My Little English Page
The English language has ben influenced by different languages and today we are having a look at French words used in English.
This was probably the video I had the most fun making so if you want more I am definitely up for making a new one, just say the words!
Keep on learning!
XoXo
You want more lessons for ESL students? Check these ones 😉
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-Last, Former, Previous – Which ONE?
https://youtu.be/RPuWPb_oTVU
-Make Your English More COLOURFUL – Use These Expressions
https://youtu.be/_Z_p9PrnHsA
-5 PROVERBS Native Speakers Use | Speak English Fluently
https://youtu.be/k24wUpg2FMU
-All Hands on Deck | ESL Vocabulary
https://youtu.be/BcHVu9yG2Mk
-VOCABULARY – Kiss Something Better
https://youtu.be/adi5gMBP8Os
-Learn 10 Ways to Greet Someone in English | ESL Lesson
https://youtu.be/1Gtexmw3vqc
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useful and pretty
thanks for sharing. as a Chinese who is really interested in the French words used in English.
garage
I am happy to
have discovered your channel. With your winning way and charming manner of educating us about the nuances of your beautiful native language,
you should go far
in life. I hesitate to mention one matter because it is such
a petite issue, and
it is not worth the
effort to correct any of your excellent videos,
which I have only
seen two of so far,
but paradoxically,
you are mispronouncing the word pronunciation as"
proNOUNciation
rather than:
proNUNciation.
This is a common error I notice in
other videos and
hear in daily conversation. So
please know not
to be embarrassed or offended. I bow before your highly advanced intellect and fluency in several languages, whereas I have only mastered my
own. Also, in English the word TOUCHE particularly is used when a rebuttal is so sharp, clever, and decisive that it destroys one's
opponent's will to
continue the argument, and he
or she, out of
admiration, utters: "TOUCHE!"
It is remarkable how we English will borrow words
from French and
invest them with
a much stronger
negative connotation. For
example, if we detest something,
we hate it with a
fierce passion. But
in French, déteste
expresses a mild
dislike. If in France
your coffee is not
hot enough, you
would say: I déteste this coffee. Please bring me another
cup." I am probably not stating anything you don't
already know infinitely better than I! Since we have borrowed a
whopping 52% of
the words we use
from French, we are halfway speaking French
without even realizing it! We
just pronounce most of the words
incorrectly.
Respectfully Peace.?
So may people speak English better then we do..I mean you can hear a accent but their English pronunciation is better.I understand them more.
you look very pretty madmuazel ?!
In England we wouldn't really use touché for that reason, it's more when someone jokingly insults you but you come back at them with an even better one, it's like, yeah okay you've got me there ?
Thx Marine, I learned 2 new vocabs, cul-de-sac and touche. And the pronuncuation of other words too.
You're making a fundamental schoolboy error here. These words/phrases may have originated in French but have now become English so need to be pronounced in a British way.
William the bastard (his real name lol) 1066, him and his mates came over and spoke French when they beat us at Hastings 🙂
Theres me a English guy moan how the yanks ruin English and forget how we have ruined the french words we use sorry
Do you know that the very first word you use when greeting someone is actually Norse in origin. It is Hello, or Hola in Spain. Why do you say the English use rend in rendezvous? It is rond, that the English use not rend!!!
Genre in English is more like Joner not jonre. You missed piqued, as in French meaning to be stung: my interest was piqued by (whatever).
You have a voice like a chainsaw.
Your 3rd example, is famous to the older generation, spoken by Maggie Smith in the film the Pride of Miss Jean Brodie, she is a school teacher in Edinburgh, and that's why you will hear it spoken with a Scottish accent. "All my gals are the 'Creme de la Creme"
after destroying the ammo dump we shall split up, take your group along the coast path, we will rendezvous back at the dock at 0800.- who knew all those war films were actually gay romances.
Also a cul-de-sac isn't just simply a road that goes nowhere. it is also a road that curves in the shape of 'the bottom of a bag'
English is a language that hides in a dark alley ready to mug another language of it's best words……
Marine what about en suite when referring to a bedroom with a bathroom attached?
Frensh language is amazing .. I wish i have time 2 learn it ^^…