The phonological variety of Australian English is most commonly described along a continuum of three accent types: Broad, General and Cultivated Australian English. These accent types emerged from Australia’s colonial history and have evolved in response to social, cultural and demographic changes.
Australian linguists A.G. Mitchell and A. Delbridge (1965) were the first to formally describe the three-point continuum. It is important to understand that these are not three discrete dialects — most Australians speak somewhere along a continuous spectrum, and individuals can shift along it depending on context.
| Accent | Approximate characteristics | Social associations |
|---|---|---|
| Cultivated | Closest to British RP; narrow diphthongs; formal vowel qualities | Historically: upper class, high education, formal prestige |
| General | Most common; intermediate vowel qualities | Mainstream Australian; no strong social marking |
| Broad | Most distinctly Australian; widest diphthongs; strong /æ/ raising | Working class; rural; authentic Australian identity |
KEY TAKEAWAY: No accent on this continuum is linguistically superior to any other. Broad Australian is not slovenly speech — it is a systematic phonological variety with consistent rules. The social values attached to different accents are culturally constructed, not linguistic facts.
The Australian accent emerged from the meeting of many different British regional accents among the convict and settler populations of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Key processes:
Dialect levelling: when speakers of many different dialects live in close contact, their dialects tend to converge toward a shared form. This produced the distinctive features of Australian English.
Koinéisation: the process of forming a new, mixed variety from multiple input dialects. Australian English is a koine — a new variety created by contact among varieties, not descended from any single parent.
Influence of London and South-East English dialects: research (Peter Trudgill) suggests these dialects were particularly influential, explaining some phonological features of Australian English (e.g. non-rhoticity — not pronouncing r after vowels: car, park, better).
The vowel in words like trap, bad, cat, dance:
- Cultivated: similar to British /a:/ (baath, dahnce)
- General: Australian short /æ/ (bat, cat)
- Broad: raised, fronted vowel — more centralised
These are often called the “marker” diphthongs of Australian English:
- Cultivated: closer to RP /eɪ/ and /aɪ/
- General: Australian /æɪ/ and /ɑe/ (FACE sounds like broad PRICE in RP; PRICE sounds like broad FACE)
- Broad: the most stereotypically Australian: mate sounds like /mæɪt/; I sounds like /ɑe/
This vowel pattern is why Australian English can sound to British ears like “mates” when Australians say “mates”, and “oy” when they say “I” — it is a systematic diphthong pattern, not mispronunciation.
The use of rising intonation at the end of declarative statements (I went to the shops? And she was there?). This is associated with General and Broad Australian English and with younger speakers, particularly women. It has been interpreted as seeking confirmation, inviting response, or simply as a discourse pattern without those functions.
EXAM TIP: The VCAA study design refers specifically to “Broad, General and Cultivated” accents. Use these exact terms in your analysis. Know at least one phonological feature associated with each point on the continuum and be able to link them to their social associations.
COMMON MISTAKE: Students sometimes describe Broad Australian as “uneducated speech.” This is a prescriptivist social judgment, not a linguistic fact. Your analysis must be descriptivist — describe and explain the social meanings attached to accent features without endorsing the stereotypes.
VCAA FOCUS: The evolution and social meaning of the accent continuum is a core Unit 4 topic. Be prepared to describe the three accent types, discuss their historical origins and current social status, and explain how they function as markers of identity in contemporary Australia.