiences and stories.

Your text deserves to be taken seriously; have it translated and edited with confidence.

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Why are Aussies so good at swimming?

To get away from the sharks! Nah, it's more than that.

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The [enter place name] Olympics are going to be a disaster...

Or perhaps not. It wouldn't be an Olympics if there wasn't impending doom. But how has it actually turned out?

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Who's gonna win: Sunderland or Newcastle? Fancy a Democracy Sausage? Or take a ride on the "Bulgarian Train"

Vote-count competitions between rival cities? How a mundane sausage in generic white bread is the epitome of mass democratic participation in Australia. And why a Bulgarian train is not a train. The weird world of election traditions.

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Pets on public transport: yes or no? 👍👎

Australians adore pets... but not on public transport. How come?

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Accadacca at 50!

One of the world's biggest ever rock bands has turned 50!

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Australian English: "We're de factos!"

Many Australians are in "de facto relationships". What are these and how do they differ from marriage?

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Burger King vs Hungry Jacks. Is there a difference?

Is Burger King the drama? How come there's no Burger King in Australia but you can still get a Whopper? A story of how a technicality turned an alternative brand into a part of local Australian identity, and how that was almost usurped.

Read more

Poor Gina...

The lady doth protest too much, methinks. Australia's richest woman, mining magnate Gina Rinehart got more than what she bargained for when she wanted a portrait of her taken down. And how does wine figure into this too?

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ABBA can thank Australia for the music!

50 years after ABBA won the Eurovision Song Content, it was Australia that set the tone for ABBA's fortunes over the decades. This is their Australian story.

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Australian etiquette: the Outback Driving Wave

It’s all about being friendly when driving out in “woop woop” (the middle of nowhere) in Australia. A definite must-do!

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Homonyms maketh the sentence…

How do you say in Bosnian, Croatian, Montenegrin or Serbian this: “Up there, the mountains burn worse”?👉 Gore gore gore gore.

Read more

So what are Fantales?

They are chocolate-covered chewy caramels 🍬 that were often so hard to bite into that they kept many dentists in business 🦷. Nothing particularly unique so far, you might think.

Read more

Happy 50th anniversary to the Adelaide Festival Centre!

🎉 50 years ago today, the Adelaide Festival Centre, the premier performing and visual arts venue and precinct in Adelaide, Australia, opened. The centre to this day remains one of the symbols of Adelaide. 🇦🇺

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How come Australia is at Eurovision? It’s actually a perfect marketing opportunity…

Time to get out the sequins and huge props. The world’s most watched non-sports TV show is on, the Eurovision Song Contest 🎤. Tonight is the second semi-final, with 16 acts from Europe… and Australia.

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Vale Barry Humphries!

Last Saturday Australian 🇦🇺 🎭 comedy legend Barry Humphries passed away aged 89.

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Australian English: "You can find the Doonas in Manchester”

Now this might sound a bit random but this is something you’ll hear all the time, in all places, in department stores in Australia. How come?

Read more

Eshays and Adlays: Australia’s answer to London’s Roadmen

Eshays and Adlays: the latest bunch of Pig-Latin-speaking, Nike-wearing young bogans (vilified poor working-class people) to cause massive moral panic in Australia 🇦🇺

Read more

Move over Easter Bunny 🐇 … make way for the Easter Bilby! 🪃

Bunnies are considered cute and loveable… except in Australia 🇦🇺, where they’re a major scourge🤬.

Read more

The time when George Bush Senior figuratively told the Aussies where to go…

Have you unwittingly done a hand gesture that meant something completely different in another country? Here’s a true story…

Read more

Australian English: Calisthenics

Calisthenics is a form of body strength training worldwide. Not in Australia though, where "calisthenics" has a completely different meaning.

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International Women’s Day (IWD). A day of campaigning ♀ … or a day to buy flowers 💐

🪃 In Australia, IWD is a day of campaigning and awareness, elements that are much closer to the day’s original purpose of bringing mainstream attention to issues affecting women.

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Australian English: BOM

Australia's weather bureau thought it had a branding problem with its explosive acronym. How solving it bombed when Aussies had their say about it.

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What is one of Australia's iconic sounds?

No, it's nothing to do with an animal call. It's a sound that international music stars have even sampled...

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Australian English: '-or' vs '-our'

"But '-or' spellings are American?" has said many an Aussie. But are they really? Not exactly. Find out how and where there are exceptions to the rule in Australian English.

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Why Australian media give warnings of deceased Indigenous people?

The recent case of Kumajayi Little Baby shows how Australian media handle indigenous mourning protocols. Here are the details and background to them.

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Australian English: Anzac Day

Parades, dawn services, two-up, biscuits... What you need to know about Australia (and New Zealand's) veteran's day. Plus, why the day is more important to some Aussies than others.

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Australian English: Easter and shops

What's open and what's not this Easter in Australia...Time to give a real-life example of Australian English.

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Australian English: pokies

Found in most pubs, clubs and casinos throughout Australia, the pokies are an important feature of Australian social culture. But what are they? Find out here...

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You fetta believe it! Australian feta, parmesan and prosecco remain.

Feta or white cheese? Prosecco or sparkling wine? How will the new EU-Australia free-trade agreement (not) affect the terms Aussies use for certain products

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Australian English: farewell and vale

No, I'm not leaving here. Linguistically, Australians actually have unique ways of bidding farewell to someone who's going for a long time... or forever.

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Australian English: to farewell

Yet another unexpected Australian-ism I and an internet superstar recently discovered...

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Australian English: demo

Aussies love shortening words and ending cutesy endings to them. But what happens when the same shortened word could mean multiple things?

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Australians laughing at ChatGPT's US English default when Aussies use it

If Australia's answer to the Onion is making fun of how AI uses US English as a default, then that means Aussies notice when you're using it in your text and copy. But there's a solution to this...

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How you can tell that an Australian wrote English text... without being told?

Are your international customers getting your message? Are you aware that some of the words, phrases and terms you use could have no or a different meaning elsewhere. That's where you need your copy and text reviewed for your target audience.

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Australian English: pay out

Yet another quirky Aussie phrasal verb that has a completely different meaning to what you'd think

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Christmas in Australia: ho ho ho in the summer heat!

Christmas in the long hot days of summer? Yes, that's the case in Australia. Here's a rundown of how Aussies do Chrissie...

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Australian English: If you drink, then drive, you're a bloody idiot!

Where did this classic Aussie saying come from and how did it change Australia dramatically...

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Australian English: regional

You start your application to migrate to Australia and then you come across all these references to "regional". What does this term mean specifically in Australia? All explained here.

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Australian English: bushwalking

A bushwalk, tramp or hike? They all mean the same thing, just they're country-dependent. Which countries?

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Australian English: Ugg boots

The whole world seems it can't get enough of Australia's own Ugg boots. But do you know Aussies (and Kiwis) follow a strict rule when it comes to the fleecy footwear?

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So what's the latest with Australian English?

Back from my Aussie trip. Here are some things about Aussie English I discovered this time.

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Australian English: Abbo

Australian English loves shortening words and names and banging an '-ie' or '-o' at the end. But you need to be careful when to do it, as this case shows...

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So I go all the way to Australia to do this...

Off to the beach? Avoid the snakes and sharks? No... something completely different but expected from me.

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Australian English: donga

Dongas come in many sizes and are often found Down Under in the outback. What's an Australian donga and the disputed origin of the term...

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Australian English: FIFO, DIDO and BIBO

Three work-related Australian acronyms heard very often throughout the country. Do you know what they mean? And what work is associated with them?

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Australian English: quenda vs qanda

Quenda or qanda? These two uniquely Australian terms may sound the same but refer to two very different things. Find out more here...

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September is not when school starts in Australia...

When targeting your copy and text for Australia, you also need to take into account that our calendar is different.

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Australian English: thongs

Aussies love wearing thongs outdoors. But does "thongs" mean the same in Australia as it does in other countries? Find out here...

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Australian English: showbag

Find out more about this uniquely Australian item, much loved by Aussie kids and adults through the decades, and how come it's an essential part of any ongoing marketing campaign for many products and brands in Australia.

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Australian English: VP Day

Even historic international events can have different names in Australia, such as the victory in World War II.

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Australian English: programme vs program

Which one is the accepted spelling in Australia? You might be surprised at the answer!

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Neighbours' greatest con and contribution to the world...

Do you know what the biggest thing the long-running Australian TV series Neighbours brought to the world? And why did the soap show a rather skewed image of Australian suburbia?

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Australian English: shopping centre vs mall

Are these terms the same in Australia? Well, it depends, but it comes with a major warning. And what's the generic trademark some Aussies use instead?

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How did I get to know about Australian English?

What can I say? How I learnt what makes Australian English what it is by simple communication and more. And what are the two things most native English speakers don't realise?

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Australian English: working bee, op shop, street directory

The last round of unique Australian English terms that I've discovered by chance.

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If it's not on, it's not on

How an Australian 1990s safe sex slogan skillfully used the many meanings of a common colloquial phrasal verb to great effect. But would this work for an international audience?

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Is it Father's Day in Australia and New Zealand this Sunday?

Are you sure that Father's Day in Australia and New Zealand is in June?

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To feta or white cheese it, that's the question

Trade negotiations between the EU and Australia fell through over the names of cheeses and wines, of all things. But will a restart of negotiations bring about a breakthrough? And what product name should you use for the Australian market?

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Australian English: abroad vs overseas

There are a number of seemingly ordinary English words that can get Aussies thinking 'that's not right'. Here's the case with one...?

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Australian English: So what happened to all those Covid-related slang words?

Rona, RAT, quazza... remembering the now-lost Aussie slang of the early 2020s Covid pandemic

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Australian English: smoko, bludge, chuck a sickie

Bludging on a smoko as if you've chucked a sickie? Welcome to work-related Australian English vocab about not working!

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Australian English: wag

No, it's not what you might think. A classic case of an Australian English term going from slang to accepted formal speech

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Australian English: little boys

Get the tomato sauce out, we're having little boys! But what does this term mean for some Aussies?

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Australian English: biscuit... and the 'c' word!

Aussies love their biscuits, but call them by the 'c' word can even get you fined! What word is this?

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Chinwag Tuesday podcast with Amanda Boyne

Want to hear how I speak in Australian English with another Australian English specialist? Here's your chance

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Australian English: Sharpies and Textas (texters)

You can tell how old an Australian is by asking what these terms mean, and what does this have to do with Australia's only ever truly local youth sub-culture?

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Australian English: your Australian election vocab list

Liberal, teal, electorate, corflute, democracy sausage... Here's your indispensable guide to Australian election terminology

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Australian English: on your L's and P's

Do you know what "she's on her P's" means? It's something all Australians understand. And how does this relate to a term that's different in most English-dominant countries?

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Australian English: tap, tag or touch?

How do you describe using a payment card to use public transport in Australia? It depends where in Australia you are...

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Australian English: maths or math

Want to get Aussies angry? Ask this mathematical question...

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Australian English: village

Are there villages in Australia? Well, yes, but not how the rest of the world sees it. Find out what makes a village in Oz...

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Do I translate into Australian?

Many people are shocked when they find out I'm a translator, but their jaws drop even more when I tell them that I also 'translate' into Australian English.

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Australia Day/Invasion Day: the Lamb Ad!

Would you believe that one of the most anticipated events in the lead-up to Australia's national day on 26 January is... an ad about eating lamb! More about the vibe here...

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Anyone up for a 'Krizmoz parti'?

Do you know your Krizmoz from your Bozhik? How some Orthodox Christians in diaspora communities differentiate between the two Christmases.

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Australia and New Zealand do seasons a little differently...

Why wishing your clients, friends and relatives in Australia a happy start to summer on December 21st is not the way to do it...

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Australian English: peanut butter or peanut paste?

Tread carefully! The extraordinary story of this salty Australian regionalism and how it can ignite passions worthy of a civil war.

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Australian English: deffo, devo, defo...

Australian English is famous for its diminutives, i.e. shortened words. Do you know what these ones mean?

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Macquarie Dictionary's 2024 word of the year is...

Australia's prime source for all things Australian English has picked its word for 2024. And this time, I agree!

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Indian and Australian English... the links between them

India and Australia have common bonds that go beyond a passion for cricket. Here are a few words that Indian and Australian English uniquely share...

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What's the name of this famous Australian natural landmark?

One of Australia's most visited tourist sites has two official names, but Aussies almost exclusively use one of them. Do you know which one?

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Australian English: one for the Petrolheads!

Aussies love their cars, so here are a few car-related words for you...

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Can the "world's most accurate translator" do Australian English?

Does DeepL live up to its claim of being "the world's most accurate translator" when it comes to Aussie English? Get ready for some zingers!

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Australian English: is it email and/or e-mail?

Welcome to confusion with "email" in Australia. It's generational...

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Australian English: scull/skull, stinker, flow-on effect, rock up, slippery dip...

Here's the latest round up of some uniquely Aussie words to add to your vocabulary...

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Australian English, Olympics edition: "Boomers croak in medal tilt"

Do you get what is being said here? Unless you're Australian, it's not what you think...

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Australian (Olympics) English: battered sav, hello boys, crazy date, flat bags, goose...

How a comedy routine during the 2000 Sydney Olympics provided Australia with its own, very naughty, gymnastics lexicon!

Read more

Why are Aussies so good at swimming?

To get away from the sharks! Nah, it's more than that.

Read more

Australian English: "We're de factos!"

Many Australians are in "de facto relationships". What are these and how do they differ from marriage?

Read more

Burger King vs Hungry Jacks. Is there a difference?

Is Burger King the drama? How come there's no Burger King in Australia but you can still get a Whopper? A story of how a technicality turned an alternative brand into a part of local Australian identity, and how that was almost usurped.

Read more

Poor Gina...

The lady doth protest too much, methinks. Australia's richest woman, mining magnate Gina Rinehart got more than what she bargained for when she wanted a portrait of her taken down. And how does wine figure into this too?

Read more

Australian etiquette: the Outback Driving Wave

It’s all about being friendly when driving out in “woop woop” (the middle of nowhere) in Australia. A definite must-do!

Read more

Watch out for the killer squirrels! It’s “silly season”… or is that “cucumber season”?

Watch out for the killer squirrels! 🐿️ We’re very much in “silly season” right now in the UK 🤪

Read more

Three everyday words that exist in Australian English only!

Ask what’s most unique about Australian English 🪃, the answers usually are our accent and slang✔️. However, there are also a number of uniquely Australian English words in regular use, even in formal situations, that Australians are surprised to find are not used everywhere else in the English-speaking world (OK, sometimes also in New Zealand🥝, […]

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Watch out, here comes the Aussie version of The Office…

Are you a fan of the cult TV comedy show The Office?🕺And which version: the UK one 🇬🇧? The US one 🇺🇸? The French one 🇫🇷? The Indian one 🇮🇳 or any of the other 13 variants made? 📣 News in is that an Australian 🇦🇺 version of The Office will be hitting our screens […]

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So what are Fantales?

They are chocolate-covered chewy caramels 🍬 that were often so hard to bite into that they kept many dentists in business 🦷. Nothing particularly unique so far, you might think.

Read more

What’s a “bank holiday”? Do Aussies say that too?

Do Aussies have "bank holidays" like in the UK? Well, it's complicated

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Vale Barry Humphries!

Last Saturday Australian 🇦🇺 🎭 comedy legend Barry Humphries passed away aged 89.

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Australian English: "You can find the Doonas in Manchester”

Now this might sound a bit random but this is something you’ll hear all the time, in all places, in department stores in Australia. How come?

Read more

Eshays and Adlays: Australia’s answer to London’s Roadmen

Eshays and Adlays: the latest bunch of Pig-Latin-speaking, Nike-wearing young bogans (vilified poor working-class people) to cause massive moral panic in Australia 🇦🇺

Read more

Move over Easter Bunny 🐇 … make way for the Easter Bilby! 🪃

Bunnies are considered cute and loveable… except in Australia 🇦🇺, where they’re a major scourge🤬.

Read more

The time when George Bush Senior figuratively told the Aussies where to go…

Have you unwittingly done a hand gesture that meant something completely different in another country? Here’s a true story…

Read more

Australian English: Calisthenics

Calisthenics is a form of body strength training worldwide. Not in Australia though, where "calisthenics" has a completely different meaning.

Read more

Seachange, Treechange, E-change

Something Australian (but no way uniquely) today…Do you fancy an escape from the rat race and going for a seachange 🌊, treechange 🌳 or e-change 💻?

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Two years as a Chartered Linguist!

Two years ago I attained the highest qualification for translators, Chartered Linguist. And I'm the only one in the UK for the languages I work from.

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5 May – Macedonian Language Day

How come Macedonian Language Day is on 5 May, and what strict rule makes spoken Macedonian sound so distinct?

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Tales from ethnic radio (part 3)

What happens when our listeners can't understand what's supposed to be "their" language? The battle between standard languages and their dialects.

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Македонски јазик: Божик или Божиќ?

Секоја година пред празникот се појавува истата дилема: Која форма е „помакедонска“? Еве го одговорот базиран на истражувањата на проф. д-р Елка Јачева-Улчар.

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Merry Christmas vs Happy Holidays

Many in the Anglosphere have a strong opinion about what greeting to use now in December. But in the Balkans, the default has been "Happy Holidays" for decades. Here are the reasons why.

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When cheese is not simply cheese – kashkaval and sirene/sirenje

How come in some Balkan countries there is no simple word for "cheese"... and how two distinct types of cheese came to monopolise these markets.

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What does "region" mean to you?

"Region" has different meanings in different places. In the countries of ex-Yugoslavia, "region" means something very particular. Do you know what?

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Translation tip: what's with the scare marks?

It's the little things that can cause the biggest misunderstandings. Which one is very common in Balkan translations? Find out ere

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Up for a crazy coupon? How Bulgarians say they want to party...

Are you up for a crazy coupon where you're strutting your stuff on the "dancing"? Perhaps you're a "labour" or a "gender"? A sneak peak into some Bulgarian linguistic false friends

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Let me fix this for you...

Ever seen a notice or ad in a public place written so badly that you've wanted to grab a pen and make corrections? Well, someone did on a Croatian tram. Here's the story...

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Dua Lipa and her "pasosh"

After many decades of Yugoslav rule, Albanian spoken in Kosovo, Macedonia and Montenegro has some Serbo-Croatian words, but particularly in certain areas. Which ones? And why is this not unique?

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I'm like every other woman who works from 7 to 3...

Did Dolly get the words wrong here? No, in ex-Yugoslavia the average work day is a bit different. Find out why here...

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Are you into BCSM?

There once was one "Serbo-Croatian" but now there are four near-identical languages. Can we still use the term "Serbo-Croatian"? Well, it could cost you dearly...

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"Fellow Traveller Zhivkov"

Do you know your deficit from a kupon? Or are you up for joining a brigada? How many aspects and language from communist Bulgaria are still relevant today, but sometimes with a twist.

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Kumpir, the Balkans potato culinary gift to Türkiye

Or is it? On International Day of the Potato, let's look into one of Türkiye's most favourite street foods, and how the Balkans have the Austrians and Germans to thank for the apple, or pear, of the ground.

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24 May: Day of Slavic Literacy and Culture

Today commemorates the saints who brought literacy to the speakers of Slavic languages, and symbolises the shared roots of all Slavic nations and languages.

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Leo, Leon or Lav?

A new pope comes with a new name. But which is the correct one in languages other than English?

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"Filled up 50 years, entered my 51st year and now in my sixth decade"

The way you can refer to age in ex-Yugoslavia is different than in English – they have to make you a year and decade older!

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Can I do Hungarian?

That's quite a list of languages I translate from, but that doesn't mean I translate from every language in Eastern Europe, no matter how similar they may seem even in name...

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Kocani, Kočani or Kochani?

Some Macedonian linguistic pointers

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What's my 'mother language'?

International Mother Language Day and Global Language Advocacy Day are on! So what do I consider to be my 'mother languages' and why one of them is under threat...

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You know Latin, right?

The time when a person working for a translation company that bills itself to clients as an 'expert in languages' thought I knew Latin. Spoiler: I don't. So why did this happen and why does this have a link to Serbian? All revealed here.

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Slovenian, the odd one out

I translate into English from all Southern Slavic languages except one. Sorry, I can't do Slovenian. Here's my apology.

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Anyone up for a 'Krizmoz parti'?

Do you know your Krizmoz from your Bozhik? How some Orthodox Christians in diaspora communities differentiate between the two Christmases.

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Serbo-Croatian? Yes, I still work from it.

3 decades have passed since it officially ceased to exist but I still get requests to translate from Serbo-Croatian. How come?

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I'm now a full member of the Chartered Institute of Linguists of the UK!

Yet another accreditation...

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Hindi/Urdu and Balkan languages... the links between them

There are words that are the same in Hindi and Urdu as in Croatian and Romanian?! How can this be? Find out here...

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Can the "world's most accurate translator" do Australian English?

Does DeepL live up to its claim of being "the world's most accurate translator" when it comes to Aussie English? Get ready for some zingers!

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Why are there so many Turkish words in Balkan languages?

Let's see how Turkish has influenced the languages of the Balkans and further afield. Bujrum!

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False Friend Friday! Time for some Latin-based words

Where the translation gets undone because just because a word looks the same in another language, it doesn't necessarily means the same.

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Watch out for the killer squirrels! It’s “silly season”… or is that “cucumber season”?

Watch out for the killer squirrels! 🐿️ We’re very much in “silly season” right now in the UK 🤪

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Луд купон, the “crazy coupon” Bulgarian party

So who’s having a “crazy coupon” this weekend? 🎉 Wait!✋ A crazy coupon?🎟️😲 What’s that?

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Oldtajmer, evergrin, rekorder, golman… the world of Balkan pseudo-anglicisms

Did you hear about the man who collects “old-timers”? 👴🏽 Or that Frank Sinatra has many “evergreens”? 🌲

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Homonyms maketh the sentence…

How do you say in Bosnian, Croatian, Montenegrin or Serbian this: “Up there, the mountains burn worse”?👉 Gore gore gore gore.

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Naš jezik at Munich Airport

I’m about to fly off to Australia transiting through Munich Airport 🇩🇪 … so I’m preparing myself to be ready to speak in “naš jezik” (“our language”).

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Ramadan or Ramazan?

The Muslim holy month of Ramadan starts today, but how do you call the month? A case of local vs global of different circumstances

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Big Bulgarian wedding – no! Big Bulgarian graduation ball – da!

Why the tradition for big weddings in Bulgaria is no longer the case... and why graduation balls and festivities have taken their place.

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How the 1972 hajj brought smallpox to Yugoslavia... and how the country successfuly dealt with it

Socialist Yugoslavia always treated the Hajj and the participation of its citizens with care – they could come back with concepts that could bring the system down. But a Hajji in 1972 brought back something far more dangerous – a killer virus.

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Is Ricky Martin Montenegrin?

Who needs real evidence? Where the Balkan thing for bread and circuses, and claiming everyone and anyone as they're own, collide. Plus, I reveal Lady Gaga's alleged Balkan roots!

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Why there's no turbo folk/chalga at Eurovision

Disposable, easy pop with a local flavour and pleasing to the eye. You'd think turbo folk/chalga would be ideal for Eurovision, but you won't be seeing it on the big stage. How come...?

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Why Croatia's 2026 Eurovision song is problematic

Croatia's dark ethnic ballad entry for Eurovision 2026 has gained many fans across Europe. But the song is problematic in some aspects...

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"Don't take my picture then!" Arif Heralić and Alija Sirotanović – two socialist Yugoslav icons as one.

Did you know the most recognisable face of socialist Yugoslavia after Tito was of a Roma furnace worker from Bosnia? But many ex-Yugoslavs think it's another Bosnian. Here are their stories...

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May Day in socialist Yugoslavia

Who's up for a picnic? It's time for bean soup. How Tito's Yugoslavia celebrated the "holiday of labour" and what changed over time and what didn't. Oh, and there's that time I got punched.

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Video killed the red star in 1980s Bulgaria and Romania

How video casettes illegally smuggled from the west caused Bulgarians and Romanians to question their communist system in the 1980s. And how are James Bond movies treated in Bulgaria...

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"I'm not a migrant"

The migrant dream: arrive, succeed, then explain why everyone arriving after you is a threat to civilisation – Sami Shah

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Princes Amongst Men is back!

The book that launched my career as a Balkans sensitivity and authenticity reader is back, updated and bigger than ever!

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22 April – Lenin's birthday

So Lenin was one of the world's most prominent revolutionaries, but his legacy lasts by way of... first names and spring cleaning? All is explained here.

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"The buying and selling of votes is a crime" in Bulgaria

The aspects of Bulgarian elections that no-one else talks about. And what does Chalga have to say about it? All aboard the 'Bulgarian train'. Toot, toot!

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The eggs are dyed for Easter!

Yes, it's that time of year again, and I'm glad to say that the eggs turned out great this year.

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8 April – International Romani Day

Today is International Romani Day. Note, not 'Gypsy'. Why this is not the most appropriate term, and how ethnic labels can be complicated.

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Vale Yanka Rupkina!

Famous Bulgarian folk singer and member of the world-famous Trio Bulgarka, Yanka Rupkina, has died. Here is her extraordinary life.

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Lazarus Saturday – the Balkan debutante ball, and Palm Sunday – the Balkan flower festival

The weekend before Easter in Balkan Orthodox Christian societies sees major celebrations for the coming of spring, steeped in pagan origins.

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Tales from ethnic radio (part 2)

How I transitioned from listener to being listened. But first, let's bring in some music. 1990s Macedonian Turbofolk anyone? And what was the (surprising) word we couldn't mention?

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Tales from ethnic radio (part 1)

50 years ago today started the service I loathed as a child... but became my ticket to my future. The crazy yet wonderful world of ethnic, and particularly "Yugoslav", radio in Adelaide, Australia.

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Kostadinka Palazova, the voice of Bojmija, Macedonia (1939–2026)

Legendary Macedonian folk singer Kostadinka Palazova has passed away. Her life has been dedicated to keeping the songs of her birthplace alive in the face of official bans, ethnic cleansing and life in exile.

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When coins matter: stotinki and sixpence for Christmas

Big issue of the day – what coin do you use for your lucky-coin Christmas tradition? It matters to many in the Balkans AND Australia

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Merry Christmas vs Happy Holidays

Many in the Anglosphere have a strong opinion about what greeting to use now in December. But in the Balkans, the default has been "Happy Holidays" for decades. Here are the reasons why.

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19 December is Saint Nicholas Day!

It's a pretty big day in some Orthodox Christian parts of the Balkans – St Nicholas Day. But how come it's happening 13 days after the rest of the world? And what are you not supposed to do today?

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Dan Republike, Yugoslavia's national day

It's been decades since Yugoslavia's national day was a public holiday but it's still commemorated, albeit online by a rock song from the 1980s

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Will they ever learn? Aca Lukas arrested (again) in Macedonia

One of the biggest Turbofolk stars in the Balkans is arrested again, but greater focus is on the venue. Have the lessons from the Pulse nightclub fire been learnt?

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Seeing yourself in colour: Balkan identity through household items and photos

A broom, a forbidden kitchen item for religious holidays, a secret book in Old Church Slavonic, and the colour photo that made my cousin cry. How objects play a vital role in shaping identities.

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The journey of a Balkan song: its chilling present and obscured past

This is not your usual story. It's about a Balkan song's unlikely journey from obscurity to ultra-right-wing rallying call.

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There's something about Tuesdays in the Balkans...

And it's not pretty. Actually, best avoid Tuesdays in the Balkans for your own good. Find out why here...

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Propping up the numbers Balkan-style... because we're "bigger" than you!

[Balkan Nation] + [Protector/Benefactor Superpower] = Inflated Number/Prowess. How some Balkan nations feel the need to prop up their numbers to show how “big” they are. But not everything that the slogans say is what it seems…

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A boy in a dress or a dres? The curious case of Serbia's Sister Milka

The story of Sister Milka, the Serbian mother who went viral claiming her son had to wear a dress to school in Germany. But was she telling the truth?

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Tales from Balkan Border Posts: "World Traveller"

What happened the first time I was in 4 countries in 24 hours. Bus, trains, automobiles... and a bizarre interrogation!

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The death of Lyudmila Zhivkova, Bulgaria's perennial murder mystery

44 years later and the death of Lyudmila Zhivkova, the ambitious, high-profile daughter of Bulgaria’s paramount leader Todor Zhivkov, continues to enthral the Bulgarian public. Who was Lyudmila Zhivkova and why is her death still subject to intense speculation?

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From muezzin to multi-millions. Hašim Kučuk Hoki, the ultimate in Balkan bad boys

This small-town boy from a prestigious Muslim family shook the Yugoslav Neo-Folk music scene in the 1970s. But he had more than dark sunglasses and long hair to keep the Yugoslav showbiz columns busy.

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I'm like every other woman who works from 7 to 3...

Did Dolly get the words wrong here? No, in ex-Yugoslavia the average work day is a bit different. Find out why here...

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Can you tell me the way to Dzordza Vasingtona St.?

Belgrade has new street signs with awkward translations... and people are laughing. Find out why translating street names is not a good idea.

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Bigger is better! The Balkans and 'Gastarbeiter houses'

Like virtual elephants in the room, the empty houses of emigrants throughout the Balkans are testimony to belonging, (no) return, nostalgia, "success"... and inat!

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Kumpir, the Balkans potato culinary gift to Türkiye

Or is it? On International Day of the Potato, let's look into one of Türkiye's most favourite street foods, and how the Balkans have the Austrians and Germans to thank for the apple, or pear, of the ground.

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"We're so tolerant!": Eurovision and the benchmarks of tolerance it (supposedly) sets

Many (western European) Eurovision fans like seeing the contest as being in the forefront of social change and liberal politics. But is Eurovision a reliable benchmark for these?

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Eurovision: 'The voting is all political and just for your neighbour'

That ultimate of Eurovision tropes! But is it really 'political' voting? Not in the Balkans...

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Princes Amongst Men: Journeys with Gypsy Musicians is back!

Garth Cartwright's award-winning book about the talented Roma music stars of the Balkans is getting a re-release!

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May Day and St George's Day in the Balkans

Southeast Europe is clocking out for the next days. Here's why...

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"Filled up 50 years, entered my 51st year and now in my sixth decade"

The way you can refer to age in ex-Yugoslavia is different than in English – they have to make you a year and decade older!

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My special tradition: dying eggs for Easter

If there is anything that I do for Easter, then it's dye eggs. It has a special significance for me that transcends any religious aspect.

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Eat that burek... it could be useful later on

How my experience growing up Balkan in Australia has provided valuable knowledge to others.

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14 February: St Valentine's Day or St Tryphon's Day? Sveti Valentin 💑 ili Sveti Trifun 🍷?

14 February in Bulgaria, Macedonia and Serbia means having to choose between love or wine. How come?

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Slovenian, the odd one out

I translate into English from all Southern Slavic languages except one. Sorry, I can't do Slovenian. Here's my apology.

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January 6 in Southeast Europe: Christmas Eve or Epiphany

Today is a big day in southeast Europe, but depending on the country it's either Christmas Eve or Epiphany. Which ones for which? Find out here...

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My moment of 2024...

There's always one thing each year that stands out in my travels, and this year it was accidently discovering the huge gastarbeiter houses of eastern Serbia

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Utopia of the Uniform: Affective Afterlives of the Yugoslav People's Army by Tanja Petrović

22 December was Yugoslav People's Day. Here are some notes about the topics raised in this research, my personal connection to the former JNA and how its legacy lives on in the memories and legends of millions.

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Professor, Doctor, Docent, Magister... let's get into academic titles!

Some societies take them very seriously, some not so much. Find out more here...

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Why are there so many Turkish words in Balkan languages?

Let's see how Turkish has influenced the languages of the Balkans and further afield. Bujrum!

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Trileche, the not-so-traditional Balkan dish

How thanks to the Albanians, a Latin American cake conquered the Balkans.

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"Can you identify the text here?"

Did you know that people regularly contact me to identify text they can't decipher. That's what happens when I know a number of languages.

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25 years since the death of Bulgarian chalga star Rumyana

How the life and death of a popular chalga singer embodied the nature of post-Communist Bulgaria

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Who's gonna win: Sunderland or Newcastle? Fancy a Democracy Sausage? Or take a ride on the "Bulgarian Train"

Vote-count competitions between rival cities? How a mundane sausage in generic white bread is the epitome of mass democratic participation in Australia. And why a Bulgarian train is not a train. The weird world of election traditions.

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Oldtajmer, evergrin, rekorder, golman… the world of Balkan pseudo-anglicisms

Did you hear about the man who collects “old-timers”? 👴🏽 Or that Frank Sinatra has many “evergreens”? 🌲

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Ramadan or Ramazan?

The Muslim holy month of Ramadan starts today, but how do you call the month? A case of local vs global of different circumstances

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International Women’s Day (IWD). A day of campaigning ♀ … or a day to buy flowers 💐

🪃 In Australia, IWD is a day of campaigning and awareness, elements that are much closer to the day’s original purpose of bringing mainstream attention to issues affecting women.

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Hugging and cheek-kissing in southeast Europe. The does and don’ts

Do you know what to do with hugging and cheek-kissing in southeast Europe? Do you know which countries kiss twice and others three times?

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Out today! Elixir, In the Valley at the End of Time

The latest book that I played a part in its fruition (no, I’m not in it this time), by my dear friend, the award-winning writer Kapka Kassabova, is now available for purchase.

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Da or 'ta? When you get things right by accident

Bilinguals and multilinguals do muddle their languages at times. But sometimes we might say something by accident... and it turns out to be the perfect response.

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Eurovision: not serving kant!

Eurovision likes to portray itself as in the forefront of social inclusion and diversity. However, the title of a Maltese song showed that there's only so far this goes.

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Do we really need self-service counters in 'Pirate', me mateys?

Ahoy, me hearties! What may appear as a community service actually serves to undermine the supposed primary purpose of such language provision.

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Child interpreters. Why are we getting them to do an adult's job?

Children who interpret for their family members who do not know the local language are often portrayed as heroes. But what do these children think?

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Hindi/Urdu and Balkan languages... the links between them

There are words that are the same in Hindi and Urdu as in Croatian and Romanian?! How can this be? Find out here...

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"Can you identify the text here?"

Did you know that people regularly contact me to identify text they can't decipher. That's what happens when I know a number of languages.

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Five common myths about raising bilingual children

Surprising as it may be, I was once a child, but one who happened to grow up in a multilingual environment but dominated by English.

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Two years as a Chartered Linguist!

Two years ago I attained the highest qualification for translators, Chartered Linguist. And I'm the only one in the UK for the languages I work from.

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If you know another language then you cannot be a bigot! Is this true?

Is there any truth that knowing another language eliminates any chance of you being a bigot?

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The Tale of Silyan: how subtitles can make or break a film

A classic case of how poor subtitles can fail a film. 'Good enough' is never good enough.

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Translation tip: what's with the scare marks?

It's the little things that can cause the biggest misunderstandings. Which one is very common in Balkan translations? Find out ere

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Let me fix this for you...

Ever seen a notice or ad in a public place written so badly that you've wanted to grab a pen and make corrections? Well, someone did on a Croatian tram. Here's the story...

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"Can we have the translation in a positive tone?"

Why such requests are unethical and potentially dangerous for patients

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Can you tell me the way to Dzordza Vasingtona St.?

Belgrade has new street signs with awkward translations... and people are laughing. Find out why translating street names is not a good idea.

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How the first Macedonian-English dictionary in Australia was formed

The fascinating story of how the first Macedonian-English dictionary in Australia was formed, and what went in and what went out.

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Leo, Leon or Lav?

A new pope comes with a new name. But which is the correct one in languages other than English?

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"Filled up 50 years, entered my 51st year and now in my sixth decade"

The way you can refer to age in ex-Yugoslavia is different than in English – they have to make you a year and decade older!

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"Vegetative electron microscopy"... a digital fossil

Welcome to the murky world of AI contamination and GIGO

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Can I do Hungarian?

That's quite a list of languages I translate from, but that doesn't mean I translate from every language in Eastern Europe, no matter how similar they may seem even in name...

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You know Latin, right?

The time when a person working for a translation company that bills itself to clients as an 'expert in languages' thought I knew Latin. Spoiler: I don't. So why did this happen and why does this have a link to Serbian? All revealed here.

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February marks my professional translation career anniversary

February 2002 was when I did my first paid translation job... and it ended up on TV! Find out how this came about, as well as its connection to Croatian skier Janica Kostelić and Bulgarian footballer Yordan Letchkov

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Child interpreters. Why are we getting them to do an adult's job?

Children who interpret for their family members who do not know the local language are often portrayed as heroes. But what do these children think?

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How to pass off as a native English speaker when writing?

What's one of the biggest giveaways that a text in English was not written by a native speaker? Find out here with a simple and yet important tip...

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Subtitling is easy, right?

Some notes on how subtitling is not simply plonking words on a screen

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My new personalised stamp!

To add to that professional touch, I can have your documents stamped with my personalised round stamp.

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Professor, Doctor, Docent, Magister... let's get into academic titles!

Some societies take them very seriously, some not so much. Find out more here...

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Serbo-Croatian? Yes, I still work from it.

3 decades have passed since it officially ceased to exist but I still get requests to translate from Serbo-Croatian. How come?

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I'm now a full member of the Chartered Institute of Linguists of the UK!

Yet another accreditation...

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Hindi/Urdu and Balkan languages... the links between them

There are words that are the same in Hindi and Urdu as in Croatian and Romanian?! How can this be? Find out here...

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Can the "world's most accurate translator" do Australian English?

Does DeepL live up to its claim of being "the world's most accurate translator" when it comes to Aussie English? Get ready for some zingers!

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The time US military officials used a computer to predict the outcome of the Vietnam War...

A cautionary tale about how human behaviour overrides data

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International Translation Day and the Dragomans

How the Ottoman Empire granted its translators and interpreters, the Dragomans, with respect and status.

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Meyk lov - not vor

Why you shouldn't trust automated translation on LinkedIn or anywhere else. And are the Macedonians being targeted?

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Any place, any time…

👍The best thing about being a freelance translator is being able to work at any place at any time. 👎The worst thing about being a freelancer translator is being able to work at any place at any time.

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English language translation tips: use of long forms of country names

Republic of Serbia 🇷🇸, Republic of Croatia 🇭🇷, Kingdom of Norway 🇳🇴, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland 🇬🇧, Oriental Republic of Uruguay 🇺🇾, Plurinational State of Bolivia 🇧🇴 …

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Muphry's Law strikes again!

Have you heard of Muphry's Law? No, it's not Murphy's Law, and if you thought that it was, then that's Muphry's Law. Confusing? Well, time to clear it up...

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If you know another language then you cannot be a bigot! Is this true?

Is there any truth that knowing another language eliminates any chance of you being a bigot?

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International Mother Language Day: "you're confusing him"

To show why mother languages matter, here's my story how educators in Australia tried stopping my parents speaking to me in my mother language.

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Careful, someone might hear you!

Think you can say vile things about the people around you because hardly anyone speaks your language? Think again! Because when you least suspect it, there'll be someone who does understand...

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SBS is 50!

Australia's unique multicultural broadcaster, SBS, turned 50 in 2025. Here's an insight into what SBS was like in the 1980s and how it enriched Australia, all of its people... and me.

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Up for a crazy coupon? How Bulgarians say they want to party...

Are you up for a crazy coupon where you're strutting your stuff on the "dancing"? Perhaps you're a "labour" or a "gender"? A sneak peak into some Bulgarian linguistic false friends

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A company by any other name than Nik?

Oil, banking, jewelry, optics, radio broadcasting, hard spirits... Nik does it all! But do I really?

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Dua Lipa and her "pasosh"

After many decades of Yugoslav rule, Albanian spoken in Kosovo, Macedonia and Montenegro has some Serbo-Croatian words, but particularly in certain areas. Which ones? And why is this not unique?

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Da or 'ta? When you get things right by accident

Bilinguals and multilinguals do muddle their languages at times. But sometimes we might say something by accident... and it turns out to be the perfect response.

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Are you into BCSM?

There once was one "Serbo-Croatian" but now there are four near-identical languages. Can we still use the term "Serbo-Croatian"? Well, it could cost you dearly...

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Do we really need self-service counters in 'Pirate', me mateys?

Ahoy, me hearties! What may appear as a community service actually serves to undermine the supposed primary purpose of such language provision.

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What's my 'mother language'?

International Mother Language Day and Global Language Advocacy Day are on! So what do I consider to be my 'mother languages' and why one of them is under threat...

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Subtitling is easy, right?

Some notes on how subtitling is not simply plonking words on a screen

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Indian and Australian English... the links between them

India and Australia have common bonds that go beyond a passion for cricket. Here are a few words that Indian and Australian English uniquely share...

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The time US military officials used a computer to predict the outcome of the Vietnam War...

A cautionary tale about how human behaviour overrides data

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"Merci" is how you say "thank you" in which language?

It may come as a surprise but it's not just in French...

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"Can you identify the text here?"

Did you know that people regularly contact me to identify text they can't decipher. That's what happens when I know a number of languages.

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You know that time when Madonna was interviewed by a Hungarian tabloid? Or when translation goes hilariously bad…

We all know how some translations can be so bad that they’re unintentionally hilarious, like the viral examples from Engrish.com...

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Working in IT? What do you call yourself? An IT-ian, a Hitechist…?

Working in IT? 👩🏻‍💻 Would you call yourself an IT-ian, Hitechist or Startupist?

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Watch out for the killer squirrels! It’s “silly season”… or is that “cucumber season”?

Watch out for the killer squirrels! 🐿️ We’re very much in “silly season” right now in the UK 🤪

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Tina Turner… Australian cultural icon!

Did you know that Tina Turner has been one of the biggest contributors to Australian culture? 🦘 Honestly, her impact has been huge! Here’s how…

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You do Montenegrin and Bosnian, right?

Two more language directions have been added to my Institute of Translation and Interpreting profile

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Generic or specific? The issue stopping the free-trade agreement between the EU and Australia

Would you believe that the names of all these famous products are the cause for the deadlock in the free-trade agreement negotiations between the EU 🇪🇺 and Australia 🇦🇺. How come?

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Smoker’s remorse… or how false friends can be deeply expressive

🟰 Words that look the same or similar in two languages but have two, at times radically, different meanings are called “false friends”.

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The personal touch

Translation can often be a very sedentary existence, plugging away in front of a laptop, with little or no face-to-face contact with clients👨🏻‍💻

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World Cancer Day: cancer scare!

Even after being cured of cancer and remission is over, there's still the threat of it coming back for around go. What to do with a new cancer scare?

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Cancer and gallows humour: Thank you for the flowers 💐; I hope they die before I do!

What's one constant when it comes to the cancer experience? It's the gallows humour. Yes, it gets very, very dark. Why is this so?

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15 years cancer-free!!!

And I know because of an annual procedure a work colleague advised me to do...

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It's Men's Health Week... and I'm 15 years cancer-free!!!

The story of how I found out by chance that I no longer had cancer

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