• Hemingways_Shotgun@lemmy.ca
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    11 hours ago

    Now if you add a sliver of curiosity toward learning rudimentary French from the ROC

    Technically we (rest of Canada) should already have rudimentary French since (at least when I was highschool) it was a core curriculum until the 9th grade, after which we had the choice to drop it or keep taking it as an elective. I stupidly chose not to continue, but still have the ability to understand about half of what I read or hear.

    The problem in the ROC is the same problem that I have with my Portuguese; we simply don’t speak it enough after highschool to maintain that base level of knowledge. It’s something that I think most of us can dig up with some effort, but it doesn’t flow off the tongue unless you’re using it on a regular basis.

    • Victor Villas@lemmy.ca
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      8 hours ago

      Living in Vancouver, I honestly think it’s more advantageous to learn Chinese than French. The only reason I didn’t fully switch my language studies is because Chinese is waaaay harder to learn (as an English and Portuguese speaker), so even though it’s more useful here, it’s still not that worth the effort.

    • Snowstorm@lemmy.ca
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      10 hours ago

      Growing up, my father told me that Quebec bashing was a frequent occurrence travelling inside Canada. Frog jokes for example. (He was military and lived everywhere for a decade in the 70) also inside Quebec before French Canadian got a better access to university education it was mostly French speaking workers exploited by English speaking bosses.

      Those divisions fueled resentment and the independence movement or at least that was my father’s thesis. I, myself, never felt a division along those line.

      Now that Trump gives us a reason to fight together for a society where healthcare, education and human dignity having value independent of one’s ability to hold a job, I expect a united Canada for a while.

      You don’t need to be fluent in French but showing that you care to learn a bit shows enough respect to open the door for more collaboration.

    • Dystopia@lemmy.ca
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      10 hours ago

      Easy access to French media would have been helpful, like having shows dubbed in French along with English subtitles to follow along with, but the biggest advantage would have been being able to hear what words are meant to sound like instead practicing speaking French with another student reinforcing the incorrect pronunciation of a word.

    • CherryBullets@lemmy.ca
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      11 hours ago

      A shame really, because it would give you guys an edge fighting against Americans who don’t even understand it at all past “Bonjour”, “Oui oui”, “Baguette” and “Omelette du fromage”, if it came down to it.

      • Snowstorm@lemmy.ca
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        10 hours ago

        I like the idea of using French as a tool of resistance against the US imperialism.

        I would like to see an American pissed off because a business meeting is in French! 💋

        • pdxfed@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          Suggest you send a new statue of liberté, they’ll open it and return it because they won’t be able to work out what it means.

    • YurkshireLad@lemmy.ca
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      11 hours ago

      School boards in Ontario are slowly lowering the amount of French that kids learn, even those in French immersion. That’s very sad. As a Brit I thought it was a great program.