Hard Light Productions Forums
Off-Topic Discussion => General Discussion => Topic started by: MP-Ryan on July 01, 2013, 04:52:37 pm
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Dear fellow beaver-lovers:
Happy Canada Day. We're 146 today. Now everyone go eat poutine :P
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America Day is this Thursday! Bastille Day is the fourteenth.
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Curnada! **** yeah!
Okay, out of my system... time to watch some CFL FOOOOOOTTTTBAAAAAAAAAALLLLLLL and drink BEER
Eh
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I'd do something Quebec-y here just for the sake of it, but I'm still kind of giggling about listening to somebody from actual France describing them.
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I'd do something Quebec-y here just for the sake of it, but I'm still kind of giggling about listening to somebody from actual France describing them.
Please share, giggling at Quebec's expense is sometimes our national sport :P
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let's all watch a Canadian hockey team lose and burn down a city. :P
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I know I'm not the only one. Someone explain to me the double entendre
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Beaver. (http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=beaver)
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Beaver. (http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=beaver)
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Please share, giggling at Quebec's expense is sometimes our national sport :P
Their comment was that Quebec French should probably be considered a different language from actual French, rather than a dialect, along with something about an entire society of rednecks.
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Happy Canada Day!
I'd do something Quebec-y here just for the sake of it, but I'm still kind of giggling about listening to somebody from actual France describing them.
I don't think Quebecers celebrate Canada Day, really. They have St Jean Baptiste Day, which I'm assuming was once a religious holiday but is now very much secular.
Their comment was that Quebec French should probably be considered a different language from actual French, rather than a dialect, along with something about an entire society of rednecks.
They're actually pretty forward thinking on a lot of topics. It's just their speech has a lot of archaic terms in it.
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Please share, giggling at Quebec's expense is sometimes our national sport :P
Their comment was that Quebec French should probably be considered a different language from actual French, rather than a dialect, along with something about an entire society of rednecks.
Nothing more than other Canadians who actually speak French say all the time. Quebecois is not French. It's not English. It's often called 'franglais' here. It's actually quite amusing, because I can carry on a conversation in my poor French with someone from a French-speaking European country; the same is not true of my fellow countrymen in Quebec.
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LOL @ Franglais.
Watched the fireworks on the lake in our family boat. Was a grand ol' time. :pimp: