Y05W32RC Voices of English

This week, you will explore how English can sound different across Australia. You will practise noticing key language ideas and how people choose words for different situations. As you read, look for clues about respect, context and variety. A way of speaking can be different without being wrong.

Informative — Q&A / interview

A Q&A or interview is a text where one person asks questions and another person answers them. Writers use it to inform by breaking a topic into clear parts, with each answer adding a new piece of understanding. It often includes facts, explanations, examples and short definitions, and it is usually organised in question-and-answer pairs with an opening and a closing summary. As a reader, you need to follow how each answer connects to the question, build the ideas step by step and notice how important words are explained. You are learning about a topic by following a conversation.

Before You Read

  • Look at the title and notice that it is about how English sounds in Australia, not just how it is written.
  • Think about how people can speak clearly and respectfully even if their voices, accents or word choices are not exactly the same.
  • Get ready to use the questions, answers and key terms box to help you follow the ideas.

While You Read

  • Pause after each answer and check what new idea it explains.
  • Use the question-and-answer format as a guide, because each question sets up the focus of the next part.
  • Pay attention to key words such as 'accent', 'dialect' and 'register', and use the nearby explanations to work out what they mean.
  • Notice how the interview explains both Standard Australian English and everyday language variation without judging either one.
  • If two terms seem similar, re-read the answer and look for the small difference between them.

Read With Purpose

  • Notice how the interview explains Standard Australian English in a respectful way.
  • Pay attention to how the text shows that language can vary across people and settings.
  • Watch how the answers connect respect, context and clear communication.

Now read

The interview

~4 min read · ~556 words

Q&A: How English Sounds in Australia

Intro

For this week’s language page, Maya interviewed Mr Hall, a teacher who studies how English is used in Australia. They talked about Standard Australian English, accents, dialects and why respectful language choices matter in different settings.

Key terms box

  • accent: the way words sound when someone speaks
  • dialect: a way of speaking with its own word choices or grammar patterns
  • register: the style of language chosen for a situation
  • Standard Australian English: the form often used in schools, news writing and formal public communication

Q: Does everyone in Australia speak English in exactly the same way?

A: No. People across Australia may sound different and may choose different words or expressions. That does not mean one everyday way of speaking is automatically better than another. It means language changes across places, families, communities and situations.

Q: So what is Standard Australian English?

A: Standard Australian English is the form commonly used in school writing, official documents, many books, news reports and other public settings. It helps people share information clearly across a wide audience. It is useful because many people recognise it, not because other ways of speaking are wrong.

Q: Is an accent the same thing as a dialect?

A: Not quite. An accent is mainly about sound, such as how a word is pronounced. A dialect can include pronunciation too, but it also includes grammar patterns and vocabulary choices. In simple terms, accent is about how speech sounds, while dialect is about a wider pattern of speaking.

Q: If someone uses a social dialect, should they be corrected?

A: Not in a rude or mocking way. Social dialects are real ways of speaking used by real communities. A respectful teacher might help a student learn when Standard Australian English is expected for a task, while also showing respect for the language the student uses at home or with friends.

Q: Why do people change the way they speak in different situations?

A: This is called choosing a register. You might speak one way when chatting on the playground and another way when giving a class presentation. Changing register is a skill. It shows that you can match your language to the setting and audience.

Q: Can two people both be speaking well even if they sound different?

A: Absolutely. Clear communication does not require everyone to sound the same. People have different voices, accents and language backgrounds. Good speaking depends on meaning, respect and choosing language that fits the moment.

Q: Are Australian words and expressions part of this too?

A: Yes. Australian English includes words and expressions that are familiar in Australia. Some are used widely, while others belong more strongly to certain groups or places. The important thing is to understand context and use language respectfully.

Q: What should students remember most?

A: Learn Standard Australian English for the settings where it is needed, but do not treat other dialects as silly or lesser. Language difference is normal. Respect matters just as much as correctness.

Closing summary

English in Australia has shared patterns, but it also has variety. Standard Australian English is helpful for many formal settings, while accents and dialects show the rich ways people and communities speak. Knowing when to shift your register is not about hiding who you are. It is about making thoughtful choices for the situation.

Check your vocabulary knowledge

accent n.
the way spoken words sound
dialect n.
a particular way of speaking used by a group
register n.
the style of language used in a situation
formal adj.
suited to official or serious settings
context n.
the situation that helps explain language choices