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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
Why translating French word-for-word can help - or confuse
Sometimes even Âé¶¹´«Ã½Ó³» cannot explain a familiar phrase because that is ‘just the way it is’

When learning another language, many of us are told not to translate phrases too literally.
However, doing so can often help us to remember them.
For example, ‘what is it that it is?’ still helps me to spell qu’est-ce que c’est?, even though I have lived here since 2004.
Many people do the same with ‘I have hot’ or ‘I have 21 years’.
Would you look at that!
One of my favourite French phrases is regarde-moi ç²¹ un peu, the literal translation of which would be ‘look at me that a bit’. Have you come across this one?
‘Look at me that a bit’ is used to point something out, with the goal of sharing laughter, or perhaps indignation.
Read more: Widen your vocabulary with 10 alternatives to common French phrases
For example, two mothers might be at the park chatting while their children play, when one child starts ordering the other kids around from the top of the climbing frame.
Her mother might nudge the other parent and say regarde-moi ç²¹ un peu, before they both start chuckling.
Our English equivalent is ‘would you look at that!’, but the reason I particularly love the French version is the moi, which is present even in the short version (regarde-moi ç²¹).
Essentially, the speaker is inviting you to look at ‘that’ (ç²¹) but actually begins with ‘look at me’ (regarde-moi), which is an impossibility unless you have independently functioning eyes.
At least they are only asking you to do this for a short time (un peu).
Read more: Six idioms to spice up your French conversations
Âé¶¹´«Ã½Ó³» cannot explain it either
Here in Brittany, an event occasionally warrants an extension: regarde-moi ç²¹ un peu, là ! means ‘look at me that a bit, there’, which now gives you three places to look.
Ask a French person to explain this phrase, and after an initial attempt at justification they will usually conclude: Bah, c’est comme ç²¹.
Indeed, that’s just the way it is.
There are some phrases and aspects of French life that you simply have to accept and then move on.
Next time you want to point something out to a French acquaintance, invite them to ‘look-at-me-that-a-bit’ and you will sound like a native.
Related articles
Unravel the etymology of certain French words
Seven words which even Âé¶¹´«Ã½Ó³» confuse masculine/feminine
‘Do not correct me everytime I murder the French language’