Pardon My French: Unleash Your Inner Gaul
By (Author) Charles Timoney
Penguin Books Ltd
Allen Lane
24th September 2007
2nd August 2007
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Places and peoples: general and pictorial works
448.2421
Paperback
256
Width 131mm, Height 178mm, Spine 15mm
173g
The hilarious survival guide to French -- from how exactly to say oh la la to ordering a steak without getting sneered at THINGS YOU DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT FRANCE- You burnt Joan of Arc! Smuggling live chickens into rugby matches is patriotic How many times to kiss on the cheek Where not to cross the road French guns don't go 'bang' What do you call a party bon appetit is vulgar A six-pack is a bar of chocolate The dangers of being called Peter or Penny Your smallest finger is your 'ear' finger The importance of Wednesdays How to tip and when to celebrate Christmas Forget the French you learnt at school. Based on twenty years of hard-won knowledge, Pardon My French takes you through all the words you need to survive, shows how and why they work, and steers you past all the pitfalls and potential embarrassments of speaking French in France. From sugar-cube etiquette to why the Marseillaise is all about slaughtering Austrians and Prussians as bloodily as possible, Charles Timoney lays bare the Gallic mindset alongside their bizarre language. Covering all areas of everyday life from eating and drinking to travel, work and, crucially, swearing and sounding like a teenager, this is not just the most entertaining, but also the most useful book on France and the French you'll ever read.
"Coming to France Forget the rest, read the best. This book will save you from being the butt of the Frenchman's humour." -"French News" "A Francophile's humorous guide to the French language. A kind of "Eats, Shoots and Leaves" meets "A Year in the Merde"." -"Bookseller"
When Charles Timoney and his French wife were both made redundant in the same week they decided to try living in France for a year or so. It proved much harder than expected. Charles' O level in French was little help when everyone around him consistently used a wide variety of impenetrable slang and persisted in the annoying habit of talking about things he had never heard of. But they stayed. Two decades and two thoroughly French children later, he decided to write the guide to French that would have saved him from so many blunders and misunderstandings along the way. This is it.