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Âé¶¹´«Ã½Ó³»: the origins and meaning of être dans la force de l’âge
A saying to describe being in the prime of life
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Âé¶¹´«Ã½Ó³»: what does recevoir une note salée mean and when should it be used?
A salty saying for inflated expenses
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Âé¶¹´«Ã½Ó³»: when and why do we say qui se ressemble s’assemble?
This rhyming expression is all about highlighting similarities between people
‘Plus on désire une chose…’: Our French expression of the week
After British ferry passengers found themselves in long queues at Calais at the weekend, we look at an expression linked to waiting

Over the weekend, British ferry passengers found themselves waiting in queues of up to six hours to get through UK passport control in Calais.
Read more: What caused this weekend’s six-hour Calais ferry queues?
This got us thinking about expressions to do with waiting, and the French saying: ‘Plus on désire une chose, plus elle se fait attendre’ (The more you want something, the more it makes you wait).
This expression can refer both to the way in which desiring the arrival of something can make time seem to move more slowly towards it, but also how unwanted or unremarkable things seem to come easily, while the most wished for seem unreachable.
In this way, we could say that the more tired and frustrated the people at Calais grew over the weekend, ‘plus leur arrivée chez eux se faisait attendre’ (the more their arrival back home made them wait).
An equivalent English expression might be ‘a watched pot never boils’.
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