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French Have No Backbone/No Sense Of Humour.?

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Atheist | 20:06 Fri 04th Sep 2020 | Religion & Spirituality
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I've heard such comments. I'm reading Verdun 1916, and I live part-time in a French village. It seems to me that they have both. They certainly have a sense of humour, although people who don't understand French wouldn't know that. They certainly have backbone; we weren't occupied by an invading army and they were. How would the English have got on if Churchill and Dad's Army had failed? The spivs and right-wing profiteers would have had a field day.
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"qui ne comprennent francais." qui ne comprennent pas le français.
20:30 Fri 04th Sep 2020
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Tata PG. Vous parlez bien francais. Vous avez des liens avec le Canada?
if Churchill and dad's army had failed and Hitler had succeeded we wouldn't have the freedom to express our views on AB that's for sure.
As JimF says in BA (well earned i.m.o.) if you don't understand French - you don't understand the French. It took me years to do so - and then I realised how deeply differently they think. This is not derogatory, I still love my many French friends and ex-neighbours and Mr. J2 talks about going back for at least part of the year, if not permanently. Nous parlons assez bien francais.
Athiest
Je suis né au Québec. Mon père est Canadien Français et ma mère Anglaise. J'avais une grand-mère qui vivait à Paris et une qui vivait dans le Nord de l'Angleterre donc je suis bilingue Québécois / Geordie :-)
"if you don't understand French - you don't understand the French"

That's certainly true, though by no means unique to the French and their language. There is also the lack of shared cultural history, of course, which means that things that are obvious to French people are impenetrable to people who didn't grow up in that country. This is the reason that non-British people often do very badly on British quiz shows, especially with the initial "easy" questions - ask any Brit of a certain age which children's programme had the presenters John Noakes, Peter Purvis and Valerie Singleton and they'd have no trouble with the answer, but a French person would almost certainly have no idea what you were talking about!

Similarly, if a French person says "T'es complètement glécin, toi", are they insulting you, praising you or just having a bit of banter with you? Unless you'd grown up in France or can otherwise speak verlan, you'd be clueless.
"Je suis né au Québec"

I had always thought you were female!
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Tata; enchante madame. Quebecois/Geordie. Formidable!
The French have a very good sense of humour , they keep sending rubber boats full of immigrants across the channel to England, they think it is very funny.
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Mij, tais-toi!!
the french have a great sense of humour

They think the Alps are
hill areas

Am I Right ?
I'm Not Wrong !
Speak English.
'I've heard such comments'
Yeah, sure you have.
The knock-knock joke above is an attempt at 'franglais'.
The ' los qui?' translates as 'lost key?' Then all is clear.
Jim // "Je suis né au Québec"

I had always thought you were female!//

Sorry jim you've completely lost me off there ......

Je suis né au Québec" translates I was born in Quebec. The sentence is gender neutral.

you are mixing up je suis ( I am) Québécois (male)/ Québécoise (female)
Anyone thinking the French lack backbone would do well to read up on the French Resistance.

They faced death and torture if captured, yet continued the fight against the Germans for years.

Courage mes braves!

A.
Atheist, given that you spend part of the year in France, may I ask how you view the prospect of, for such purposes, having a soon to be devalued passport and driver's licence rights ?

Separately, there are gender inferences between né and née - unless my French is failing me.
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KARL, I don't know the latest about driving licenses. We keep a car here but not in England. I usemy UK license, and it may be that that won't be enough after 31 January. It may be necessary to get an international driving permit (I think that's what it's called - I go one last year but it proved not to be necesary.) This whole business is a pain for people like us; we won't suffer awfully, but everything is becoming difficult, more red tape etc.
Don't you like the English Atheist ?
Karl it depends on how you are using the word né

In the instance of 'je suis né' its used as the Participe Passé in the Passé Composé and will conjugate. Only neé is correct in 'Elle est neé

né takes on Gender when it directly follows a subject pronoun for example : M. Dupont, né à Paris
Mme Dupont, neé à Paris

The actual mistake in my post was at the very end where I missed an 'e' off Quebecoise which was a typo :-) -which I do a lot of in English too.
Don't you like the English Atheist ?
//Speak English.//

Parle Français.

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