Il ne faut pas oublier que plus de 70% des québécois ont du "sang" (même si on a relativement les mêmes origines) acadien et qu'en gaspésie, il y a plusieurs villages acadiens!!! Je suis montréalaise et je trouve dommage que le québec soit aussi renfermé politiquement (souverainistes, indépendantistes et d'extrêmes nationalistes je dirais)...parfois, j'ai l'impression qu'ils oublient qu'il y a d'autres communautés francophones en dehors du québec!!!Soyons unis! hahaha!
So I'm acadian from new-brunswick, my first language is french. Everytime I go anywhere outside a city in quebec and speak french to them, they tell me in a very bad french accent "I speak inglesh" as they pronounce it. Working in the customer service industry in NB, Many tourists from quebec come down and as much as we smile and be nice, they are super rude. maybe it's just the people i've spoken too but it's a very common thing for acadians to dislike the quebecois.
@thejourneyoflife I'm an Islander and though Anglophone, did all my schooling in French. However, when I first started speaking with Quebecois(e) they would always trash my accent and tell me they could tell I was English. Turns out, after making some Acadian/Brayon friends, and travelling parts of French Europe that most of what they were complaining about were because most of my teachers were Acadian (and thus my accent), and the books (and thus my words) were largely from France...
@akropiss this is true. I am half quebecois half polish. Many french quebecers and acadians (i think even more acadiens) are also from La Rochelle and the west coast of france. I know my direct ancestors came from there.
the diference the quebecois think their the only one who speak french well.. us acadian we dont care we speak the way whe speak and were proud of it !!!
La relation québécois-acadiens est bizarre. Les québécois semblent adorés l'Acadie et l'accent acadien, tandis que les acadiens trouvent que les Québécois s'aiment trop et qu'ils se pensent meilleur que tous le monde. En même temps, la majorité des touristes au NB sont Québécois et les Néo-Brunswickois les ont besoin pour que leurs entreprises fonctionnent bien de plus, les acadiens savent que sans le Québec, ils seraient probablement devenu anglophones ou n'auraient pas d'école francophones...
@jcc92xo je ne crois pas que cest juste .....mon chers sans vouloir commencer un debat les acadien se sont toujours battu tres fort pour avoir les ecoles en francais et plein de gens sont mort dans la guerre contre les anglais pour quon puisse avoir acces a leducation en francais donc les acadiens se serait debrouiller sans le quebec sur ce point !! mais je te donne netierement raison sur le point economique !!
Avant aujourd'hui, j'ai cru que le français acadien était une langue morte mais évidement j'avais pas raison. Les francophonies de l’Amérique m’intéresse beaucoup. Parfois, j'ai des problèmes de compréhension de la langage de la France métropolitaine mais ces problèmes n'existent pas pour moi quand j'entends le québécois et l'acadien.
moi je viens de l'acadie faque j'ai de la famille du Quebec sooo,, LOL on va l'accueuillir avec toute ses amis... puis les tourrists la plupart du temps on les faits decouvrir le peit coin de part chez nous ;) / If you want than I translate I can 4 you ::)
@REDEMBTION Is it really all that rural over in New Brunswick? I mean...everything I read says it's kind of the 'middle of nowhere'. That's probably what helped preserve the language in the earlier days but how is it today? Lots of urban bilingualism like there is in Montreal?
@insegnilo It depends where you go in the province. Generally, Eastern and Northern NB is french, and Western and Southern NB is english. (with a few exception of course) Moncton is in the South-Eastern part its the only one that is officially billingual, its where the only french university of the province is (main campus)l. There are a lot of villages but there are 3 cities with a good population (Moncton, Fredericton, St-Jean) but don't expect anything like Toronto! Around 100 000..
@insegnilo if I understand well your question, than Yes ! they have some region that is totaly french , and totaly english. like from where I live, by only 1 hours of difference we can see than its begining to be english and french.
@insegnilo Most of the French community's in New Brunswick are rural, with the exception of Moncton, which is 30% french and has urban population of over 100 thousand people, though because the majority speaks English, most French people speak fluent English and a French dialect called Chiac, which is like French with English words mixed in, but the structure is French.
Il ne faut pas oublier que plus de 70% des québécois ont du "sang" (même si on a relativement les mêmes origines) acadien et qu'en gaspésie, il y a plusieurs villages acadiens!!! Je suis montréalaise et je trouve dommage que le québec soit aussi renfermé politiquement (souverainistes, indépendantistes et d'extrêmes nationalistes je dirais)...parfois, j'ai l'impression qu'ils oublient qu'il y a d'autres communautés francophones en dehors du québec!!!Soyons unis! hahaha!
mpg895 3 months ago
So I'm acadian from new-brunswick, my first language is french. Everytime I go anywhere outside a city in quebec and speak french to them, they tell me in a very bad french accent "I speak inglesh" as they pronounce it. Working in the customer service industry in NB, Many tourists from quebec come down and as much as we smile and be nice, they are super rude. maybe it's just the people i've spoken too but it's a very common thing for acadians to dislike the quebecois.
thejourneyoflife 5 months ago 2
@thejourneyoflife I'm an Islander and though Anglophone, did all my schooling in French. However, when I first started speaking with Quebecois(e) they would always trash my accent and tell me they could tell I was English. Turns out, after making some Acadian/Brayon friends, and travelling parts of French Europe that most of what they were complaining about were because most of my teachers were Acadian (and thus my accent), and the books (and thus my words) were largely from France...
tsireal 3 months ago
@akropiss this is true. I am half quebecois half polish. Many french quebecers and acadians (i think even more acadiens) are also from La Rochelle and the west coast of france. I know my direct ancestors came from there.
DroppinTheBeats 5 months ago
You were high as fuck when you recorded this, weren't you? :)
YukiNekoPrincess 5 months ago
the diference the quebecois think their the only one who speak french well.. us acadian we dont care we speak the way whe speak and were proud of it !!!
StreetBmxMonster 6 months ago
acadiens for the win calice cose tu parle wilfred radio radio
Rushxtanker 11 months ago 5
@Rushxtanker Heh - Cliche' Hot!
insegnilo 11 months ago
acadiens for the win calice
Rushxtanker 11 months ago
La relation québécois-acadiens est bizarre. Les québécois semblent adorés l'Acadie et l'accent acadien, tandis que les acadiens trouvent que les Québécois s'aiment trop et qu'ils se pensent meilleur que tous le monde. En même temps, la majorité des touristes au NB sont Québécois et les Néo-Brunswickois les ont besoin pour que leurs entreprises fonctionnent bien de plus, les acadiens savent que sans le Québec, ils seraient probablement devenu anglophones ou n'auraient pas d'école francophones...
jcc92xo 11 months ago 4
@jcc92xo je ne crois pas que cest juste .....mon chers sans vouloir commencer un debat les acadien se sont toujours battu tres fort pour avoir les ecoles en francais et plein de gens sont mort dans la guerre contre les anglais pour quon puisse avoir acces a leducation en francais donc les acadiens se serait debrouiller sans le quebec sur ce point !! mais je te donne netierement raison sur le point economique !!
tipierre666 5 months ago
Avant aujourd'hui, j'ai cru que le français acadien était une langue morte mais évidement j'avais pas raison. Les francophonies de l’Amérique m’intéresse beaucoup. Parfois, j'ai des problèmes de compréhension de la langage de la France métropolitaine mais ces problèmes n'existent pas pour moi quand j'entends le québécois et l'acadien.
AjAlexK 1 year ago
u wanna here a real acadien talk give me a shout im from lakeville newbrunwick
chadarseneau1 1 year ago
@akropiss St. Pierre et Miquelon is awesome! Is the accent similar at all or has Paris made their 21st Century mark on the language over there?
insegnilo 1 year ago
moi je viens de l'acadie faque j'ai de la famille du Quebec sooo,, LOL on va l'accueuillir avec toute ses amis... puis les tourrists la plupart du temps on les faits decouvrir le peit coin de part chez nous ;) / If you want than I translate I can 4 you ::)
FROM REDEMBTION :)
hope than i help you with this question :D
REDEMBTION 1 year ago
@REDEMBTION Is it really all that rural over in New Brunswick? I mean...everything I read says it's kind of the 'middle of nowhere'. That's probably what helped preserve the language in the earlier days but how is it today? Lots of urban bilingualism like there is in Montreal?
insegnilo 1 year ago
@insegnilo It depends where you go in the province. Generally, Eastern and Northern NB is french, and Western and Southern NB is english. (with a few exception of course) Moncton is in the South-Eastern part its the only one that is officially billingual, its where the only french university of the province is (main campus)l. There are a lot of villages but there are 3 cities with a good population (Moncton, Fredericton, St-Jean) but don't expect anything like Toronto! Around 100 000..
jcc92xo 11 months ago
@insegnilo what you mean....
REDEMBTION 8 months ago
@insegnilo if I understand well your question, than Yes ! they have some region that is totaly french , and totaly english. like from where I live, by only 1 hours of difference we can see than its begining to be english and french.
REDEMBTION 8 months ago
@insegnilo Most of the French community's in New Brunswick are rural, with the exception of Moncton, which is 30% french and has urban population of over 100 thousand people, though because the majority speaks English, most French people speak fluent English and a French dialect called Chiac, which is like French with English words mixed in, but the structure is French.
coldwhitesky 3 months ago