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The expression: "Il faut vivre pour manger et non pas manger pour vivre." (One must live to eat and not eat to live) expresses the role of cuisine in French culture. Socrates originally meant it to be a rebuke: Molière used it ironically and the French later put it backwards to remind all who do not revere meal time sufficiently. Today, we enter the kitchen and stay for a cozy moment of food, conversation and even a recipe.
French Please gives you expressions you can use every day to add FRENCH to your day, easily, fuss-free and in joy! If you know you will not take the plunge alone, but this lifestyle of the two of you, hanging out and speaking together in French is what you desire, let us make it easy, fun and immediate for you with our French at Home: a Conversation or French at Home: a Debut offerings. Start now, today, and fill your day with the French you've always dreamed you would speak again...or for the first time.
French from today:
Que mange-t-on?/What are we eating?
Nous avons au menu une fricassée de tomates et oignons, servie pour accompagner un poulet rôti.
On the menu is a tomato fricasé accompanying a roasted chicken.
Comment comptes-tu faire le poulet?/How will I cook it?
Est-ce bien un poulet de la ferme?/Is it a farm chicken?
Le sel/salt le poivre/pepper l'huile d'olive/olive oil Un peu d'eau/a little water
La cuillère à soupe/tablespoon une cuillère à café/a teaspoon une fourchette/a fork
Mets le couvert/set the table bon appetit!
Would you like your lessons all laid out, stress-free for you, audio, written and all?
Learn more about French with Kids and French at Home: a Conversation below:
French at Home: a Conversation (be ready for your next trip, practice now, together, never with a screen.):
French with Kids: Bring the joy of French into your family's day the fun, quick and easy way (screen-free).
Don't miss another episode, video, blog post or special offer on French Please. Sign up for our newsletter here.
Feedback? Requests? We would love to hear from you! Send letters here: [email protected]
The expression: "Il faut vivre pour manger et non pas manger pour vivre." (One must live to eat and not eat to live) expresses the role of cuisine in French culture. Socrates originally meant it to be a rebuke: Molière used it ironically and the French later put it backwards to remind all who do not revere meal time sufficiently. Today, we enter the kitchen and stay for a cozy moment of food, conversation and even a recipe.
French Please gives you expressions you can use every day to add FRENCH to your day, easily, fuss-free and in joy! If you know you will not take the plunge alone, but this lifestyle of the two of you, hanging out and speaking together in French is what you desire, let us make it easy, fun and immediate for you with our French at Home: a Conversation or French at Home: a Debut offerings. Start now, today, and fill your day with the French you've always dreamed you would speak again...or for the first time.
French from today:
Que mange-t-on?/What are we eating?
Nous avons au menu une fricassée de tomates et oignons, servie pour accompagner un poulet rôti.
On the menu is a tomato fricasé accompanying a roasted chicken.
Comment comptes-tu faire le poulet?/How will I cook it?
Est-ce bien un poulet de la ferme?/Is it a farm chicken?
Le sel/salt le poivre/pepper l'huile d'olive/olive oil Un peu d'eau/a little water
La cuillère à soupe/tablespoon une cuillère à café/a teaspoon une fourchette/a fork
Mets le couvert/set the table bon appetit!
Would you like your lessons all laid out, stress-free for you, audio, written and all?
Learn more about French with Kids and French at Home: a Conversation below:
French at Home: a Conversation (be ready for your next trip, practice now, together, never with a screen.):
French with Kids: Bring the joy of French into your family's day the fun, quick and easy way (screen-free).
Don't miss another episode, video, blog post or special offer on French Please. Sign up for our newsletter here.
Feedback? Requests? We would love to hear from you! Send letters here: [email protected]
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