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![]() If you were Western Australian you would understand the term "far east' To WA people, SA is the middle East and Qld, Vic, Tas & NSW the "Far East" grin John H "Frank Slootweg" wrote in message ... Rolf Loehrer wrote: Hi, we are coming to Australia in July (from Germany). Can somebody recommand a good guide (like"Lonely planet" for the far east)? What do you mean by "the far east"? The far east of Australia? If so, what the heck do you mean by that? Or the far east, period? If so, which country/countries in the far east? In general, for Australia: Just get the Lonely Planet guide for Australia and optionally the LP guides for the states you want to visit or/and the LP Outback guide. |
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"Rolf Loehrer" wrote in :
Hi, "far east" for us in Germany is Asia, "near east" are countries like Israel, Syria, Egypt.Thanks for your tip. Rolf Löhrer "Frank Slootweg" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... John H wrote: If you were Western Australian you would understand the term "far east' To WA people, SA is the middle East and Qld, Vic, Tas & NSW the "Far East" grin snip other stuff I know we are joking a bit at the moment, but just to clarify a few things for those dropping by. Geography tends to get a bit odd here, as Australia is more-or-less a European nation physically located in opposite side of the world. The phrase 'Far East' is not in use a lot in Australia. I suspect most Australians when faced with the expression 'far east' would reply 'far east of what?' (as indeed happened here). John H's suggestion that WA people would regard "Qld, Vic, Tas & NSW" as the 'far east' is humourous - West Australians are notoriously parochial - but I've never heard it actually used. What a European (and an American??) would call "Far East" we would call "Asia". (interestingly, an Australian would not refer to India, Pakistan etc. as "Asia"). We use the term "Middle East" to refer to the countries Rolf L called "near east" - ie Arab countries, Israel etc. I gather this is fairly common elsewhere. I doubt we'd ever refer to the "Near East" at al. However, the expression "Far North" is sometimes used domestically. In particular it applies to Queensland (Cairns etc. semi-officially refer to themselves as "FNQ"). It has something of the resonance that "Deep South" has to an American. The expression "Western World" to refer to the traditional developed world is in popular (if no longer official) use, despite the fact it makes no geographic sense. The "North/South" divide sometimes used to denote the developed/under- developed split is not in common use here, except in certain left-wing circles, as it doesn't make much sense locally either. I hope all this has informed at least as many people as it has bored. Happy travels Les in W.A. ![]() |
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"Rolf Loehrer" wrote in :
Hi, "far east" for us in Germany is Asia, "near east" are countries like Israel, Syria, Egypt.Thanks for your tip. Rolf Löhrer "Frank Slootweg" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... John H wrote: If you were Western Australian you would understand the term "far east' To WA people, SA is the middle East and Qld, Vic, Tas & NSW the "Far East" grin snip other stuff I know we are joking a bit at the moment, but just to clarify a few things for those dropping by. Geography tends to get a bit odd here, as Australia is more-or-less a European nation physically located in opposite side of the world. The phrase 'Far East' is not in use a lot in Australia. I suspect most Australians when faced with the expression 'far east' would reply 'far east of what?' (as indeed happened here). John H's suggestion that WA people would regard "Qld, Vic, Tas & NSW" as the 'far east' is humourous - West Australians are notoriously parochial - but I've never heard it actually used. What a European (and an American??) would call "Far East" we would call "Asia". (interestingly, an Australian would not refer to India, Pakistan etc. as "Asia"). We use the term "Middle East" to refer to the countries Rolf L called "near east" - ie Arab countries, Israel etc. I gather this is fairly common elsewhere. I doubt we'd ever refer to the "Near East" at al. However, the expression "Far North" is sometimes used domestically. In particular it applies to Queensland (Cairns etc. semi-officially refer to themselves as "FNQ"). It has something of the resonance that "Deep South" has to an American. The expression "Western World" to refer to the traditional developed world is in popular (if no longer official) use, despite the fact it makes no geographic sense. The "North/South" divide sometimes used to denote the developed/under- developed split is not in common use here, except in certain left-wing circles, as it doesn't make much sense locally either. I hope all this has informed at least as many people as it has bored. Happy travels Les in W.A. ![]() |
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On 22 May 2005 09:26:28 +0800, Les Chandra
wrote: "Rolf Loehrer" wrote in : Hi, "far east" for us in Germany is Asia, "near east" are countries like Israel, Syria, Egypt.Thanks for your tip. Rolf Löhrer "Frank Slootweg" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... John H wrote: If you were Western Australian you would understand the term "far east' To WA people, SA is the middle East and Qld, Vic, Tas & NSW the "Far East" grin snip other stuff I know we are joking a bit at the moment, but just to clarify a few things for those dropping by. Geography tends to get a bit odd here, as Australia is more-or-less a European nation physically located in opposite side of the world. The phrase 'Far East' is not in use a lot in Australia. I suspect most Australians when faced with the expression 'far east' would reply 'far east of what?' (as indeed happened here). John H's suggestion that WA people would regard "Qld, Vic, Tas & NSW" as the 'far east' is humourous - West Australians are notoriously parochial - but I've never heard it actually used. What a European (and an American??) would call "Far East" we would call "Asia". (interestingly, an Australian would not refer to India, Pakistan etc. as "Asia"). We use the term "Middle East" to refer to the countries Rolf L called "near east" - ie Arab countries, Israel etc. I gather this is fairly common elsewhere. I doubt we'd ever refer to the "Near East" at al. However, the expression "Far North" is sometimes used domestically. In particular it applies to Queensland (Cairns etc. semi-officially refer to themselves as "FNQ"). It has something of the resonance that "Deep South" has to an American. The expression "Western World" to refer to the traditional developed world is in popular (if no longer official) use, despite the fact it makes no geographic sense. The "North/South" divide sometimes used to denote the developed/under- developed split is not in common use here, except in certain left-wing circles, as it doesn't make much sense locally either. I hope all this has informed at least as many people as it has bored. Happy travels Les in W.A. ![]() Hi All Just to confuse things further, in NSW the "Far West" is not WA but much closer to home as the area west of the great Dividing Range, and "beyond the Black Stump" is similar but evokes dusty inland small towns. A little town called Coolah actually claims to be the site of the Black Stump:-) We have a charity dedicated to supporting kids from that district http://www.royalfarwest.org.au which brings them to Sydney for holidays or medical treatment. When I was in the RAAF the area between Alice Springs and Port Hedland (on the WA west coast) was known as the GAFA when we overflew it. The Great Australian F... All. When I visualise Asia on hearing that word it is split into: Asia: China, Mongolia, Japan, Korea, Siberia, the 'stans (Afghani, Kazakh, Uzbeki etc) SE Asia: - what used to be Indo China, plus Malaysia and Singapore. The nearby island Nations: Indonesia/Phillipines/New Guinea/East Timor. The Sub-continent: India, Pakistan, Burma, Nepal etc; the old English Raj. I still relate to the term "Middle East" for the rest. That's just me. Cheers, Alan, Australia |
#5
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On 22 May 2005 09:26:28 +0800, Les Chandra
wrote: "Rolf Loehrer" wrote in : Hi, "far east" for us in Germany is Asia, "near east" are countries like Israel, Syria, Egypt.Thanks for your tip. Rolf Löhrer "Frank Slootweg" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... John H wrote: If you were Western Australian you would understand the term "far east' To WA people, SA is the middle East and Qld, Vic, Tas & NSW the "Far East" grin snip other stuff I know we are joking a bit at the moment, but just to clarify a few things for those dropping by. Geography tends to get a bit odd here, as Australia is more-or-less a European nation physically located in opposite side of the world. The phrase 'Far East' is not in use a lot in Australia. I suspect most Australians when faced with the expression 'far east' would reply 'far east of what?' (as indeed happened here). John H's suggestion that WA people would regard "Qld, Vic, Tas & NSW" as the 'far east' is humourous - West Australians are notoriously parochial - but I've never heard it actually used. What a European (and an American??) would call "Far East" we would call "Asia". (interestingly, an Australian would not refer to India, Pakistan etc. as "Asia"). We use the term "Middle East" to refer to the countries Rolf L called "near east" - ie Arab countries, Israel etc. I gather this is fairly common elsewhere. I doubt we'd ever refer to the "Near East" at al. However, the expression "Far North" is sometimes used domestically. In particular it applies to Queensland (Cairns etc. semi-officially refer to themselves as "FNQ"). It has something of the resonance that "Deep South" has to an American. The expression "Western World" to refer to the traditional developed world is in popular (if no longer official) use, despite the fact it makes no geographic sense. The "North/South" divide sometimes used to denote the developed/under- developed split is not in common use here, except in certain left-wing circles, as it doesn't make much sense locally either. I hope all this has informed at least as many people as it has bored. Happy travels Les in W.A. ![]() Hi All Just to confuse things further, in NSW the "Far West" is not WA but much closer to home as the area west of the great Dividing Range, and "beyond the Black Stump" is similar but evokes dusty inland small towns. A little town called Coolah actually claims to be the site of the Black Stump:-) We have a charity dedicated to supporting kids from that district http://www.royalfarwest.org.au which brings them to Sydney for holidays or medical treatment. When I was in the RAAF the area between Alice Springs and Port Hedland (on the WA west coast) was known as the GAFA when we overflew it. The Great Australian F... All. When I visualise Asia on hearing that word it is split into: Asia: China, Mongolia, Japan, Korea, Siberia, the 'stans (Afghani, Kazakh, Uzbeki etc) SE Asia: - what used to be Indo China, plus Malaysia and Singapore. The nearby island Nations: Indonesia/Phillipines/New Guinea/East Timor. The Sub-continent: India, Pakistan, Burma, Nepal etc; the old English Raj. I still relate to the term "Middle East" for the rest. That's just me. Cheers, Alan, Australia |
#6
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Good summary.
I was disappointed to learn that "Far East" is not a regularly used WA term for the NSW/QLD/Vic - I like the "Northern Island" and "Western Island" usage of Tassie and Enzed respectively for the Australian mainland. |
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