Subj : This week's issue To : Ward Dossche From : Sean Dennis Date : Fri Jul 06 2018 13:12:03 Hello Ward, 06 Jul 18 09:22 at you wrote to me: WD> They speak 'Quebecois' which is probably derived from the old french WD> in the 1600-es and started to lead its own life. With a proper WD> knowledge of french you can get by, but it's not the real thing. I have been told by my young co-workers that even the French can't speak French let alone Quebecois (that's the same name they used). I am to the point now though that I can read and understand much of what they write in French. WD> I also found that english takes me where I want to go in Quebec, but I WD> think your brand new baby-faced ZC may disagree ... I've been told in Quebec City, English is fine, but if you start getting out into the rural areas, you will probably be out of luck. WD> The thing is that the french language is monitored by the 'Academie WD> Francaise' which guards the language and keeps it uniform. As a result WD> you can still read the works of Moliere for example as they were WD> written back in time. Much like the Danish language . . . and others, I'm sure. WD> Try that with the english of Shakespeare's time and you're doomed. English is made up of so many other languages and dialects you're lucky to get it to follow its own rules most of the time. A friend of mine who is a linguist and speaks 16 languages has told me that save for Mandarin Chinese, English is the most difficult language for non-native speakers to learn. I can't say I don't blame them. If it's not the language it's the grammar and punctuation rules that will throw them also. However, I have several international friends who are better English speakers than most native English speakers I know. :) Later, Sean .... Not tonight, dear. I have a modem. --- GoldED+/LNX 1.1.5-b20170303 * Origin: Outpost BBS * Limestone, TN, USA (1:18/200) .