Quote: Originally Posted by scratch
Hey Rush,
Welcome to 3C/CanCon. I lived in Quebec for almost 40 years and lived in a town that was split in language, by that I mean 50% Anglophone --- 50% Francophone.
As kids we played together and learned each other's languages. Then in school (English system) starting from grade 1 to grade 11 we had 2 hours of French every day. Our teacher was a local resident and if you met her in the street or in a shop you spoke only French with her...in other words a form of heavy immersion.
The problem with Quebec French is that it is always evolving especially into Franglais. I still speak what was known as the "high speech", but the language changes from region to region. There is also "joele" to deal with, a kind of Louisiana type language.
IMO what you need to do is involve yourself in French based activities. Schools provide high speech which is not spoken that often anymore.
You have a dilemma that I didn't have to face. And there are no magic solutions.
If you consider France as an alternative their French is more Anglicized than Quebec French.
Regards,
scratch
Oh, I don't mind that it's evolving. In fact, I do know quite a bit of Quebec French, enough to get by and have a good time, but I can't understand fast-paced conversations. And as for being in French activities...well, that's a bit off for most anglophones where I live. Where I live, the anglophones and francophones are quite isolated, just because of the language difference, because a lot of the francophones can't and won't accept English-speakers as friends, even if we're friendly with them, and will mock, ridicule, and isolate themselves from us. Also, where I'm from, speaking France French is a bit like speaking with a British accent in Harlem: you just don't do it.
And yes, it's quite the dilemma, because as I said before, schools teach mostly the grammar, and a couple of words. After that, they basically assume that you can learn the rest on your own, until you get to high school, where they assume that you were already taught French well by a teacher, but for the classes that are intended to teach those that only speak English, they do it just like they did before, only assuming that you know more when they know that you're not around it (I go to one of the few English schools around Montreal).
Also, as you said, schools teach a high language that isn't used that much anymore. So basically, they're teaching something that won't get us anywhere for now, nearly guaranteed. In fact, in one of my schools, I was actually taught
incorrect French by my French teacher (Example: "Il m'a frappé" vs "Il a frappé moi"), so that made the situation even worse.
I figure that you can imagine why I'm so passionate about this, because I
really want to learn the language, but have no viable solution, and a lot of my friends (and people that aren't even my friends, or people I know in their 40's) want a viable solution as well, but when we try to take some action, we can't, because there's nothing to do that we know of. That's why I'm fed up, and why I'm asking you guys out there if YOU guys know of ANY place to learn Quebec French
well, whether it be free, or $1000 per lesson, every day, for 5 years.
And by the way, thank you, scratch
