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Life in rural France - Food - Friends - Wine - Cheese - Comments
Welcome to French Food
Focus. The name describes the intent of this blog. I'll focus on food
and because I live in rural France the stress will be upon French food.
Not that I will limit myself to food only. There are numerous posts
concerning life in France, comments on life in general and, certainly,
opinions about anything that strikes my fancy.
I welcome your comments and promise to publish all of them good & bad so
long as they're not offensive, pornographic or rude.
If
you have some good recipes you'd like to share or if you want to rave
about any great French
restaurants this
is the place to do it. I hope you enjoy my ramblings about rural France!
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Comments
to: yankinparisot@gmail.com
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I've been
thinking about language and wondering how to ever get fluent in French.
Somehow, I don't think I'm ever going to truly get there. But I'm having
a lot of fun in the process of trying.
The recent episode was posted on eGullet and was all about crote,
crottins & bouse. All words describing various forms of dung in French.
Only funny in context when you had a bunch of English vying with a bunch
of French to see who could come up with the most dung describing words
in their language. I think 'ka-ka' in English was the final winner!
Still they don't teach you these words at school and trying to learn to
speak 'familiar' everyday French is not easy. Slang is difficult in any
language; just think of the howlers that come up between the British &
the Americans who speak sort of the same language. All one can do is to
keep trying.
One thing that I have learned over my many years of living in countries
other than where I grew up is that trying to learn the local cultures
and value systems is every bit as important, perhaps even more so, than
learning the local language. Time after time I've seen sympathetic souls
with poor language skills more readily accepted in local society than
those who are more fluent in the language, but don't try to understand
what makes the locals tick.
Thus my piece of philosophical bit of advice for today; when planning a
visit to foreign climes study the culture first, then the language.
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