(no title)
masom | 4 months ago
"super" is also a Latin word that's valid French.
> Au-dessus de, exprimant une supériorité dans la qualité
masom | 4 months ago
"super" is also a Latin word that's valid French.
> Au-dessus de, exprimant une supériorité dans la qualité
fouronnes3|4 months ago
wiether|4 months ago
SilasX|4 months ago
1) Quebec wanted "arrêt" instead of "stop" on stop signs, even though the latter is accepted as valid French and used in France.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop_sign?utm_source=chatgpt.c...
2) The use of the TLD .gouv.fr instead of .gov.fr, even though "gov" is a recognizable contraction of the intended French word "gouvernement".
(No, it's not a valid defense that "'gov' would be pronounced differently from 'gouv'": the English TLD .com is a contraction of "commercial", even though the "com" in "dot-com" is pronounced differently from the "com" in "commercial".)
wiether|4 months ago
Probably because of their proximity with the USA, the french-speaking community in Québec is far more attached to using French than actual French people. That's why in France we use "Stop" and not "Arrêt".
On the other hand, ".gouv.fr" is something used in France. gouv[ernement] is completely different than go[u]v[ernement] Not only because of its pronunciation, but also because it's not a simple shortening of the original word.
We never use "aso" to talk about an "association", even though it would shorten it even more, because it just doesn't make sense. You can remove the ending of a word, creating a kind of "prefix", bug it you remove multiple part of a word it just become something different.
layer8|4 months ago
SilasX|4 months ago
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45773624
zozbot234|4 months ago