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Podcasts and Listening Resources on French Radio

Lately, I have been listening to a number of French radio stations for music, news, podcasts and other programming. There is a an extensive amount of free programming out there for all levels of French speakers and for a variety of interests! • RadioFrance International ( RFI) has programming on both English and French, and offers French language educational materials. It's worth adding the app to your phone, but you can also use the website version: https://francaisfacile.rfi.fr/en/ https://francaisfacile.rfi.fr/en/exercices/ check out the serial podcast immersion stories of Les Voisins du 12 bis  for a dual-language radio play meant to help you understand French accents and common phrases: https://www.rfi.fr/en/podcasts/immersion-in-french-language-les-voisins-du-12-bis/ • RadioFrance has hours of programming on everything you can think of, from news and culture, to sports and music:  https://www.radiofrance.fr/ they also have podcasts on topics like the sciences, politic...

Bonne Année!!

 As we start a new year with the Lexington Francophones, I am reflecting on 2023, which saw the group continue to grow and change. We often reached attendance numbers in line with our pre-pandemic attendance. Lexington continues to welcome new arrivals from around the world, if either for a short visit, or a long-range plan, and we have gotten to know many interesting people who share a common bond of an interest in the French language. It is always an adventure and a chance to hear the stories and experiences of those around us! 

Language Family Tree

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  Tree by Minna Sundberg –– See the article in the Guardian:  https://www.theguardian.com/education/gallery/2015/jan/23/a-language-family-tree-in-pictures

Thoughts on William Alexander's "Flirting with French"

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  Last week, I finally caught up to the 2014 book by William Alexander, Flirting with French , in which Alexander sets out to learn French with relatively high expectations and a mildly discouraged but quasi-scientific outlook.  At 57, is Alexander too old to realize his dream of embodying French language and culture like a native? Alexander seeks out the advice of linguists, psychological researchers, native speakers, and a multitude of other anecdotal resources, completes all the levels of Rosetta Stone French, visits a Meetup group (!) and enrolls for two weeks in a luxury immersion school in France (Millefeuille Provence https://www.millefeuille-provence.com/home/)  in an effort to "BE French." Unlike most French speakers, whether native or second-language learners, he never goes to a traditional class or follows a textbook, however.  As Alexander details picking up a new project and facing the inherent struggles toward his targeted level of mastery –– much like ...

Fixed it!

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  Map  Credit:  The French Advocacy Resource Bank https://advocacy.frenchteachers.org/french-in-the-world-and-in-north-america/

Resources for Learning a Language or Developing Conversational Skills

I will continue to update this list regularly, so check back for more! Learning a language happens on many levels, and through diverse efforts. Reading, speaking, listening, and writing are all related skills, but we sometimes develop them at different rates. For some of us, the goal is simply to communicate and to connect with speakers from outside our culture or language. Being polite, reading a menu, getting around, and maybe making a few jokes can be a reachable goal. Some of us are writers and therefore need more polish and better grammar. Many of us are professionals and would like to develop clarity and good presentation skills. Others would like to watch a film or a TV show and understand without subtitles, or perhaps read novels or philosophy in the original language. Some of us find the weekly conversations easy, and others are hoping to practice and build their knowledge, vocabulary, and comprehension. While a level of fluency can be achieved more quickly, learning a languag...

The Lexington Francophones –– A Brief History & A Personal Introduction

Hi! I'm Julie, the current organiser of the Lexington Francophones. This Meetup group was started circa 2010. I joined in 2011 in order to build my skills in conversational French. I was already conversational in Italian, and pretty decent in French, if only in the kind of French you learn in academic settings.  In 2014, I began living abroad while working on my doctorate, a key component of which included research in French. This experience was made much easier by my time in the Lexington Francophones. I remained a regular attendee during my return trips home, and was able to join an Italian Meetup while away. I also had a small group of Francophones to practice with during weekly lunches at my college. At the end of 2019, I came home for a holiday break, and, like many others, I soon found that I could not travel back right away. From 2014-2019, on return trips to Lexington, I was always excited to see old friends and the many new faces at the table. I became the third organiser ...