What Did You Just Say?
20 May 2008 by French for a While
PATRICK AND JULIA were doing homework over the weekend and they happened to be studying homophones. Now, we have these in English (red v. read; straight v. strait, hoe v. ho!), but the French language takes homophones to the next level -- they are everywhere! Take this for example: in French the following words are all pronounced vair [like the English ‘fair’, but with a nice throaty ‘r’]
Here's a fun link to even more French homophones (hope you caught the sarcasm there, cause I'm laying it on pretty thick).
[obscure reference guide: layng it on pretty thick]
CJS
- vert (green)
- vers (towards)
- une verre (glass)
- une ver (worm)
- une vers (verse)
That’s FIVE words that are pronounced exactly the same. But there are plenty of other examples. How about these words, all pronounced core [but, again, with the fancy ‘r’ sound]
- la cour (courtyard)
- le court (court, like tennis)
- court (short)
- le cours (course/class or grand courtyard)
- courre (a conjugation of 'to run')
Or these -- again, pronounced the same:
- vingt (twenty); le vin (wine); vain (vain); vint (a conjugation of 'to come')
- c'est (it is, or it's); s'est (a reflexive version of it is); sais (1st/2nd person singular of 'to know'); sait (3rd person singular of 'to know'); ses (a possesive pronoun); ces (these/those), and, of course, the letter 'c'.
Here's a fun link to even more French homophones (hope you caught the sarcasm there, cause I'm laying it on pretty thick).
[obscure reference guide: layng it on pretty thick]
CJS
