All Things French

 

Stone French fountain
Bird song is what I thought the French language sounded like when I first arrived in France.

After a while, it just sounded difficult.

I was utterly lost after a person would say, "Bonjour."

When I was first married French Husband and I lived in Paris. A few years later, we moved with his business to Marseille.

The first few things I noticed when we arrived in Marseille:

The smell of pine trees.

That women's neckline dropped two inches. Cleavage was another fashion statement.

Thirdly, the Mistral (a strong cold wind, famous in the south of France) seemed to blow away the Parisian accent, which made the French I knew to disappear with the current as well.

 

 

Voiture 2CV

 

Whenever anyone comes to France and stays with us, the questions mainly concern cultural differences.

Take cars; cars do not have the same meaning as they do in the USA. Having a nice car means you have a nice car. Status isn't attached to it as strongly as it is in the States. Why have a big expensive car in France when you have to drive it and park it in teeny-tiny places?

Where are the buckets of ice cubes?

Where are the toilets when you are out and about? 

Why do people drive like crazy people? Are they on a suicide mission?

Why do children seem so well-behaved?

You guys eat so much; why aren't you fat?

Why are there so many strikes?

Wouldn't it be more profitable if bakeries had coffee too?

What's health care like?

 

French-market-sign

 

Strawberries

3, 20 Euros a kilo.

Roughly:

A couple of dollars for 2.2 pounds.

But they come from Spain, and the cost of French-grown strawberries is double at least.

 

French sign

 

In the beginning, when speaking French was something I could not do,

yet needed desperately, I memorized all the words I knew that were French

And I tried to use them when I could…

A la carte,

A la mode,

Au contraire,

Au natural,

Avant-garde,

Belle,

Merci, 

Beaucoup,

Carte Blanche,

Deja-vu,

Faux pas,

Rendez-vous,

 

And I was told that nearly every French word that ended with 'TION" is, in most cases, means the same thing in English as they did in French.

The trick was saying those words with the correct accent.

Super! is Super in French too. Super became my best friend.

How are you? Super.

Do you like it? Super.

How is your meal? Super.

Did you have a good time? Super.

Isn't it beautiful? Super.

Would you like some more? Super.

Do you want to go to the brocante? Super.

 

 

France, French countryside village

 

Du sublime au ridicule il n'y a qu'un pas. 

 

"It's just one step from the sublime to the ridiculous."

 Napoléon

 

I can say this in English, but it doesn't roll off my tongue in French.

 

Thefaceoftruth_2

 

Avoir le cafard literally means (to have the cockroach).

Translated, it means:

To be down in the dumps, to have the blues.

 

 

Tous les jours

 

Another little surprise when I arrived in France was how the hours were displayed.

One through twelve, such as:

1h00

4h00

10h00

And so, on and forth to 12h00, are the morning hours until you reach midnight, 24h00 the evening hours.

13h00

16h00

22h00

Forget  12 am or 12 pm.

 

 

France, Fountain, Wine

 

Eclaboussure – French verb,

Means: Splash.

 

 

L'homme parfait

The perfect man.

 

 

Chambres 

 

Avoir le démon de midi (To have the midday demon)

Means: To have a midlife crisis.

 

 

Chalk board French market

In the beginning, I took a dictionary with me everywhere I went; It was humbling.

Nowadays, the advantage of cell phones is.

I bought sour milk instead of milk, flour instead of sugar… and was thankful for spices I could open and smell. It is a language I knew by heart.

 

  French postcards France

 

Zut Alors! 

It is one of my French Husband's mother's favorite expressions and one that I first learned.

Means:

 Darn it!

 

Backdrop

 

The word

Ça va? 

It is a lifesaver. An entire conversation can be had with just those two little words.

 



Comments

9 responses to “All Things French”

  1. …thank you Corey. That was very interresting! I’ve never been much of a reader, but I “hang” on every word you write. (everyday 🙂

  2. Thanks for the explanation! I think the only way to really get it is to have to live it as you are. It takes a lifetime.

  3. The car thing is changing here in LA. The most “statusy” car here now is the all-electric Tesla. And many people are switching to the tiny Smart Cars, Fiats and Mini Coopers because of the limited street parking and crazy gas prices. Prius hybrids are popular too.
    That said, I would like to know the answers to a couple of the questions you brought up, lol:
    Why aren’t there ice cubes?
    Where are the toilets when you are out and about?

  4. TEXAS FRANCOPHILE

    Love your writings! I live in Tx so of course we still drive big gas guzzlers. We’ll be the last to convert. HA! I to wonder about the ice cubes.

  5. Teresa Cesario

    Such a beautiful photographer Corey. Love hearing of your life.

  6. When we were in France this summer, we, too, were fascinated by the price of fresh fruit. Wow, we bought cherries and raspberries and strawberries by the kilo and just ate them as we walked along.
    So, another request for an answer. How do the French manage to have such great fruit at such amazing prices?

  7. Sitting here in triple digit heat wave & drinking a tall iced tea..yes, I wonder about the ice cubes thing, too… “must have ice”! I’m not a world traveler but remember once in Austria during a layover ordering a coke in a restaurant and it didn’t have ice & it was warm! Ha-ha, but when I order an iced tea here I ask for “easy ice” otherwise I get a full cup of it and little tea.
    But, yes I think you have to live the way it is when you are in another culture/country, that’s what makes it unique and interesting.

  8. Mais si, il y a des glaçons! Not everywhere, but ice cubes are now so much more plentiful than when I first spent time in France 40 years ago. Sigh.
    I had a lovely French roommate, Monique, who’d say “flûte,” the equivalent of “dang,” even more polite than “zut.”
    Great photos. Bonne continuation, Corey.

  9. Madame in Bangkok

    You Forgot : avoir la cuisse légère . We had so much fun with this one

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