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Showing posts with label French. Show all posts
Showing posts with label French. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Why did Joey Barton put on a weird French accent?

27 November 2012 Last updated at 15:06 GMT Joey Barton Joey Barton is yet to become fluent in French English footballer Joey Barton has been much mocked for conducting a press conference in Marseille in a French accent. But why do some English speakers put on accents when in other countries?

Joey Barton has already defended himself after a wave of lampoonery of his accent while speaking to journalists following his league debut for Marseille.

During the appearance, Barton chatted to reporters in a French accent worthy of BBC sitcom 'Allo 'Allo! - his neatly-trimmed moustache and head-nodding mannerisms all adding to the spectacle.

For many a football fan it evoked memories of the now infamous interview former England boss Steve McClaren gave in 2008 when he spoke English in a Dutch accent.

Barton has yet to offer an explanation but has hinted to his 1.7 million Twitter followers that he may have used the "Bartonese" - as it has since been dubbed - in jest.

Joey Barton adopts French accent after Ligue 1 debut

"Steve MaClaren [sic] eat your heart out..." he posted on Twitter after the press conference.

But he also tweeted about the difficulty of speaking to a room full of French journalists in "Scouse", saying that adopting the accent of an 'Allo Allo!' character was the only way he could be understood.

There is a well-founded stereotype that Britons speak louder and more slowly when abroad. But why do some attempt the accent of the country they are visiting?

Dr Karen Douglas, reader in psychology at the University of Kent, says there is a common phenomenon known as "speech accommodation" where people might adapt their speech style - accent, intonation, and so on - depending on the context they are in.

"One thing that might be going on is that Barton is adapting his speech style to sound French because he's in France," she says.

"Psychologists theorise that people do this sort of thing for a number of reasons but [it is] mainly to make themselves understood and to make themselves more likeable."

Douglas says that, most often, people will do this subconsciously - and it is likely that this is what was going on in Barton's case.

Continue reading the main story Psychological phenomenon of "speech accommodation" where people change to fit contextIt is often a subconscious attempt to be friendly"It's unlikely that he's doing this with the conscious goal to be liked - or to offend anyone. [But] this is one of the perhaps unintended effects," she says.

Kim Stephenson, a researcher on the impact of accents, says Brits tend to take one of two approaches - they go "very, very English" or they adopt the accent they are hearing around them.

He says mostly it is well-meaning and perhaps out of a feeling of self-consciousness that they do not know the language. In short, they overcompensate - hence the mimicking.

"The trouble is what usually happens is the English don't have much idea of how other languages actually work, so what tends to happen is that in France you end up sounding like [you are in] 'Allo 'Allo!, in Italy like Chico Marx, etc."

He says mimicking an accent can mean treading a fine line between appearing friendly or offensive.

"It's either seen as a joke or it's seen as insulting because it doesn't work very well," he adds.

Stephenson says Barton may have been trying to mimic the speech rhythms or patterns of the French players - and he was probably doing this unintentionally.

"It may be that if he's hearing lots of broken English with French accents he has subconsciously started to mimic it. But he is probably smart enough that I suspect he must know [what he is doing] and he is just trying to be friendly. It's probably not a good plan," says Stephenson.

'Allo 'Allo Officer Crabtree represented a high-water mark of French-accented English

Even if the French don't get the joke, it is unlikely his attempts have made him easier to understand.

"For most people it's easier to understand someone when the language is very clear. If you start slurring it or changing the stresses and leaving gaps [in sentences] it's harder to understand," says Stephenson.

But do foreigners adopt accents in the same way as Brits?

"Speech accommodation is something that occurs in other linguistic cultures as well," says Douglas.

But a European is more likely to speak another language than a British person thanks to more emphasis on learning. "The reason one might be less likely to hear a German 'putting on' an Italian accent in Italy is that they are likely to be speaking Italian," says Dr Ghada Khattab, lecturer in phonetics at Newcastle University.

So a word of advice to Barton - and others - is to learn the language, even if just a few token words.

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Chinese wines beat French in tasting, but it's not best vs best

A man drinks a glass of red wine during the 6th Shanghai International Wine Trade Fair June 1, 2011. REUTERS/Carlos Barria

A man drinks a glass of red wine during the 6th Shanghai International Wine Trade Fair June 1, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Carlos Barria

By Terril Yue Jones

BEIJING | Wed Dec 14, 2011 1:46pm EST

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese wines took the top four places in a China vs Bordeaux blind tasting competition on Wednesday, but it wasn't exactly a thrashing of the world's most elite wines by Chinese upstarts.

The wines were all red , mostly Cabernet Sauvignon-based Bordeaux-style blends. The Chinese side was represented by five of what are considered among the best Chinese wines produced; the French wines were five more pedestrian reds from Bordeaux negociants and commercial labels, not chateau-bottled wines.

They ranged in price from about 200 yuan to 350 yuan ($30-$55).

Five French and five Chinese judges tasted the wines blind at a wine bar in Beijing. In the end, the 2009 Chairman's Reserve from China's Grace Vineyards in Ningxia province came out on top.

In second place was Silver Heights' "The Summit" 2009; in third was 2009 Jiabeilan. Grace Vineyards' Deep Blue 2009 took fourth place. Like all the Chinese wines in the tasting they too were from Ningxia, a small, sparsely populated region in north-central China.

Fifth place went to Saga Medoc 2009 from Barons de Rothschild Collection, a commercial label from the owner of Chateau Lafite-Rothschild, which scored the highest of the French wines in the tasting.

It wasn't exactly replicating the 1976 tasting of California vs Bordeaux in Paris, in which a top red and white from Napa Valley shocked the wine world by beating out some of the most famous French labels.

But it shows that Chinese wines are beginning to come into their own and have the potential to become great, said Jim Boyce, a China wine expert who helped organize the event.

"The one thing this tasting showed is that China can make good wines," said Boyce, who runs grapewallofchina.com, a blog about Chinese wine.

"There is the soil, the climate, the skill to take all the elements and make even foreign judges say 'this is good'," he said. "These wines can compete."

"SWEETER, FRUITY"

Chinese are developing a huge appetite for wine, with high-end Bordeaux such as Chateau Lafite and Petrus, and vaunted Burgundy producer Domaine Romanee-Conti among the favorites of collectors.

French wine and champagne producers Chateau Lafite, Pernod Ricard SA and Moet-Chandon have invested in planting vineyards in China, aiming to produce quality wines and develop their brands in what is expected to become the world's largest wine-consuming market.

While most of the wine produced in China is inexpensive bulk, quality wine is appearing from vineyards in Ningxia, Gansu and Shandong provinces.

Ningxia in particular is gaining attention because Jiabeilan recently won an award for excellence from the British wine magazine Decanter.

"Some of the Chinese wines are way more 'oaky' than what we are doing in Bordeaux for this price," said Thomas Briollet, who has worked in China for seven years with wine importers and as export manager for French wine producers, and who was one of the French judges at the event, referring to the taste of oak barrels.

"The quality was equivalent between the wines. No one was really on top, and maybe one or two was under," Briollet said.

The wines were in a similar price category because of a 50-percent tax on imported wine, and given that choice, the Chinese wines were better, he said.

"Ningxia wines have sweeter, more fruity tannins, and are rounder on the palate," said John Gai, chief operating officer of the Beijing-based wine distributor 90 Points and one of the Chinese judges.

Gai picked Grace Vineyard's Chairman's Reserve, the eventual winner, as his top choice.

"It definitely has more structure and more fruit side, and has a much bigger effect on the palate," he said. "Ningxia wines are soft and easier to drink."

The other wines in the tasting were 2009 Mouton-Cadet; 2009 Calvet Medoc Reserve de L'Estey; 2008 Cordier Prestige, and 2008 Kressman Grande Reserve St. Emilion from Bordeaux, and 2009 Silver Heights Family Reserve from Ningxia.

(Editing by Robert Birsel)


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Friday, December 16, 2011

ECB's Noyer says French downgrade "not justified"

French Central Bank Governor Christian Noyer attends a news conference at the end of the G20 meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors at the French Finance ministry in Paris October 15, 2011. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

French Central Bank Governor Christian Noyer attends a news conference at the end of the G20 meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors at the French Finance ministry in Paris October 15, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Gonzalo Fuentes

PARIS | Wed Dec 14, 2011 8:03pm EST

PARIS (Reuters) - A downgrade of France's AAA credit rating would not be justified and ratings agencies are making decisions based more on politics than economics, European Central Bank policymaker Christian Noyer said on Thursday.

Speaking in an interview with local newspaper Le Telegramme de Brest to be published later on Thursday, Noyer also questioned whether the use of ratings agencies to guide investors was still valid.

"In the arguments they (ratings agencies) present, there are more political arguments than economic ones," said Noyer, the head of the Bank of France and a member of the ECB's governing council.

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said on Wednesday that decisions by rating agencies were "sometimes subjective and political," and that any loss of France's top-notch AAA rating would be regrettable but not disastrous.

Standard and Poor's is due to decide whether or not to downgrade euro zone countries in the coming days following an EU agreement on Friday to forge tougher fiscal rules.

"The downgrade does not appear to me to be justified when considering economic fundamentals," Noyer said. "Otherwise, they should start by downgrading Britain which has more deficits, as much debt, more inflation, less growth than us and where credit is slumping," he said.

Noyer was also unhappy about critical comments from ratings agencies following last week's EU summit in Brussels. He said such comments had weakened positive sentiment that arose in the markets following the agreement to draft a new treaty for deeper integration in the euro zone.

"Frankly, the agencies have become incomprehensible and irrational. They threaten even when states have taken strong and positive decisions," Noyer said. "One could think that the use of agencies to guide investors is no longer valid."

(Reporting By John Irish and Pierre-Henri Allain; Editing by Mark Heinrich)


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Thursday, December 15, 2011

ECB's Noyer says French downgrade "not justified"

French Central Bank Governor Christian Noyer attends a news conference at the end of the G20 meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors at the French Finance ministry in Paris October 15, 2011. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes

French Central Bank Governor Christian Noyer attends a news conference at the end of the G20 meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors at the French Finance ministry in Paris October 15, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Gonzalo Fuentes

PARIS | Wed Dec 14, 2011 8:03pm EST

PARIS (Reuters) - A downgrade of France's AAA credit rating would not be justified and ratings agencies are making decisions based more on politics than economics, European Central Bank policymaker Christian Noyer said on Thursday.

Speaking in an interview with local newspaper Le Telegramme de Brest to be published later on Thursday, Noyer also questioned whether the use of ratings agencies to guide investors was still valid.

"In the arguments they (ratings agencies) present, there are more political arguments than economic ones," said Noyer, the head of the Bank of France and a member of the ECB's governing council.

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said on Wednesday that decisions by rating agencies were "sometimes subjective and political," and that any loss of France's top-notch AAA rating would be regrettable but not disastrous.

Standard and Poor's is due to decide whether or not to downgrade euro zone countries in the coming days following an EU agreement on Friday to forge tougher fiscal rules.

"The downgrade does not appear to me to be justified when considering economic fundamentals," Noyer said. "Otherwise, they should start by downgrading Britain which has more deficits, as much debt, more inflation, less growth than us and where credit is slumping," he said.

Noyer was also unhappy about critical comments from ratings agencies following last week's EU summit in Brussels. He said such comments had weakened positive sentiment that arose in the markets following the agreement to draft a new treaty for deeper integration in the euro zone.

"Frankly, the agencies have become incomprehensible and irrational. They threaten even when states have taken strong and positive decisions," Noyer said. "One could think that the use of agencies to guide investors is no longer valid."

(Reporting By John Irish and Pierre-Henri Allain; Editing by Mark Heinrich)


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Friday, November 25, 2011

French nuclear waste train enters Germany

German police observe the train transporting Castor containers with radioactive waste, during a stop in Neunkirchen near Saarbruecken November 25, 2011. REUTERS/Alex Domanski

German police observe the train transporting Castor containers with radioactive waste, during a stop in Neunkirchen near Saarbruecken November 25, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Alex Domanski

STRASBOURG, France | Fri Nov 25, 2011 10:07am EST

STRASBOURG, France (Reuters) - A French train carrying 150 tons of reprocessed nuclear waste entered Germany Friday en route to a storage site after a 24-hour stop at the border following clashes between riot police and anti-nuclear activists who tried to block the transport.

"The train is crossing the border at this very minute with German police forces on board. Everything has gone well," a French interior ministry spokesman said by telephone from the area.

French officials said Thursday the temporary halt was meant to help ensure public order on the train's route to the storage site at Gorleben in Germany's Lower Saxony state.

The "Sortir du Nucleaire" (Exit from Nuclear) activist group said on its website that French authorities had been forced to wait until Germany authorized the convoy to enter its territory Friday, as originally planned.

Loaded with 11 tubular containers of highly radioactive nuclear waste, the train left Areva's nuclear fuel reprocessing facility in Normandy Wednesday after scuffles between police and hundreds of protesters who tried to foil the transport by occupying train tracks near the town of Valognes.

The train was the last of 12 shipments of treated German nuclear waste sent in recent years from France to Gorleben. German and French protesters have frequently tried to block the rail shipments and clashed with police sent in to remove them.

The protesters have maintained that the waste transports could endanger the environment and population if there were to be an accident en route.

An expired contract between Areva and German nuclear power producers is not expected to be renewed as Germany has voted against the transport of radioactive nuclear fuel.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel decided to shut down eight of Germany's nuclear power plants in the wake of March's disaster at the Fukushima plant in Japan, and later said all its remaining nuclear capacity would be taken off the grid by 2022.

(Reporting By Marie Maitre; Editing by Mark Heinrich)


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