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Riviera Reporter
THE FRENCH RIVIERA'S ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWS MAGAZINE
THE FRENCH RIVIERA'S ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWS MAGAZINE

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Court allows controversial ultra-nationalist rally in Paris
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France expands slavery remembrance with memorial in Paris suburb
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France fails to broker deal on New Caledonia's future after three-day 'conclave'
France fails to broker deal on New Caledonia's future after three-day 'conclave' Talks between pro- and anti-independence groups in New Caledonia – mediated by Overseas Territories Minister Manuel Valls – this week collapsed without an agreement, leaving the French Pacific territory in political limbo one year after its worst violence since the 1980s.
Football: Stars align as Monaco secure Champions League qualification Competitors fell by the wayside on a dream night in the Principality as AS Monaco secured qualification for next season's Champions League with a win over Lyon (2-0).
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Where the parties are: terrace events bring high-energy nights to Monaco Grand Prix weekend As Monaco gears up for the return of the Grand Prix this May, attention is turning not only to the racing, but also to where the best views—and parties—will be found.
Prince Albert II inaugurates Top Marques Monaco 2025 Prince Albert II unveiled world-first hypercars and celebrated 20 years of Top Marques Monaco, where cutting-edge design, personal touches, and automotive innovation meet in one of the world’s most exclusive shows.

The French Riviera's English Language Magazine

Getting familiar: Tu or vous?

Je te dis vous: the title of that Patricia Kaas song sums up the difficulty for foreigners of coming to terms with the use of vous and tu, without doubt the trickiest aspect of the language. 

Anyone who learned French in a British school would have been taught that vous was the form to use with strangers, superiors and older people; tu was for friends and others you know well and also for children and animals.

Rue Francais Of course, it’s always been more complicated than that. Once above a certain altitude, we’ve been told, French mountaineers, whatever their relationship, always use tu, on the way down they switch back to vous. Then there are those cases of famous couples – Charles and Yvonne de Gaulle, Sartre and de Beauvoir – who stuck to vous during decades of intimacy. But now the conservative daily le Figaro has told us that vous is falling out of favour and more and more even fairly straight-laced Gauls are going for tu most of the time. Maybe, but be careful.

What they often didn’t tell you in school is that tu can be disrespectful and so ill-received which is why Sarkozy (inescapable, isn’t he!) has told cops working in the suburbs not to say tu to youngsters of Arab and African descent.

So what’s the solution, heh?

Sensible advice from he business magazine Challenges to those arriving in a work place: “Listen to how the others – your superiors and colleagues – address each other and try to fit in with the house usage. In an ad agency likely everyone will be tu, in a bank no way!”