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FRENCH WORD OF THE DAY

French Expression of the Day: Les doigts dans le nez

This French expression has nothing to do with unpleasant personal habits.

French Expression of the Day: Les doigts dans le nez
Photo: Annie Spratt/Unsplash/Nicolas Raymond

Why do I need to know les doigts dans le nez?

Because you don’t need to be disgusted if a French person says this phrase near you. 

What does it mean?

Les doigts dans le nez – roughly pronounced lay dwah dahn luh nay – translates precisely as ‘the fingers in the nose’.

However, it’s not related to picking your nose. It actually means ‘doing something with ease’. In English, one might say ‘piece of cake’ or ‘I could do it with my eyes closed’. 

Though a popular colloquial expression nowadays, the phrase first began to be used in the early 1900s, after horse races – and originally was accompanied by a gesture. If a jockey handily won a race, the commentator might make this comment or add a gesture to jokingly comment on how easy the win had been.

These days the gesture seems to have fallen out of favour, so you won’t see French people stuffing their fingers up their nose to make a point, but the phrase remains. 

It is meant to give the idea that the feat was so easy, it could be accomplished even with two fingers in your nose.

If you are looking for a similar expression, you could also say something was un jeu d’enfants (a children’s game), to describe it being simple and quick.

Use it like this

Ce type a terminé le marathon, les doigts dans le nez. Sérieusement, le gars s’est à peine entraîné et il est arrivé dans les dix premiers. – The guy finished the marathon, piece of cake. Seriously, he barely trained and still finished in the top 10.

Les deux premières semaines: les doigts dans le nez. Mais par la suite, les choses se sont compliquées. – The first two weeks: piece of cake. But after that, things became complicated.

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FRENCH WORD OF THE DAY

French word of the Day: Jours ouvrés

You'll need to check the calendar carefully when you see this.

French word of the Day: Jours ouvrés

Why do I need to know jours ouvrés?

Because you need an accurate time estimate.

What does it mean?

As most French learners will know, jours means days, while in this context ouvrés means ‘working’. Therefore jours ouvrés – roughly pronounced jzoor-ouv-ray – means ‘working days’. You may also see jours ouvrables, which means the same thing.

You’re most likely to come across this in the context of estimates on how long things will take – for example a delivery or the processing of an official task or perhaps the results for a test or exam.

And this is where the calendar comes in – ‘working days’ doesn’t include the weekends, but also excluded are public holidays, of which France has quite a lot. So an estimate for livraison dans les cinq jours ouvrés – might actually take almost two weeks to reach you, if there are weekend days and public holidays in between.

Days on either side of public holidays (known as ‘pont‘ days) are technically working days, but don’t be too surprised if things don’t happen on these days either. 

Although ouvrés looks similar to ouvrir (to open) the root of the work is actually ouvrer – an archaic verb meaning to work or to labour.

This word was gradually supplanted by travailler in around the 16th century, but some derivatives of it are still used – most commonly ouvrier (or ouvrière for women) which means a worker – it can be used for all types of salaried workers, but is more commonly used for people who do manual labour or work with their hands. 

It’s often used in a political sense too – one of France’s leftist political parties is Lutte ouvrière, which translates as Worker’s struggle. 

Use it like this

La livraison est estimée à trois jours ouvrés – Delivery is estimated within three working days

Les résultats seront communiqués sous 48 hours (jours ouvrés) – the results will be sent within 48 hours (on working days)

Not to be confused with 

If you want to talk about ‘open days’ – days when institutions including schools, the military or artists workshops open up to the public – in France these are known as portes ouvertes (literally ‘open doors’).

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