
Paris has changed more in the past five years than in the past
few decades, in my opinion!
After several years away, as a reaction to 9/11, I suspected this from my contact with friends and French TV and films. But I had no idea how true it was. During my stay there last month, several friends asked for my observations so I wrote them down for them. There are two categories of this, social and linguistic, and I imagine they are all related. Below is my list of new phenomena in Paris:
SOCIAL CHANGES :
1. Natives
riding bicycles throughout the city's streets! I never saw any bicycles
in the streets there before and, now, they are everywhere!
-
Most are rented from "Vélib," short for "Vélibataire," Paris's
new bicycle rental program. Launched this summer, it has met with
surprising success.The French, as usual wary of safety rules, of course, don't
necessarily wear helmets or stop at red lights, making it risky to be a pedestrian.
I saw a gentleman holding a baby who was almost run over.
-
There are electronic rental stations, with dozens of parked bikes, every
few blocks.
- Keith Miller, NBC's "man in Paris," reported
in the October 25 edition of Nightly News, that it's "the biggest
self-service bike program in the world." In just two months, he
added, the bikes were rented five million times. And it's still growing!
-
The term "Vélibataire" is a combination of "Vélo," (bike)
and "liberté."
2. Less formality on many levels: aside from the above bike system is "le tutoiement" - addressing others by "tu" rather than the more formal "vous." Mistakenly doing that has always been a major pitfall for my students and I've been warning them about that for years. Now, it might be a less horrific faux pas, but, since Americans can never tell, I still advise them to use the safe, respectful "vous."
3. The globalisation of stores we find everywhere - GAP, McDonald's, KFC, Starbucks, etc. Branches are replacing boutiques all over Paris.
4. After long disdaining American fast food but eating at McDo's on the sly, the French have come up with their own versions. Two are la Brioche d'Or, a cousin of Starbucks, and Quick, a cousin of McDonald's. A case of "if you can't beat them... "?
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| New bench styles discourage sleeping, and even sitting. |
5. Many public benches in public waiting places now appear to be manufactured to keep homeless people ("les SDF," standing for "Sans Domicle Fixe") from lying down on them. There were even two different styles of them, one not even allowing waiters to sit comfortably.
6. I saw a new kind of graffiti on smooth surfaces, mostly windows. Instead of using paint, these new graffiti artists use sharp objects to carve words they want eternity to see.
LANGUAGE CHANGES : (check out the new
words page for a list of new French words)
7. There
are many new expressions like "A+" (short for à plus tard) "A
tout" (short for "à tout à l'heure), "carton" (a
hit), "cartonner" (the have a hit), and, of course, "pipole." My
friends think there are two reasons for this: what they called "SMS" (Short
Message Service, or text messaging) and the increasing influence of its
young immigrant population.
8. The new word that reflects a new phenomenon
first called "peoplisation," then "pipolisation." The
first step was the deformation of our noun people, used as either a
noun an adjective and in the singular as well as plural! Gérard Depardieu,
for example, is probably the best known French "people" in the
States.
The
second step, was the term "une presse people" I kept hearing with
puzzlement. The use of "une," indicating the singular but
used with "people," which is plural in English didn't make sense. Did
that mean that "people" had become a French adjective?
The answer is Yes. It modifies "presse" here and refers to
celebrities, so the entire term refers to those tabloid papers like our "Star" that
feed off celebrity gossip.
The most
recent step is the "pipolisation" of the press in general. So,
even President Sarkozy is "un pipole" and his divorce is described
in as much detail as possible in the "presse pipole."
9.
Common acceptance and use of what French grammarians have always considered
errors. They seem to come from contamination from similar expressions. There
are, for example, two verbs
meaning to remember: "se souvenir de" and "se rappeler" followed
by a direct object with no preposition. (A correct example of both would
be "Je me souviens de ma jeunesse" and "je me rappelle ma
jeunesse.")
After
hearing more and more people - including learned ones - use "se rappeler" followed
by a "de," I asked an erudite friend what the story was. No one
in France would ever use "se rappeler," she informed me, without
the following "de," even though she averred that it was officially
wrong.
A
similar example of contamination is the use of the subjunctive after "après
que" because "avant que" takes the subjunctive. The essence
of the subjunctive makes it obvious that this is incorrect but, if all
the French make the "mistake," has it not, perhaps, become correct?
Do I want to teach my students to speak like grammar books or like French
people?
Two
other former no-no's are anglicisms that now seem to be accepted: "réaliser" meaning
to realize instead of the more correct "se rendre compte (de)" and "opportunité" meaning
opportunity instead of the more correct "occasion."
My
college professors would be horrified at all these changes but are
they necessarily bad?
10.
An extra syllable is now added
to French words that do not end in "e." I started noticing it over
20 years ago but it has gotten so pronounced, a friend of mine even railed
againt it in his blog ( Eric Jabouille
http://switchie2.wordpress.com/).
I particularly noticed that all French people pronounced the number 22 as "vingteu-deux." I
wondered what the reason for that was and could now see that my friend considers
it like a virus, eating up the French language.
11. French pronunciation has deteriorated. "A
revoir" is often heard now instead of "Au revoir" from contamination
from "A bientôt." Similar to See ya instead of See you. "Pathétique!," exclaimed
my friend about the deterioration. When
I asked another friend whether she'd noticed it, she responded: "Je
n'y avais pas pensé mais maintenant que tu le dis, c'est sans doute
vrai. Hélas."
Other words
now pronounced sloppily are "Je ne sais pas," now pronounced "ch'ais
pas," and "oui," which is often "ouais." These
are similar to our Djeet yet? for Did you eat yet? and Yeah for Yes.
My
friend continues his lamentation on the deterioration in French as follows: "Beauoup
de "heus" à la fin de tous les mots et qui viennent
remplacer les e muets : ils disent "j'arriveuh" au lieu de "j'arrive". "Suzannheu" au
lieu de "Suzanne." Et le pire c'est que même lorsqu'il n'y
a pas de "e" à la fin (comme dans "Eric"), ils
prononcent "Erikeu" !
He
adds the following notes:
- plus
une seule cravate nulle part
- plus de chaussures normales mais des nikes
(running shoes) partout
- la disparition totale des librairies de quartier
-
la disparition des lettres papier (plus que des emails ou SMS)
- remplacé par
Skype, SMS, ou mails. Même moi, je ne téléphone presque
plus.
- le très mauvais état des arbres (platanes et marronniers)
totalement détruits par la pollution. Et personne ne fait rien pour
s'attaquer à la cause. Ils préféreront comme toujours
geindre sur les effets !
- l'accélération du temps : les gens
sont de plus en plus pressés. He concludes sadly: "Les
changements que je vois sont surtout un signe d'un effondrement de la vieille
Europe."
A humorous patriotic sculpture exhibit in front of l'Hôtel de Ville