(function(){var src_url="https://spshared.5min.com/Scripts/PlayerSeed.js'playList=519199325&height=&width=100&sid=577&origin=SOLR&videoGroupID=155847&relatedNumOfResults=100&responsive=true&ratio=wide&align=center&relatedMode=2&relatedBottomHeight=60&companionPos=&hasCompanion=false&autoStart=false&colorPallet=%23FFEB00&videoControlDisplayColor=%23191919&shuffle=0&isAP=1&pgType=cmsPlugin&pgTypeId=addToPost-top&onVideoDataLoaded=track5min.DL&onTimeUpdate=track5min.TC&onVideoDataLoaded=HPTrack.Vid.DL&onTimeUpdate=HPTrack.Vid.TC";if (typeof(commercial_video) == "object") {src_url += "&siteSection="+commercial_video.site_and_category;if (commercial_video.package) {src_url += "&sponsorship="+commercial_video.package;}}var script = document.createElement("script");script.src = src_url;script.async = true;var placeholder = document.querySelector(".js-fivemin-script");placeholder.parentElement.replaceChild(script, placeholder);})(); Scientists have long known that the modern Australian accent developed from a combination of European settlers'and Aboriginies' pronunciations-- but a provocative new theory claims the accent may also have boozy origins.Dean Frenkel, a lecturer at Victoria University, wrote an opinion piece this week in Melbourne daily newspaper The Age arguing thatthe Australian accent washeavily influenced by the drunken slurs of the country's original settlers."Our forefathers regularly got drunk together and through their frequent interactions unknowingly added an alcoholic slur to our national speech patterns," he wrote."Missing consonants can include missing 't's (Impordant), 'l;s (Austraya) and 's's (yesh), while many of our vowels are lazily transformed into other vowels," he explains in the piece. "If we all received communication training, Australia would become a cleverer country."Frenkel's piece swiftly drew criticism from linguistics researchers, as there currently doesn't seem to be evidence to support it."There is no evidence that alcohol consumption has any long-term effect on one's own language, let alone transgenerational language transmission," Aidan Wilson, a Ph.D. candidate in linguistics at the University of Melbourne, told The Huffington Post.Dr. Rob Pensalfini,a senior lecturer in languages and cultures at the University of Queensland, compared the theory to other accent-origin ideas that don't have scientific backing."They say New Yorkers have nasal voices because they have to cut through the noise of the traffic," he told the Australian Broadcasting Company."The original [joke]for Australia was we speak in a slurred and closed-lip way to keep the flies out of their mouths. ...They're all completely baseless [and] I want to see the evidence, I want to see the instrumental valuations."The Australian accent is a relatively new dialect of English,as it's just over 200 years old.Though many scientistsdisagree with Frenkel's theory, some residents of Australia seem to be respondingmore lightly:Apparently Aussie accent origin is based on drunk settlers #Iwilldrinktothat TwittyKate (@HereKityKate) October 28, 2015 Also on HuffPost: -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
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