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2dimes wrote:I must confess, I don't listen to nearly enough French content here. I keep meaning to but it's difficult to find people to converse with here, so I almost never get to practice speaking it. On the very rare occasion I do they usually want to just speak English and move on.
Arama86n wrote:I have thought about that many times; about the fact that at some stage (or perhaps many times) there was a meeting somewhere in Sweden. Where it was decided to subtitle instead of dubs films and series, as you say. Whoever was involved in reaching that decision deserves some sort of damn medal.
Those countries that dub have done their citizens a real disservice.
I would consider getting free education in any language a very good thing, English especially so.
jonesthecurl wrote:My French used to be pretty good, but I've gotten horribly rusty since moving to the US. ON another topic, way back in the 90's I often went to Greece. I learnt enough Greek to get by in everyday situations, and even chat a little bit. Everyone told me not to bother, "they all speak English anyway".
When I went to Rhodes, I discovered part of the reason why this was. They tend to deliberately attract English-speakers to one part of the island, Germans to another, Italians to another, maybe other language groups to other bits (though I couldn't confirm that last comment). We drove around the island for a couple of days, and once outside the area full of English-speaking tourists we found that nobody spoke English. Not in shops, not in restaurants, not in the bank. Instead, the local schools taught everyone, primarily, the language of the people who would most likely stay in their area.
2dimes wrote:I agree with Betiko about the French.. I think it is pretty funny when people who can't even say a simple greeting in any other language besides English complain when going somewhere. And it happens a lot. "We went to xxxxxxxx and they were so rude. No one even spoke English. It was the worst trip ever." Awesome story bro.
First time I was in France, the closer we got to Paris and the north part of The country where tourists go, the ruder and less likely to help with my bad attempts to speak French some people were. I find it interesting hardly anyone speaks about how rude the Brits and other English speaking tourists are. I watched many English speaking people being jerks in Dieppe.
It's no different from going to New York and not learning English. They will probably be pretty rude there too.
Good luck going to most places in western Canada or the USA and trying to speak French. The lazy English speakers won't help at all, and here they had to sit through French class in elementary school. But French people usually don't do that. They at least learn basic English.
Often I have spoke with a French person who speaks perfectly reasonable English then they apologize for doing it. "Sorry, my English is not very good." I never hesitate to tell them, "Your English is fine. It is much better than my French."
Oh no, Betiko called the ram disrespectful.. He will be distraught. He will likely need to write about being the smartest, hard working, sober person in his room full of guys who caught a bird, to get over that harsh accusation.
2dimes wrote:In Montreal it's neither French nor English.
Dukasaur wrote:2dimes wrote:In Montreal it's neither French nor English.
I used to deliver to Quebec quite often. I'd try to work on my French, but I'd say something in French (badly) and instead of correcting me in French they would just speak to me in English. I'd say, "no, no, don't switch to English. Help me improve my French. Tell me how to say it properly," but nobody wanted to invest the time.
betiko wrote:Dukasaur wrote:2dimes wrote:In Montreal it's neither French nor English.
I used to deliver to Quebec quite often. I'd try to work on my French, but I'd say something in French (badly) and instead of correcting me in French they would just speak to me in English. I'd say, "no, no, don't switch to English. Help me improve my French. Tell me how to say it properly," but nobody wanted to invest the time.
Maybe because you were delivering stuff.... if you receive a new dildo from amazon, i m sure the only thing you have in mind is to go try it out, not to start teaching english to the Quebec delivery guy on your front porch!
betiko wrote:Dukasaur wrote:2dimes wrote:In Montreal it's neither French nor English.
I used to deliver to Quebec quite often. I'd try to work on my French, but I'd say something in French (badly) and instead of correcting me in French they would just speak to me in English. I'd say, "no, no, don't switch to English. Help me improve my French. Tell me how to say it properly," but nobody wanted to invest the time.
Maybe because you were delivering stuff.... if you receive a new dildo from amazon, i m sure the only thing you have in mind is to go try it out, not to start teaching english to the Quebec delivery guy on your front porch!
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
2dimes wrote:betiko wrote:Dukasaur wrote:2dimes wrote:In Montreal it's neither French nor English.
I used to deliver to Quebec quite often. I'd try to work on my French, but I'd say something in French (badly) and instead of correcting me in French they would just speak to me in English. I'd say, "no, no, don't switch to English. Help me improve my French. Tell me how to say it properly," but nobody wanted to invest the time.
Maybe because you were delivering stuff.... if you receive a new dildo from amazon, i m sure the only thing you have in mind is to go try it out, not to start teaching english to the Quebec delivery guy on your front porch!
Wrong again.
Duke would be excited to help a guy learn English or Czechoslovakian
Dukasaur wrote:2dimes wrote:In Montreal it's neither French nor English.
I used to deliver to Quebec quite often. I'd try to work on my French, but I'd say something in French (badly) and instead of correcting me in French they would just speak to me in English. I'd say, "no, no, don't switch to English. Help me improve my French. Tell me how to say it properly," but nobody wanted to invest the time.
jonesthecurl wrote:I used to find that, in France, my French was perfectly good enough to have even quite complicated conversations with the French people who spoke no English. OK, a bit slow and laboured at times, but sufficient for the task. However, it would often happen that French people who spoke very good English would pretend that my French was so awful that they couldn't understand it at all.
In Greece, it was very different, maybe because so few tourists make any attempt beyond "Yassou". If my Greek wasn't up to what I was trying to say, they would ask "what are you trying to say?" and then tell me the correct Greek for it.
betiko wrote:
For French people.... Parisians are super rude. Just like for American people, newyorkers are super rude. Paris and New York being the most visited cities of these countries, it would be wrong to assume that newyorkers and parisians are the stereotype of each country s inhabitants.
mrswdk wrote:There are basically three types of capital city centre:
- Those that get that relatively few foreign workers/tourists and therefore the locals think you’re interesting and are willing to humour you (e.g. Kampala, Tehran, Astana)
- Those that get a fair few foreign professional workers and tourists and where the locals have had therefore one too many stilted conversations with foreigners to be willing to have any more (e.g. Paris, Rome, Dublin)
- Those that are so international that half of shop/restaurant staff and pedestrians are probably other foreigners anyway and so they’re in the same boat as you (e.g. London, New York, Brussels)
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
riskllama wrote:
saxitoxin wrote:More good news!
President Trump has just extended his beneficent mercy to Alice Johnson. (Not this Alice Johnson.)
President Trump had previously ordered Alice released from prison where she'd spent 22 years for a Jean Valjean-type crime but, when he saw her in the crowd at the party mass rally last night, decisively decided to declare her fully pardoned and absolved of all crimes. After pardoning her today, President Trump charged Alice to prepare a list of others still sitting in prison for minor drug offenses committed under Bill Clinton's regime of the 1990s who can be freed.
After signing her pardon, Rev. Robert Jeffers said an invocation declaring that Jesus Christ acted through the person of Donald Trump to answer Alice Johnson's prayers.
Thank you President Trump!
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
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