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Monday, March 2, 2015

French words of the day and how to pronounce the last two letters: entourage, garage

My light-hearted translations of French words increasingly found in the English language. My translations are not necessarily accurate, more a way of remembering unfamiliar or confusing words.

The entourage is the group of people you take to surround you when you are on tour, en route to somewhere else.

chiffon - light fabric, often see-through, often used for scarves
Crêpe-de-Chine - crepe from China, not crap, crêpe
georgette - light fabric, may feel slightly rough but drapes well and crease-free in my experience of reversible dresses which are now often viscose.

Word ending et and ette
et rhymes with ay, say, as in ballet, bouquet
ette - rhymes with bet, get, jet, let - banquette, georgette


masseuse - lady giving a massage - no funny comments, please. The e on the end hints that the subject is feminine. Masseur would normally be male, like entrepreneur.

The e on the end of masseuse tells you to pronounce the previous letter. For example, gris is pronounced gree and Paris in France is pronounced p a r e e. (I have to separate the letters because otherwise the spell checker keeps changing it to another word such as pared.)

The s-e on the end of masseuse also tells you to pronounce it as ZZZ.

(The letter e after c makes an s sound as in police, writer as polis in some languages. The letter e after g makes it a soft j sound. That applies to the word entourage above. To see both sounds in one word, for example, in the word garage, the first g is hard but the second is soft j. )

(Please don't pronounce garage in English as gar ridge! Yuk!)

Marriage and carriage in English rhyme with fridge but all three words have the letter i and garage doesn't. If you have learned French, you pronounce garage more like the French speakers, to rhyme with barge, large and the girl's name, Marge, short for Marjory. 

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