Definatly "mwah." And I most certainly do not have a French accent lol.
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Definatly "mwah." And I most certainly do not have a French accent lol.
LMAO...that is just hilarious. I'm canadian as well and I can guarentee I have no french accent if I have an accent at all it's newfie. "Right on buddy" LOL
And I say it "mwah" too :D
It is "mwah"! Tell her that a Belgian "girl" (:rolleyes: ) told you :)
Just for the record, being a southerner has nothing to do with mispronouncing the word "moi." I've never heard her pronunciation used before.:)
Ummm yeah, it's "mwah". Did you ever hear Miss Piggy say "moy"? No. I've been to Montreal and I knew a French exchange student in high school. It's pronounced "mwah" and if your friend honestly thinks it's pronounced "moy", you need to tell her to just not bring up French again 'cause it's ignorance like that that gives Americans a bad name.
(Ignorance meaning, they don't know any better and don't care to find out the correct way. - I didn't mean that as a cut against your friend.)
LOL I think she thinks its Moy, because thats how you would think it was pronounced. Since its spelled that way. But I say muah, mhua, I dont really know how to spell it.:p
Definition of a generation gap....I was going to suggest listen to the song from Camelot....."Tis I" but then again...there is Miss Piggy....:D ;) :D
I agree with Karen.Quote:
Originally posted by Karen
C'est moi = say mwah = It's me! And it is mwah in Canadian French and Parisian French as well. Moy is just plain wrong.
C'est moi, Karen, je suis 1/4 Quebequois = It's me, Karen, I am 1/4 French Canadian from Quebec (way north woods). My Grandma didn't want us to learn any French but at family gatherings, her generation spoke it, so we kids "wouldn't know" what was being said.
I took 4 years of French in school, which was in someways very different than Canuck French.
And my dear friend since 6th grade is now a French teacher at a Junior High here in Newton, 45 miles away from the town where we grew up.
There, that enough for your friend to believe you?
I come from a town 7 miles from the French border.
I took 9 years French in school.
I was married to a French for 7 years.
So that should add even a little more evidence ;)
If you are ever in doubt about pronuncation of a word you
can always check it out here at http://www.m-w.com/home.htm
They sound it out for you.:)