French vs. Italian Word Differences!! How similar are they!?

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🇫🇷 LUCIE

🇮🇹 Jordy
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Love these two ladies discussing their languages.

hollish
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French: carrote🥰🥰
Italian: carota🥰🥰
English: carrot🥰🥰
Spanish: Z A N A H O R I A👹👺☠️💥

ethandougherty
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I read that Italian and French share more words than either of them does with Spanish, but because the pronunciation is so different, it's far easier for Italians and Spaniards to understand each other than it is for Italians and French

ehmzed
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Video Spanish🇪🇦-Portuguese🇧🇷 ✅, Video Spanish🇪🇦-Italian🇮🇹 ✅, Video Italian🇮🇹-French🇨🇵 ✅, for Italian there is only one video with Portuguese and for Spanish there is only one video with French 😅, videos with latin languages ​​are very good

henri
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Red in languages : Rosso ( Italian ), Rojo ( Spanish ), Rouge ( French ), Vermelho ( Portuguese ), portuguese is similar to Catalan in this one, vermell.

henri
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French is quite easy for Italians to learn and vice versa.

Orazio
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I'm English and I find it fascinating how it's a second language to both of you and you have no problem at all communicating at such a precise level about grammatical differences in both of your native languages using this other language. You're both very fluent and impressive!

asmith
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In italian you can use also "femmina" (femme), same for "enfant" (in italian you can says "infante").
Basically in written French there are many words that are no longer used in Italian (or at least used less).

lazios
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For me, French is very simple because when it is written it resembles Italian and when it is spoken it resembles my dialect (I live in Lombardy, in northern Italy). When I was a student and I didn't know a word in French I invented it based on Italian and my dialect and 9 times out of 10 I guessed, ah, ah!
Man: uomo in Italian, homme in French, höm in my dialect.
Egg: uovo in Italian, oeuf in French, œf in my dialect.
'Na cazzata, lol!

scully
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The more I read and watch videos about this topic the more intrigued I am about how the different Romance languages came to be, and in particular how the pronunciation of French originated. Especially because it seems to me that the pronunciation of Italian and Spanish are similar, but French, which is geographically in the middle of both, is very different.

DracoIsfet
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In Italian you can use the word "infante" to say "children" so a french speaker can understand you better.

chiamatemigio
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Fr. Mademoiselle It. Madamigella (in the past) Fr. Madame It. Madama Fr Enfant It. Infante (infanticidio). And so on... We share most of the vocabulary, and some words are the same as well but we used those words in the past (if we read them is not difficult to understand their meaning)

giulianorivieri
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i know poire because of the BELGIAN detective Poirot 😆

janslavik
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French is married with catalan and Italian, intense relation between 3 idioms in fact.💚🇮🇹💙🇫🇷💛🇪🇦

SinilkMudilaSama
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"Haut", "eaux", "os", "oh" have the same pronunciation in French. 😁

rafaelrandom
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In the USA we sometimes use Ms. if we are unsure if a lady is married or not or in some formal settings. It’s pronounced miz versus missus or miss.

anndeecosita
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Lucy has the most comforting voice ever. I love the French and everything they're about.

SharksRevenge
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“Prego” when u enter any store and another “prego” means you’re welcome😂

EdinburghTiger
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French is easier to understand when written than when it is spoken since French isn't written like it is spoken as in Italian. I have a French speaking friend who can understand my Italian quotes I text before signing off messenger and I can understand his French quotes he texts to me most of the time. Lol😁

michaelmartinelli
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Unlike Italian and Spanish, French is pronounced differently from how it is written, but the differences in pronunciation are fixed and not as arbitrary as English, so it's not difficult to learn.

tic-tacdrin-drinn