how's about if i see you i slap shit outta you ? don't y'all frenchies do that ? i seent it in the movies..
or is it the british ? i get y'all all mixed up.
ps mr frenchie . i like you and you're prolly way cuter in person than you are in them pictures. but i do think it would be fun to slap shit outta you like i seent the other frenchies do.
The last paragraph of your post seemed to legitmately end with you asking us readers for our opinion. It totally clashes with the rest of the post, fyi.
Both French and Spanish treat "snob" as an adjective, but, Julien, you must know that in English it is strictly a noun. The adjective you want is "snobbish". "I am snobbish" or "I am a snob".
French Intern ROCKS! Don't worry about the haters, French Intern, as they no doubt wear dad jeans and have bad posture.
Maybe you could take Dan shopping for shoes, I hear he no longer has his white sneakers? And a scarf and a beret, mmm.
Thanks, gus. Reading sloooowly is undoubtedly a specialty of Willie boy here, but I don't think comprehension comes with.
But I gotta say, you're slipping already, Mister Frenchie Man. I don't think this post is going to make it to 50 comments, let alone 100. Your string is broken.
Sign languages are not "renderings" of spoken language into signs, a common misperception. They are distinct languages. ASL is as distinct from spoken English as spoken Russian is from spoken English. Same with FSL from French. (There are signing systems such as Signed English, which is a system for rendering spoken English in signs, but that is not the same thing as ASL.)
Although Brits and Americans can understand each other speaking English, people using British sign language and American Sign Language are _not_ mutually intelligible to each other, but ASL and FSL are mutually intelligible (largely). This is because American schools for the deaf early on relied on students and teachers trained in France, and not in Britain.
Sorry to add yet another comment on sign languages, it's a niche thing, what can I say?
ASL was not imported from France, and the beloved legend about its trip across the ocean in the persons of Laurent Clerc and Mr. Gallaudet is only a tiny part of the story about Where We Get Our ASL From. There were at least two sign languages here in small but living communities when OFSL got here. Likely more that we don't know much about.
Also, the OFSL origins of many new world sign languages are very very fragile and difficult to trace.
So, that sign language teacher needs to keep up with the state of knowledge in sign language history. Maybe that's why the class was free?
Carry on.
When will the French Intern visit the Lego Statue of Liberty at Seattle Center and the Statue in West Seattle.
buy a nice pastry at the french coffee and beignet place when you do the Seattle Center one.
or is it the british ? i get y'all all mixed up.
My second impulse is that you're failing at one kind of sarcasm, and being blaringly obvious about another kind.
Posts before have demonstrated that you're a self-absorbed snob. You're still not getting the hint.
I want to like you, but you have to stop acting like a moron.
Your English is adorable and reminds me of Alex from Everything is Illuminated.
There, now you'll go to bed less ignorant.
God, you're pedantic when you're wrong, Fnarf.
Maybe you could take Dan shopping for shoes, I hear he no longer has his white sneakers? And a scarf and a beret, mmm.
Please continue to post, and stay snob.
If he meant American English, he should have specified that.
But I gotta say, you're slipping already, Mister Frenchie Man. I don't think this post is going to make it to 50 comments, let alone 100. Your string is broken.
@33: How does he even capture your attention? All I hear is white noise.
Sign languages are not "renderings" of spoken language into signs, a common misperception. They are distinct languages. ASL is as distinct from spoken English as spoken Russian is from spoken English. Same with FSL from French. (There are signing systems such as Signed English, which is a system for rendering spoken English in signs, but that is not the same thing as ASL.)
Although Brits and Americans can understand each other speaking English, people using British sign language and American Sign Language are _not_ mutually intelligible to each other, but ASL and FSL are mutually intelligible (largely). This is because American schools for the deaf early on relied on students and teachers trained in France, and not in Britain.
Oh, and Fnarf? In Spanish it's - charmingly and hilariously - "esnob."
ASL was not imported from France, and the beloved legend about its trip across the ocean in the persons of Laurent Clerc and Mr. Gallaudet is only a tiny part of the story about Where We Get Our ASL From. There were at least two sign languages here in small but living communities when OFSL got here. Likely more that we don't know much about.
Also, the OFSL origins of many new world sign languages are very very fragile and difficult to trace.
So, that sign language teacher needs to keep up with the state of knowledge in sign language history. Maybe that's why the class was free?
Daddy, I want a french intern NOW!!! I want to lock it all up in my pocket...
..et je les adore, ces betes noires!