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QUEEN'S 90TH BIRTHDAY

ROYAL

Queen Elizabeth at 90: Is she really fluent in French?

On Queen Elizabeth's 90th birthday, it's time to examine how good her majesty's French really is.

Queen Elizabeth at 90: Is she really fluent in French?
President François Hollande and Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo (right) seem delighted with the Queen's level of French. Photo: AFP
Parlez-vous francais, votre Majesté?
 
The Queen, who celebrates the grand-old age of 90 on Thursday, speaks French. That much is sure. 
 
But how well? Can she say the number 90 in French without hesitating?
 
Her press team confirmed to The Local that she spoke French, but refused to go into any detail whatsoever, preferring to remain tight-lipped about the monarch's ability to speak Moliere's tongue.
 
Unable to get a direct line to the Queen, here's what we could find out elsewhere. 
 
The official website for the Royal Family describes the Queen's French as “fluent” (but let's face it, we've all exaggerated our language ability on our CVs before).
 
It also says she does not need an interpreter, so it must be fairly accomplished. But when does she really get to use it? We all know that a language is like a muscle and needs to be stretched regularly.
 
How often does she get to stretch her tongue? Certainly on state visits to France. Pictures from her 2014 visit show her apparently at ease as she wanders around a Paris flower market with President François Hollande and Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo, neither of whom speak English that well.
 
And below she can be seen giving instructions to Hollande as she boards the plane home, perhaps asking him to keep quiet about her level of French. Ma'am's the word.
 
(“You don't say a word about my French.” Photo: AFP)
 
Whenever she does speak French, the English-language press certainly get excited about it. Indeed, after she had a tiny French conversation with a 13-year-old last year, one paper went with the headline “Mon Dieu! Queen Elizabeth Speaks French at School Visit“.
 
This, however, may speak more about the (lack of) French skills of the rest of the us than the Queen's impressive French.  

 
The Queen made her first state visit to France in 1948, shortly after her wedding. Since then she has been back five times on official visits.
 
And she often switches between English and French when giving speeches in France and other French-speaking countries, something she has been doing for some time.

In fact, there is video footage of her holding a nearly ten-minute speech in French when visiting Quebec in 1964.
 

 
Yes, she was reading the entire speech from cue cards, but her pronunciation was excellent. 
 
But just because she could read French well in 1964 doesn't mean she could waltz into a Parisian coffee shop tomorrow and order “un café à emporter” (or 'a takeaway coffee', for you non-French speakers out there) without being asked to repeat her order three times by a confused waiter.
 
More recently, in 2012, footage emerged of Sa Majesté speaking French with France's President Francois Hollande in what appeared to be an off-the-cuff conversation. 
 
 
She even took the small talk to an impressively high level (and quickly) by blaming the bad weather in the UK and France “on the jet streams, or something like that”. 
 
This video is one of the most interesting of all. It's seemingly unscripted, for one, but even better – Her Majesty uses the word “jet streams” in English. 
 
This could be interpreted in two ways:
 
1) She knew that the French use the English word “jet streams” (suggesting she is an advanced speaker).
 
2) She panicked and decided to use a well-known tactic of just throwing in an English word during small talk (and hope to get lucky).
 
More perplexing still, the quick cuts on the footage leave a lot to the imagination. Was Her Majesty scrambling for her French-English phrasebook after every sentence?
 
We may never know. 
 
In 2014, she spoke again in French (and English) during the State Banquet for her fifth French State Visit at the Élysée Palace in Paris. 
 
In the clip below she makes the switch to French at the 27-second mark (watch Hollande's ears prick up) and again at 4min45.
 
 
Once again, the French sounds very impressive. But who are we at The Local – native English speakers (like the Queen) – to judge Her Majesty on her French?
 
We asked French language expert Camille Chevalier-Karfis, the founder of the language site French Today, for her opinion on the above videos. 
 
“Her reading skills were excellent – both pronunciation and rhythm were very good, but you could feel she was quite tense,” she said.

“I was impressed by the quality of her French (yet, I bet she could read a speech in Chinese if need be…). No stuttering pour la reine.”
 
As for the impromptu chat with Hollande, our expert says the Queen's response about her husband “was answered perfectly, but this is quite basic French”.
 
“So, with these clips it's quite hard for me to say the level of French the Queen speaks. She seems to be understanding basic conversation and can read a speech perfectly, but I don't know how would she manage a whole conversation or watching a movie in French.”

 
So it's unlikely we'd ever see her wandering around Paris holding a French phrase book, but nor will we see her sneaking into the cinema to watch a French language movie without English subtitles.
 
So she's probably pretty much at the same level as most of us. Except she's 90.

 

 

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BIRTHDAY

Over 100,000 Danes sing for Queen on her birthday

Over 100,000 Danes sung the country's birthday song for Queen Margrethe II at midday on Thursday, after her 80th birthday celebrations were cancelled as a result of the coronavirus lockdown.

Over 100,000 Danes sing for Queen on her birthday
Danish singer Thomas Buttenschøn sings alongside others in the Facebook broadcast. Photo: Facebook screenshot (with permission)
The event, organised by the group singing organisation Danmark Synger (Denmark sings), has gained 191,170 members since it was launched on March 26.  It was also broadcast on Denmark's two national television stations and livecast on Facebook
 
The country's popular Queen followed the event from the sofa of her living room in Denmark's Fredensborg Palace. 
 
“Thanks for the song. It was truly a fantastic experience. It went straight to the heart,” she said in a short statement to public broadcaster DR after the performance was finished. 
 
The sing-a-long was led by musicians from the Copenhagen Phil symphony orchestra, the singer Thomas Buttenschøn, and 130 selected children and adults, with Danes encouraged to join in from their homes, workplaces or schools. 
 
As well as Denmark's birthday song “Idag er det Dronningens fødelsedag” (Today, it is The Queen's birthday), the performance also included “Solen er så rød mor” (The sun is so red, mother) “I Danmark er jeg født” (I was born in Denmark), written by Hans Christian Andersen, and the Kim Larsen song “Papirsklip”, or Paper Chain.
 
“We think it went really, really well. It attracted more than a million viewers I guess, and a lot of schools and neighbours got together,” Stine Isaksen, from the organisation Sångens Hus which helped organise the event, told The Local. 
 
“My youngest daughter went to school for the first time in a little bit more than a month, and the whole school was participating in this event.” 
 
She told the Ritzau news agency that the event was supposed to “give a feeling that it is all of us are collected together for the birthday.”
 
“For example, if you stand on your balcony or outside in the garden, we hope you will be able to hear the neighbours singing along.” 
 
 
The “Denmark sings for the Queen” group was originally created by the graphic artist Kim Bruhn. 
 
“When it was canceled, I thought we had to do it in a different way, and then it took off,” he told Ritzau.
 
On the Queen's birthday, there is a tradition that well-wishers travel to Copenhagen's Amalienborg Palace to sing the birthday song, Isaksen told Ritzau. 
 
“This time many others have also got the chance to sing for Her Majesty,” Isaksen said. “Of course it is a pity that people cannot physically gather, but now everyone can join in wherever they are.”
 
Well-wishers can leave their congratulations digitally on the Royal Court's website. Margrethe II will give a birthday address to the nation at 7pm, the court announced early today in a press statement
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