Hi Raina & Jason!! This new series of "visiting villages of up to 5000 people to explore from the perspective of living there" is absolutely a fantastic idea. We are traveling from the convenience of our couch to small French villages through your camera lenses. We are so curious to see what these villages look like and how people live in them. This is terrific. Can't wait for more videos on this series. Question: Lauzun is cute, but it seemed a little bit desolate with the exception of when you were sitting down for a coffee that we saw a few people coming and going. Why do you suppose it feels so empty? There wasn't even one person at the park... It felt kind of sad to me. Thank you.
@BaguetteBound9 ай бұрын
We were there fairly early in the morning (almost nothing opens before 10am) because we thought it would be easier for shooting (and to beat the rain that was coming!). But I will say Jan - March, is much quieter in village life here. The weather is very rainy during that time (filling our rivers) So the park is muddy, there are few tourists and in some town certain shops even close for a couple months to give the owners a break before the season starts again in April. But I'm so glad you pointed this our, the next village we shoot we'll have to try to go at both a quiet time for good shots and a busy time (like market day) to give you a better sense. Thanks for watching!
@gsbeak9 ай бұрын
One of the main answer is jobs : There are very few jobs in such a village. So most people commute every day to the next main town for work.
@BaguetteBound9 ай бұрын
@@gsbeak This is also true and a good point. Especially a village of this size, it's more like what we might call a "bedroom community" particularly during the week. But it does have a lot of essential shops on foot open year-round, which you don't always see in a place this size and makes it nice for our viewers who are considering moving to France are either retired, planning to retire, or working from home remotely. Thanks for the comment!
@francisleveque29397 ай бұрын
Peut être un dimanche et le temps d’ hiver 😢
@signefurax9337 ай бұрын
@@BaguetteBound Le problème c'est que le mal est fait...vous faites passer nos villages comme tristes et isolés...il faut filmer quand il fait beau et montrer les gens...Pourquoi ne pas attendre un peu de soleil quitte à reporter la vidéo de quelques jours ? En tout cas c'est très gentil de dire que nous ne sommes pas si impolis et démentir notre réputation 😉. On espère vous voir pendant les jeux olympiques de Paris 😊
@jean-pascalesparceil90088 ай бұрын
Hello! There is a historical connexion between Lauzun and the USA: the Legion of Lauzun, was a combined arms military corps (infantry, artillery and cavalry) made up of foreign volunteers in the service of the Ancien Régime at the end of the 18th century. Its colonel owner was Armand Louis de Gontaut-Biron, Duke of Lauzun. This mixed legion of a thousand volunteers took part in the American War of Independence from July 1780 to May 1783.
@rayvogensen2983Ай бұрын
Thanks for the historical reference. As a passionate lover of history, I salute you.
@WanderingWordsmanАй бұрын
Great videos, I saw you were eating your pastries sat on a wall somewhere, but you may or may not know that in France, generally speaking, no café will mind if you turn up there with pastries bought at the boulangerie pâtisserie, and eat them on their premises with a beverage you purchase there. Sometimes cafés offer a small selection of pastries - often only croissants - but even then, especially in small villlages, there is an understanding between the baker and the café owner so that bringing you croissants purchased at the bakery to eat them in the café with a coffee or something is not at all unusual. It's just nicer to eat fresh bread sitting comfortably at a table with a hot drink 🙂 Keep up the videos, I like your enthusiasm for fully exploring your region and diving right into your French experience!
@lollygee1729 ай бұрын
Love these little tours! Thanks!
@heliedecastanet18829 ай бұрын
Something you maybe don't know : Lauzun was owned by the family de Caumont de la Force, Dukes de la Force, Counts de Lauzun (among many titles). Lauzun eventually became a duchy with Antonin Nompar de Caumont, who married Louis XIV's cousin, named "la Grande Mademoiselle". Their story is quite famous. And thanks for the video !
@natgus17 ай бұрын
Lauzun never married "la Grande Mademoiselle". The king would not agree to the alliance ("La Grande Mademoiselle" was of royal blood, she was the king's cousin)
@heliedecastanet18827 ай бұрын
@@natgus1 Dear Natgus, according to the majority of historians, they secretly married in 1681, after Lauzun was released from Pignerol. However, they split as soon as 1684. You are obviously among the few ones who think they did not get married. No problem. Have a good evening.
@goofygrandlouis62967 ай бұрын
"la Grande Mademoiselle" ? Did she have big feet ?
@heliedecastanet18827 ай бұрын
@@goofygrandlouis6296 You can be tall with small feet. Which is not really confortable though.
@goofygrandlouis62967 ай бұрын
@@heliedecastanet1882
@gohumberto8 ай бұрын
We live in Lauzun (actually 1km out of town) and you also need to consider the proximity of Lauzun to Eymet (6km). We moved here 4 years ago, from the UK, and haven't regretted it for a moment. Eymet is quite unusual (as well as extremely beautiful) in that it's fairly active all year round, not just in high summer (when it's is incredibly busy as a tourist destination). So many small towns in the region are losing what few amenities they had, whereas Lauzun and Eymet seem to be growing, Eymet especially. Eymet has bigger versions of the Lauzun essentials. The French locals have been nothing but kind and helpful since we arrived. Hopefully they appreciate my attempts to speak French (and I apologise now for some of the weird things I must have said in error). You should come to Lauzun in High summer, on a Saturday evening, for the Table Gourmands. Quite incredible, the number of people being fed out on the main street. Similarly Eymet on summer night markets on Tuesdays, plus the Oyster & Wine festival, where the main square is packed with hundreds (thousands?) of people dining. The towns and villages in the areas really do put on quite a show in the summer season. It's very difficult to resist the amazing food and wine on offer ... so I don't resist. Yes, the area is known for (infamous for?) its anglophone immigrant communities, but I think that influx of relatively wealthy foreigners has gone someway to keep businesses active here all year round.
@buckyetsonali9 ай бұрын
Thank you for these videos! It’s so helpful for families trying to figure out the right move to France
@brigittelacour50559 ай бұрын
Mirabelle is a small yellow plum. We eat it fresh during the saison, late summer, znd you can eat it in tarte, do jam, preserve or froze it. it has a more sweet and flavor taste than ordinary plums. The Nancy and Metz one are the most famous one. And I forgot, you can do mirabelle eau de vie (spirit) too.
@kimdelo97958 ай бұрын
My daughter's best childhood friend (in the USA) is named Mirabelle. We always used to bring back jars of Bonne Maman 'Mirabelle' jam for her when we went to France to visit grandparents for Christmas and summer vacations. My son (a few years younger than my daughter) asked why Bonne Maman didn't make 'Colin' (his best US friend's name) jam, so he could bring 'Colin' jam back to his friend. We could only tell them that we didn't think customs would let us bring a stinky unrefrigerated fish (colin) back to the US on a plane as a gift for an elementary school kid, and his friend Colin probably wouldn't be too happy if we did, lol.
@etienne81105 ай бұрын
Mirabelle is a funny fruit. It is very very very regional. 90% of the world production is concentrated between France and Germany. With 60% coming from just the lorraine region (north east France). The fruit is basically unknown to the rest of the world despite being one of the best plums available, super sweet and flavorful, be it raw, cooked, in pies, jam or as spirits.
@yvonnebirch60268 күн бұрын
I love these tours through the small villages. Thank you !❤❤❤
@alkante29628 ай бұрын
Le duc de Lauzun, l'amant de la Grande Mademoiselle! Merci de la visite...😘
@laurac72899 ай бұрын
This is by far the best KZbin channel for those looking to make the move to France. As an Aussie, it's definitely not practical to do regular reconnaissance missions to France to check out possible places to live! I'm really looking forward to your future videos in this series. Merci!
@BaguetteBound9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the kind words, that means a lot since thats our goal!! We were so frustrated with trying to find information on smaller places when we were planning our move, and we love all these little villages so much, we thoight it would be a fun way to share them and provide some insight. Thanks for bearing with us through this first tour as we figure out how to shoot on location. We learned a lot filming this one on how to put the next one together better!
@rayvogensen2983Ай бұрын
I love the French villages. They have such conformity in the construction, with all the houses built in the same style, with the same materials, and usually with the same color. Here in northern Portugal, where I have lived for over 30 years, villages are often abandoned or semi-abandoned due to immigration to the cities or abroad. The original houses often crumble due to their original dwellers having left for France, Germany, or Switzerland or the low income of the aged occupants. The villages that still have inhabitants are practically deserted with a dwindling population of septuagenarians or octogenarians. There are usually no grocery stores or cafes and the primary schools have long ago been abandoned. There are never pharmacies or post offices. The nearby fields are often overgrown with weeds and the forests no longer cleaned, causing summer wildfires. Some have new houses built on the outskirts by immigrants who come back for a visit in August. Often these houses tend to copy the style of the countries where the immigrants live, be it in France or Switzerland. Unlike in France, it would be very hard to live in these places.
@arnomrnym6329Ай бұрын
3:14 in Germany it's called: Berliner (Pfannkuchen, like in french: _Boule de Berlin_) or Krapfen. 😉
@madbell9317 ай бұрын
So, since you become now Lauzunais ( citizen of Lauzun), you have to visit the magnificent Hôtel de Lauzun in Paris, build for the duke of Lauzun, military figure and very closed person to Louis the XIVth, the Sun King in the 17th century...I think they reopened it now, kind of building we call it in France Hôtel Particulier, like a mansion...and don't forget to take youre little sweet girl to see la Grotte de Lascaux! what a chance she has to learn culture in such a beautiful country with big and deep history!
@calvacoca7 ай бұрын
A "Tabac" is a place where you can buy tobacco. Most of the time, it also includes a bar, it's called a "bar tabac" in that case. But french people simply call "café" places where you can have a drink.
@doubleas44143 ай бұрын
Very pretty place❤. Looks like an easy place to live. A car is definitely a requirement!! Thanks, keep it up!!
@caromurray61529 ай бұрын
Love this idea; it’s a way to discover places in the area of France I would like to be in. Planning on an extended visit next year to hopefully fulfil this dream.☺️
@ravipeiris4388Ай бұрын
Great overview, thank you ❤
@sophied3313 ай бұрын
Many playgrounds in french parks have been removed because the health and safety rules are too complicated and too costly for local councils to implement. Lovely village ,thanks for sharing
@Gert-DK8 ай бұрын
As a European, I will recommend immigrants to look for places with a train station. Lauzun would have been perfect, if there was a train station. EU countries are looking at ways to bring down CO2. France are doing it by further expand their Nuclear capabilities. In France, trains drive on electricity, so they will get a huge advantage in the future. Imagine living in Lauzun (with train). You can skip the car, job might a little away. Pendle each day, and get work done on the train. I have a friend, he got he's job in Copenhagen, 1,5 hour each way. He got the travelling hours, on the train, included in he's working time, and he got himself a 4 days week. Look for a train station, when looking for a place to live in Europe. Cars are a very expensive way to transport yourself, and it will get even more expensive in the future.
@Gert-DK8 ай бұрын
@@absolutefreedom8035 Just did a test. Paris to Lyon this Thuesday at noon. 49€ and under 2 hours. On Saturday, you can buy a ticket for 19€. Expensive ???
@MsMatcauthon7 ай бұрын
When there is a train station, there are migrants from third world countries
@northerngannetproject31477 ай бұрын
Village with railway station have typically 3 trains a day to/ from big cities around. The early morning, the 12.00 and the evening one. Doing whatever is a full day trip !!
@Gert-DK7 ай бұрын
@@absolutefreedom8035 So it is cheap to own and operate car?
@Gert-DK7 ай бұрын
@@northerngannetproject3147 Thnx
@rickchandler25708 ай бұрын
I live in Portugal and in a small village like yours however we don't have near the things you do. We have a couple café's but that's about it. Nice village!
@nevillemignot16816 ай бұрын
I found it interesting that in the exploring an alley way in the old part of town up near the Chateau and Church you came across some roof tiles embedded in the foundations and walls of old buildings. These were used by the Romans as a way of adding strength to such structures, as an Ex-London tour guide you would see tiles used this way in the few Roman walls that survive in London, and i would guess these could date from Roman times.
@BaguetteBound6 ай бұрын
Oh really? That is interesting, thank you for your comment.
@nevillemignot16816 ай бұрын
@@BaguetteBound The Romans did use so many sorts of these fired items to add strength to all sorts of buildings. We once saw the underpinning of the 'Foss Way' that was full of Roman bricks and roof tiles.
@mikesmith-rp1mb7 ай бұрын
I hope to move to France soon with my french girlfriend. For me and my very basic French, I'd like a town where no one but the Marie speaks English. So when I piss off the locals at least he can explain what I've done...! 🇫🇷❤️ ☘️💚🇮🇪
@lorcanlorcan93347 ай бұрын
Les irlandais ne m'ennuient jamais et nulle part, ni dans mon petit village de Dordogne, ni en Irlande. De la part d'un français amoureux de l'Irlande
@jowalk808 ай бұрын
Love this type of videos, so informative. Thanks
@juliannadougherty26479 ай бұрын
glad i found your platform! You answer many questions we have...loved this little town. Thank you
@StephanieHughesDesignАй бұрын
C'est un excellent video. J'apprecie tu les deux la tournée de ces villes. Je voudrais achete une petite maison dans a de ville semblable à ceci. J'prefere un plus grande de ville avec a la gare. Merci.
@angelicapeach8588 ай бұрын
Hello, I enjoyed your tour very much. Would you consider doing Cordes Sur Ciel, lovely medieval town in Tarn. A lot of history I think you and your viewers would enjoy. I would like to know if that town has the five basics and what kind of transportation. I think many of us don't plan on having a car, at least not right away, and are counting on Local transportation. Also, where healthcare providers within the town or at what distance out of town. Merci' to you both and your lovely family. ❤
@faithheyison2 ай бұрын
I lived 26 years in a village not far from here. The region is beautiful, but you are also surrounded by locals who tend not to be too curious about the outside world. It is insular and unless you are born in the region, in other words a true local, you will forever remain an outsider. I have dual citizenship and am completely fluent, but I grew tired of the mentality. When the shutters and shops close at 7pm every dark winter night, you best be prepared to hibernate like the animals or at best, leave on the week-ends. It is not always the fairy tale that it looks like just because there is a medieval castle. When moving to France, choose your villages wisely.
@JJMA529 ай бұрын
wow, this was a great video! super peaceful. i assume you should learn how to drive manual? how was it learning to drive on the otherside of the road?
@BaguetteBound9 ай бұрын
Manual cars are common, but you can easily find automatics too. And lucky for Americans, the French drive on the same side! Thanks for watching.
@JJMA529 ай бұрын
oops, for some reason i thought the camera was showing the drivers side! thats a relief hehe@@BaguetteBound
@WalkwithMarsha8 ай бұрын
I would love it if you could please do a similar tour of Yvoire! It looks like such a charming French town, and I've been dying to know what it might be like to actually live there!!
@bikesfrench85247 ай бұрын
Ils sont a côté des landes et a 1 heures de la côte basque surnommé la petite Californie car les plages sont très belles et c est le spot du surf en Europe
@UnluckyPlant8 ай бұрын
Love this, and can’t wait for more tours! It would be nice if you added (text on the screen?) the date, time and temperature, so we know what the weather is like during that season, and if we’re seeing it when everyone is at work /school, or if it’s a weekend. We just discovered your channel this week, so have been binge watching. 😂 We moved to Portugal a couple years ago, but love France and want to get an affordable home there one day. Just trying to figure out where. 😁
@zappow28278 ай бұрын
Someone may have already told you that: the "c" at the end of "tabac" is mute. It's pronounced "taba", not "tabak".
@brooklynbabe37273 ай бұрын
Right you never pronounce the consonant at the very end of a word.
@hedwin_tv81226 ай бұрын
Would love to see you guys in Castelculier, near Agen !
@RetireToEurope9 ай бұрын
Great job you guys! This is amazing. Wish I was there with you! 🙌
@francisleveque29397 ай бұрын
Super coin❤ Marmande et C ” tomates ”!😂 Faut bien un lien commun mais, beaucoup de belles choses a 80 kilomètres à la ronde pour qe Régaler 🎉🎉
@Whanganuibloke9 ай бұрын
Picturesque - oui, buzzing with activity - non !!! What time of day were you filming ? France seems to come to life after 10am or so. Great content guys - keep 'em coming s'il vous plait.
@BaguetteBound9 ай бұрын
Lol, yes, it was fairly early morning. I didn't think about that until after, I was thinking it would be quieter and easier to shoot. I will say though, village life Jan - March always feels quieter. This town in particular has a fantastic summer night market. All the restaurants have outdoor eating areas. Life feels very different winter to summer. Thanks for watching this first one! We learned so much putting it together, I hope our next ones will be much better shooting!
@Whanganuibloke9 ай бұрын
@@BaguetteBound You are completely right in that it is easier to hear what you are saying without the distraction of locals chatting in the background and this is borne out when you are having a cafe . But it does provide the impression that nothing is happening ! Hard for you to win either way LOL
@kimdelo97958 ай бұрын
@@Whanganuibloke Yeah, hard for them to win either way when she sounds like a hyena and her husband sounds like he's narrating a 1974 BBC documentary about cheese. Trying to get a monetized KZbin channel to fund their fake 'French' life is never going to work out for them. So sad for their daughter that they've dragged into this.
@caroledsd12437 ай бұрын
You can find mirabelles to eat at the end of summer every in France and especially in the east departments.
@scottphillips68479 ай бұрын
Yes, we look for a train station, veterinarian, proximity to the rest of Europe, and within two hours (by train) to major airport.
@jean-pascalesparceil90088 ай бұрын
Hello. You can look south of Bordeaux, you will be close to Spain and Portugal; near Lyon you will be close to Switzerland, Italy and Germany. East of Paris (for the largest airport) you can travel easily to Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany. Look for cities with a TGV train station, they will have veterinarians.
@papatango50858 ай бұрын
Near Geneva you have good airport and good quality of life. But it s expensive as Paris. Maybe near Nice too
@northerngannetproject31477 ай бұрын
Impossible in France to catch an international airport by train in 2 hours from the countryside.
@branlotin7 ай бұрын
I've been going on holidays (my family has a home outside the village) in Cressensac since I was born, it's 20 kms south of Brive-la-Gaillarde which is only a 15mns drive by the freeway with regular trains to Paris or Toulouse, Toulouse is 1h45 by the same A20 freeway, the Dordogne river is quite close (Souillac is 15kms), Rocamadour and Padirac a 45mns drive, Martel 10mns, Collonges-la-rouge 15mns, Turenne 10mns... and cherry on the cake, the Brive airport is just outside the village with 2 daily flights to Paris-Orly, 2 weekly flights to London Stansted. There also is a brand new primary school. Only minus is it is crossed by the N20, I wish they'd built a deviation so that the traffic doesn't go through the village.
@isayx32 ай бұрын
Can you do a video where you compared living in or near a small village like this vs a larger city like the one live by now? I really like the idea of a smaller village like this but curious if you could go back to this way of live? or is it pretty similar?
@bodilyc7 ай бұрын
One thing that I noticed (that we really struggled with when living in France) is the lack of ppl anywhere. The village looks dead as you walk around..No ppl.We really found this so isolating when we would drive around in villages.... and one has to wonder..."where are all the ppl" and incidentally it doesn't matter what time of day, its always like that.
@thierrycambon1167 ай бұрын
They're at home ! There are a lot of retired people in those villages, looking for quietness. If you have kids, want to practice sports, go to the movies, restaurants, theatres, you should live in a town.
@bodilyc7 ай бұрын
@@thierrycambon116 Thank you for your kind suggestion to live in a town. Its very sweet of you to be concerned enough to comment. However town living is not what we desire, we like to see ppl walking about and to get to know the local village ppl. A village has 'Soul" when ppl frequent it and talk to one another. And also its so funny because we are retired and we (like a vast many others) do not want to sit home in retirement.
@Maria-js9ou7 ай бұрын
0:52 Why is the Lauzun plate upside down?
@hugoguedon65767 ай бұрын
The movement of inverted (or upside down) signage signs is a protest movement initiated by the agricultural unions FDSEA and Young Farmers of the Tarn department, it then spread throughout France
@branlotin7 ай бұрын
It is by solidarity with farmers demonstrations a couple weeks ago, it was the same when I went to my village on holidays, I started noticing upside down village plates just before Rodez (at Luc La Primaube to be precise) and then all the way on the remaining 160 kms
@trevinormandy14520Ай бұрын
Considering you’re only 15 miles away from Bordeaux you’re not lost your not in the middle of nowhere and guess what with an Internet connection I can live pretty much anywhere in the world doesn’t bother me, but I prefer small villages over bigger towns, but I can tell your Americans cause your travel time is a lot more than what it would take me to go from that village to Bordeaux. Then again, I ride a motorcycle, so maybe that’s why you travel time seems a lot, It’ll take me 35 minutes
@markwild23987 ай бұрын
Total grandeur!
@davidniquot64236 ай бұрын
Be carreful, you'll be soon used to the picturesque... be carreful not to be bored .. :D
@sylviemanson97618 ай бұрын
Nice video. I thought you were diabetic man !! Then collège and collage are 2 different words, think about the word "hedge" to get the right sound for an "è". Have a nice stay^^ .
@mikesmith-rp1mb7 ай бұрын
Canelé de Bordeaux...you must have tried.?
@KoHokCheung7 ай бұрын
Did you noticed the upside down Lauzun village sign at the entrance of the town?
@BaguetteBound7 ай бұрын
Yep...that was from the Farmer protests earlier this year.
@nicolasmillet8888 ай бұрын
Did you already try to ask for pain au chocolat at the bakery in Lauzun ? 😬🤭😅
@corentineduperche50537 ай бұрын
tu veux leur attirer des ennuis? 😋c'est la région des chocolatines, je crois
@nicolasmillet8887 ай бұрын
@@corentineduperche5053 hehe je pense qu'ils le savent deja ;)
@3arezu8 ай бұрын
Did you visit any big town or region since you came in France ?
@dancersdumonde6 ай бұрын
We have a house in a hamlet. Maybe 25 people?
@Reckadu77 ай бұрын
Do you know why the village signs are turned over? =)
@jean-claudemuller31997 ай бұрын
recent farmers protests turned over village signs, against some EU regulations, it happened also in some regions in germany
@phoenix-xu9xj7 ай бұрын
There looks like there is far more than 700 people living there. I live in a village in the UK of 3000 and yet this village seems to have a lot more houses🤷♀️
@branlotin7 ай бұрын
Probably only 700 permanent residents but plenty of secondary houses.
@Elaines-travels9 ай бұрын
If there is no train station how do you get there when you fly in?
@BaguetteBound9 ай бұрын
You'd need to rent a car or book a taxi from the airport. Some village do have a bus that comes through from the nearest train station. But a car is necessary to live in most small villages in France. I would only consider larger cities in France if you'd like to be car free.
@kimdelo97958 ай бұрын
Living on the bus route within an hour radius of a larger city is key. I personally fly into Barcelona, take the 50 minute TGV ride to Perpignan, and my town is a 40 minute bus ride up into the Pyrenees from Perpignan train station. That bus ride costs one (1) euro. You can get anywhere within a 2 hour radius on the bus for one euro, then you have to pay another euro (sniffle.) You absolutely DO NOT have to have a car in France, depending on where you live. It's a major reason I went back to France (from the US) after my kids were out of school. Goodbye, paying for insurance that I never used! Goodbye ridiculous gasoline prices! Goodbye car maintenance costs that always seemed to show up out of nowhere! That crap is over for me, forever. We do rent a car when my (adult) kids come to visit, but they're responsible for that, I just give them the money to do it. The no car thing is a major, major relief for me.
@Elaines-travels8 ай бұрын
@@kimdelo9795 that is exactly what I was thinking of doing
@kimdelo97958 ай бұрын
@@Elaines-travels By all means look into it! If you're specifically looking into the area southwest and west of Perpignan, there is a great community of expats and anglophile French natives in the area. The culture certainly sways into the Catalan/Spanish influence given its location, you'd need to be willing to embrace that, but I've found people warm and welcoming.
@reynaldparisel38527 ай бұрын
What about the famous local rugby team (Union Bordeaux-Bègles) :) You are in a land of rugby !
@collbackk5 ай бұрын
What about the locals? Are they approaching you? They must bu curious. Are you making local friends by now?
@marysemazeres14307 ай бұрын
I am sorry to point The french problem, : health, doctors and even more, Dentist, it really difficult to find on who accept new patients, I am living the other side east on of this département 47, yes every thing is very picturest, life is nice when retired, except for health that is really important.
@melaniezette8867 ай бұрын
As a gentlemen you should just check the beignet is not dangerous and let your wife eat it first 😄
@MmmGallicusАй бұрын
Seems to be a pretty remote and desolate place. I wouldn't trust the availability of trains in Marmande. If you want some people around, human contact and transportation, it would be better to settle for Bergerac.
@michellemobakeng59389 ай бұрын
FYI the 'c' at the end of 'tabac' (tæbæ) is silent. The full expression would be, e.g. 'Je vais au bureau de tabac', imperative 'Allons au bureau de tabac.' Interesting tour
@michellemobakeng59388 ай бұрын
@@kimdelo9795 I do not understand your point. In France, the last letter in a word is silent therefore, the only sound we should hear is 'tæbæ' not 'tæbæk'.
@michellemobakeng59388 ай бұрын
@@kimdelo9795 In French grammar, it is not unusual for rules to have their exceptions: nouns ending in 'AL' change to 'AUX' in the plural form such as Un cardinal - des cardinaux Un animal - des animaux Un bocal - des bocaux ( jar) Exceptions (just a few) Un récital - des récitals Un carnaval - des carnavals (carnival) Un étal / des étals (stall) The words you quoted are not French but foreign and so can be pronounced as they would in their country of origin. These nouns are the exceptions to the rule. I saw you tried to be clever and could not help yourself but be mean for no reason.
@michellemobakeng59388 ай бұрын
@@kimdelo9795You had no more things to say about the topic on hand so you fell back on your mean self. Should I be 90, where is your respect? You must be bored to be picking on someone who you don't know and did you nothing. So, please, let go off me.
@kimdelo97958 ай бұрын
@@michellemobakeng5938 Don't even THINK you're preaching to ME about 'French Grammar,' little girl. If you're such an expert in French grammar, why were you FYI-ing the original poster with your ignorance when you were 100% WRONG and didn't have the slightest clue? Sit ALL the way down and think long and hard before you ever dare to crawl out your cave and humiliate yourself again in the future.
@ogamiitto86278 ай бұрын
@@kimdelo9795Tu veux pas compter tes cheveux plutôt que de raconter de la merde ? Personne ne prononce le "c" de tabac.
@alexmarcus90098 ай бұрын
Adjust your camera from tree tops and tops of people heads. Oh, look not a McDonald’s in sight 😅
@joeshmooo53278 ай бұрын
Do you speak French?
@stephbreizhАй бұрын
Too bad the weather did not do justice to the village
@inigoromon1937Ай бұрын
Do USA citizens realize that France IS a civilized country where citizens' rights are guaranteed by the Republic? That basic services like education, sewage and drinkable wáter are part of that?
@cmolodiets7 ай бұрын
so you chose to live in the "diagonal of the void"
@red-one59237 ай бұрын
Severals special medical in this buildings lol, only nurses!