25 KIWI English Slang words | Speak English like a Native Speaker | English Vocabulary Lesson

preview_player
Показать описание
👉 Check the latest Video - American Idioms I love to use the most?

25 KIWI English Slang words | Speak English like a Native Speaker | English Vocabulary Lesson

English Slang words always confuse you while learning English. British English or American English have different slang words and probably know quite a few of them, but in today's English lesson you will learn 25 Kiwi slang terms originated from New Zealand that you have probably not heard before. This English vocabulary lesson is a good English practice to learn a few. This lesson would also help you understand the New Zealand accent which is slightly different from the British accent or the American accent and improve your English pronunciation as well. If you are looking to travel to New Zealand or get your hand on accent training to understand native speakers this lesson would be perfect for English listening practice and expand your English vocabulary. Watch the complete video with your teacher from New Zealand, Kat, and used these terms in your daily English conversation to sound fluent in English, someone who has a good knowledge of the English language.

You are watching this English lesson on Let’s Talk – Free English lessons. This lesson is a part of our English lesson series ‘English Unplugged’ shot in the beautiful New Zealand. It’s our effort to teach yo English outside the classroom so that you learn English naturally from Native English speakers. Take advantage of this free YouTube resource to learn English quickly and easily. We have more than 1200+ free English learning videos to teach you all aspects of the English language so that you could speak English fluently and confidently and never have to ask the question - How to speak fluent English. Access our huge library of free English speaking lessons covering a range of topics such as – Grammar, English conversation, Tips on How to speak English, How to build vocabulary, learn new words, Communication skills, English sentence practice, Accent Training, American Accent Training & British Accent Training, Difference between British and American English and much more.

For complete lesson transcript visit us at –

=====================================================

Our Social media –
👉Facebook -
👉Instagram – @letstalkpodcast
👉Twitter – @letstalkone

=====================================================

👉Watch the latest English lesson series from Auckland, New Zealand – English Unplugged

👉English lessons by Niharika –

👉Watch all English lessons by KAT –

👉English Lessons by Jack –

👉English lessons by Michelle –

👉English lessons by Ceema –

👉English lessons by Rachna –

======================================

Topic wise English lessons –

👉English Vocabulary –

👉English Idioms –

👉Learn English Grammar –

👉English Conversation Topics –

👉Spoken English Tips & Tricks-

👉IELTS Training & Coaching –

👉Personality Development & Enhancement –

👉Business English Lessons –

👉Job Interview Skills –

=========================================================

Our Other Channels -

👉Learn English through Hindi - Learnex
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

Watch all lessons from 'The English Unplugged Series'

letstalk
Автор

Hi im a filipino from the phillipines, my parents work in New Zealand and they alway practice english and i already know all the words in new zealamd now i will teach them too so thanks for other additional words....chur bro.🤗🤗

jay-c
Автор

You also forgot:
Feed = food "wanna feed?"
Mean = awesome/great "that feed was so mean"
Hard = to agree with someone short for hardout "yeah hard that feed was mean"
We just invented our own lingo lol

klingna
Автор

I love how overly slow she’s speaking so that she’s understood

anthonytrocks
Автор

Love the way she explains all different slang we have here 👍

pablokoko
Автор

"Yeah nah" exists in Russian too "Да нет" and means absolutely the same thing! It's like a milder way to say "no" :)

margaritaafanaseva
Автор

Great to hear these slang words again after returning home half a century ago, yeah, it's been a bloody long time eh?

chiradejd
Автор

This is really fun for me after four months in NZ because I really thought I was improve my english but since I arrive here now in Christch I live with a lot of kiwis and is very dificult understand lol and now I watching your video and kaboom lol and now everything is clearlier when remember some conversations jajaja. Chur!

luisfuentes
Автор

I was born in NZ but have lived in Australia since 1988. A lot of the slang has changed over the years. Some is the same as Aussie slang. One thing I note is that you refer to a "jumper". When I left NZ, the word was definitely "jersey" and I had to change it to "jumper" when I arrived in Oz.

davidlloyd
Автор

I left NZ 30 years ago and much of that slang was typical of maori or islanders, not as common among pakeha. Never heard of the word "skux" but the use of "um" at the start of a sentence was common when pausing to think.

rocko
Автор

When I learned a little Spanish, I was surprised to find they also use the word "Caro" in the same ways we use dear, ie both for a dear friend, and for something expensive.

flamencoprof
Автор

I-i watched through this video and found myself using New Zealand's slangs so often even though I only had been there for 3 months. Missing my Whangarei life so much:(

pc
Автор

What a sweet as video! ;) Always good to study a bit before going on vacation to NZ.

TheEarthlyOdyssey
Автор

Warning: if you come over here as a foreigner and use phrases like skux, chur bro, hungus, or hori, you're probably gonna get looked at like an idiot. Most of these are only really used as an ironic joke in my experience, so take this list with a pinch of salt.

raindropfox
Автор

she’ll be right and no worries are my favorite slangs, I can see myself using them often

fatimaabdullaitf
Автор

Thanks, Kat, , I should have been educated 50 years ago when I emigrated from the UK. Strangely enough, when I was at college in 1964/65 studying to be a Radio Office in the Merchant Navy, one of our tutors was an ex RO and he used the "smoko" expression which he had to explain to us. I'm sure lots of Poms have learnt from your video! Perhaps the next video could be 'how to pronounce NZ place names" - I got laughed at with my efforts at "Waiouru"

martincook
Автор

Thank you. Made my day and i remembered lots of them from my trip in 2015

troidl
Автор

Just be aware, my Aussie ex criticised me of being 'rude' whey I kept saying 'eh' all the time in Australia to her parents.

chiwiartist
Автор

This tutorial needs to be a part of in-flight entertainment for all flights landing in NZ 😂🍻

indapamod
Автор

it's a fabulous lesson Kat, thank you so much..

mustaqeemshaikh