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Going to France with limited French for a day
Can I travel from France to UK with a recently expired French passport?Can I buy pre-paid data plan in France for 4 weeks, without speaking French?Driving in France with US driving license only (French driving license being kept in some French Consulate)Cell phone service providers in France with English customer supportTravelling with the application receipt for a French residence permit?UK visa requirements for Algerian citizen in France on French tourist visa wanting to visit UK?Regulation on available cash for tourists going to FranceHow to use public transport in Russia with limited Russian knowledge
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I am going to France (Toulouse) for a day in October. I will be landing at Toulouse–Blagnac Airport. (TLS). I would like to travel and look around the city.
I have a limited knowledge of French from school.
Is the transport well sign-posted in English?
Is there information/maps available for English speaking people in town or at the airport?
I'm specifically looking for answers relating to Toulouse and not France in general/answers that are applicable to the most of France.
france language-barrier english-language
add a comment
|
I am going to France (Toulouse) for a day in October. I will be landing at Toulouse–Blagnac Airport. (TLS). I would like to travel and look around the city.
I have a limited knowledge of French from school.
Is the transport well sign-posted in English?
Is there information/maps available for English speaking people in town or at the airport?
I'm specifically looking for answers relating to Toulouse and not France in general/answers that are applicable to the most of France.
france language-barrier english-language
1
As mentioned in the answer, you will have no problem to find your way, even with a limited knowledge of French. In addition, if you speak Spanish, you could find many people to speak with, as there is a large Spanish-speaking population in Toulouse (I heard once that a third of Toulousains can speak Spanish, but I cannot find a link now)
– Taladris
7 hours ago
@Taladris fantastic remark about Spanish. While I was unable to find the research you were referencing, it says here that 10% of the modern Toulouse population are of the Spanish origin and that Spanish is the second most spoken language there.
– undercat
13 mins ago
add a comment
|
I am going to France (Toulouse) for a day in October. I will be landing at Toulouse–Blagnac Airport. (TLS). I would like to travel and look around the city.
I have a limited knowledge of French from school.
Is the transport well sign-posted in English?
Is there information/maps available for English speaking people in town or at the airport?
I'm specifically looking for answers relating to Toulouse and not France in general/answers that are applicable to the most of France.
france language-barrier english-language
I am going to France (Toulouse) for a day in October. I will be landing at Toulouse–Blagnac Airport. (TLS). I would like to travel and look around the city.
I have a limited knowledge of French from school.
Is the transport well sign-posted in English?
Is there information/maps available for English speaking people in town or at the airport?
I'm specifically looking for answers relating to Toulouse and not France in general/answers that are applicable to the most of France.
france language-barrier english-language
france language-barrier english-language
edited 7 hours ago
Daniil
asked 9 hours ago
DaniilDaniil
6,5021 gold badge15 silver badges65 bronze badges
6,5021 gold badge15 silver badges65 bronze badges
1
As mentioned in the answer, you will have no problem to find your way, even with a limited knowledge of French. In addition, if you speak Spanish, you could find many people to speak with, as there is a large Spanish-speaking population in Toulouse (I heard once that a third of Toulousains can speak Spanish, but I cannot find a link now)
– Taladris
7 hours ago
@Taladris fantastic remark about Spanish. While I was unable to find the research you were referencing, it says here that 10% of the modern Toulouse population are of the Spanish origin and that Spanish is the second most spoken language there.
– undercat
13 mins ago
add a comment
|
1
As mentioned in the answer, you will have no problem to find your way, even with a limited knowledge of French. In addition, if you speak Spanish, you could find many people to speak with, as there is a large Spanish-speaking population in Toulouse (I heard once that a third of Toulousains can speak Spanish, but I cannot find a link now)
– Taladris
7 hours ago
@Taladris fantastic remark about Spanish. While I was unable to find the research you were referencing, it says here that 10% of the modern Toulouse population are of the Spanish origin and that Spanish is the second most spoken language there.
– undercat
13 mins ago
1
1
As mentioned in the answer, you will have no problem to find your way, even with a limited knowledge of French. In addition, if you speak Spanish, you could find many people to speak with, as there is a large Spanish-speaking population in Toulouse (I heard once that a third of Toulousains can speak Spanish, but I cannot find a link now)
– Taladris
7 hours ago
As mentioned in the answer, you will have no problem to find your way, even with a limited knowledge of French. In addition, if you speak Spanish, you could find many people to speak with, as there is a large Spanish-speaking population in Toulouse (I heard once that a third of Toulousains can speak Spanish, but I cannot find a link now)
– Taladris
7 hours ago
@Taladris fantastic remark about Spanish. While I was unable to find the research you were referencing, it says here that 10% of the modern Toulouse population are of the Spanish origin and that Spanish is the second most spoken language there.
– undercat
13 mins ago
@Taladris fantastic remark about Spanish. While I was unable to find the research you were referencing, it says here that 10% of the modern Toulouse population are of the Spanish origin and that Spanish is the second most spoken language there.
– undercat
13 mins ago
add a comment
|
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
I never had any French lessons and I have been traveling in France, often solo, every now and again in the last 35 years or so.
I never ran into trouble, the only time I was told to speak French (as an order rather than as a request) it was by French Canadians being loud in the hostel at night (and in that case I am pretty sure they did understand my English.)
Sometimes people ask if I do speak French and when I say no, we find a way to communicate. Often by finding someone who speaks English as well as French (or Dutch as well as French as Dutch is my native language) or we struggle with what each of us knows in the languages the other can understand.
Dealing with travel officials, you will find that these days almost all speak some English, in the past you would find one person with a button 'I speak English' in the information office in the main station in Paris for trains to the north of France, Belgium, the Netherlands and to the ferries to England (no tunnel yet.) On my last visit all in the office spoke English and mostly at a high level.
My impression is that all of France has gone through that change. In the 1980's and 1990's the people were willing but most of them did not speak any English or not enough to dare speak with a foreigner.
I think I have been in Toulouse, in the '90's but it did not stand out as special language wise. I have been in many smaller and bigger villages and towns, as well as in some of the cities and I see the same pattern all over.
If tourist are common, English is spoken in most shops and public transport. If it is a town or part of town where fewer tourist come, you may have to find younger people to help you translate. Young French people also use the world wide internet sites the English and other Europeans do, and I think they are picking up and improving their English as a result.
These days almost all young people speak some English and a lot of them speak it well, and many people who were young in the '80 and '90 are secure enough in their English to be happy to use it.
In the last 10 years or so I have been part of a group having a meeting in France once a year. As part of the meeting we set up a show in a local museum or community center or some such.
And invite the local people in.
Our groups is mostly French but has a strong English and Dutch membership. Some of our English and Dutch do speak French and speak it well, the rest does not speak French much or at all. Some of our French people do speak English (and some also German) as well as French, so people who can translate are mostly not far away.
But it is amazing how few people in France can not handle a simple face to face talk about what is on show, with only a few words of French from me and a few of English from them.
I have had a few people who just look and walk on but I have never had people getting angry because us foreigners took over their local museum or hall. Mostly they do express gratefulness that foreigners have taken the time and effort to come to them and share their passion.
The general level of English in France is way better than the general level of French in England.
add a comment
|
I speak English and limited French and—anecdotally—most French people I've spoken to in the Île-de-France region would switch to English whenever they realized I wasn't a native French speaker, even though I had no issues understanding what they were saying in French.
While the knowledge of French would totally come in handy at grocery stores, cafes and such, you should have no issues visiting any major city in France with the working knowledge of English alone.
add a comment
|
You will be fine.
Toulouse Airport is an international airport, you will find enough signage (French and English) to get you in and out of the airport to the city center either on a Tram (T2), bus or a taxi.
Some officials at the airport will have working knowledge of English (be mindful of the accent :-) ); A little less at the city center.
add a comment
|
Toulouse is probably as good a non-Paris city as you could get to. Consider that it's home to Airbus, so while it doesn't have that many tourists proportionally, it gets a considerable amount of solely-English-speaking traffic. As long as you stay more or less downtown you shouldn't have too much trouble dealing with basics, if only because some member of the public could be a British engineer (if they're still in the EU..).
That said, I'd make sure to get your transportation information before leaving the airport, because few bus drivers, say, are going to be able to answer your complex questions in English. Get your materials in writing at https://www.tisseo.fr/en/home and learn a few words of useful vocabulary (sortie, arret..) and you should be fine.
Be aware also that a huge proportion of the population speaks Spanish. There are over a million descendants of Spanish refugees in the area, and in my friends' experience you can get help in Spanish anywhere around Toulouse, much easier than in English.
add a comment
|
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4 Answers
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
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I never had any French lessons and I have been traveling in France, often solo, every now and again in the last 35 years or so.
I never ran into trouble, the only time I was told to speak French (as an order rather than as a request) it was by French Canadians being loud in the hostel at night (and in that case I am pretty sure they did understand my English.)
Sometimes people ask if I do speak French and when I say no, we find a way to communicate. Often by finding someone who speaks English as well as French (or Dutch as well as French as Dutch is my native language) or we struggle with what each of us knows in the languages the other can understand.
Dealing with travel officials, you will find that these days almost all speak some English, in the past you would find one person with a button 'I speak English' in the information office in the main station in Paris for trains to the north of France, Belgium, the Netherlands and to the ferries to England (no tunnel yet.) On my last visit all in the office spoke English and mostly at a high level.
My impression is that all of France has gone through that change. In the 1980's and 1990's the people were willing but most of them did not speak any English or not enough to dare speak with a foreigner.
I think I have been in Toulouse, in the '90's but it did not stand out as special language wise. I have been in many smaller and bigger villages and towns, as well as in some of the cities and I see the same pattern all over.
If tourist are common, English is spoken in most shops and public transport. If it is a town or part of town where fewer tourist come, you may have to find younger people to help you translate. Young French people also use the world wide internet sites the English and other Europeans do, and I think they are picking up and improving their English as a result.
These days almost all young people speak some English and a lot of them speak it well, and many people who were young in the '80 and '90 are secure enough in their English to be happy to use it.
In the last 10 years or so I have been part of a group having a meeting in France once a year. As part of the meeting we set up a show in a local museum or community center or some such.
And invite the local people in.
Our groups is mostly French but has a strong English and Dutch membership. Some of our English and Dutch do speak French and speak it well, the rest does not speak French much or at all. Some of our French people do speak English (and some also German) as well as French, so people who can translate are mostly not far away.
But it is amazing how few people in France can not handle a simple face to face talk about what is on show, with only a few words of French from me and a few of English from them.
I have had a few people who just look and walk on but I have never had people getting angry because us foreigners took over their local museum or hall. Mostly they do express gratefulness that foreigners have taken the time and effort to come to them and share their passion.
The general level of English in France is way better than the general level of French in England.
add a comment
|
I never had any French lessons and I have been traveling in France, often solo, every now and again in the last 35 years or so.
I never ran into trouble, the only time I was told to speak French (as an order rather than as a request) it was by French Canadians being loud in the hostel at night (and in that case I am pretty sure they did understand my English.)
Sometimes people ask if I do speak French and when I say no, we find a way to communicate. Often by finding someone who speaks English as well as French (or Dutch as well as French as Dutch is my native language) or we struggle with what each of us knows in the languages the other can understand.
Dealing with travel officials, you will find that these days almost all speak some English, in the past you would find one person with a button 'I speak English' in the information office in the main station in Paris for trains to the north of France, Belgium, the Netherlands and to the ferries to England (no tunnel yet.) On my last visit all in the office spoke English and mostly at a high level.
My impression is that all of France has gone through that change. In the 1980's and 1990's the people were willing but most of them did not speak any English or not enough to dare speak with a foreigner.
I think I have been in Toulouse, in the '90's but it did not stand out as special language wise. I have been in many smaller and bigger villages and towns, as well as in some of the cities and I see the same pattern all over.
If tourist are common, English is spoken in most shops and public transport. If it is a town or part of town where fewer tourist come, you may have to find younger people to help you translate. Young French people also use the world wide internet sites the English and other Europeans do, and I think they are picking up and improving their English as a result.
These days almost all young people speak some English and a lot of them speak it well, and many people who were young in the '80 and '90 are secure enough in their English to be happy to use it.
In the last 10 years or so I have been part of a group having a meeting in France once a year. As part of the meeting we set up a show in a local museum or community center or some such.
And invite the local people in.
Our groups is mostly French but has a strong English and Dutch membership. Some of our English and Dutch do speak French and speak it well, the rest does not speak French much or at all. Some of our French people do speak English (and some also German) as well as French, so people who can translate are mostly not far away.
But it is amazing how few people in France can not handle a simple face to face talk about what is on show, with only a few words of French from me and a few of English from them.
I have had a few people who just look and walk on but I have never had people getting angry because us foreigners took over their local museum or hall. Mostly they do express gratefulness that foreigners have taken the time and effort to come to them and share their passion.
The general level of English in France is way better than the general level of French in England.
add a comment
|
I never had any French lessons and I have been traveling in France, often solo, every now and again in the last 35 years or so.
I never ran into trouble, the only time I was told to speak French (as an order rather than as a request) it was by French Canadians being loud in the hostel at night (and in that case I am pretty sure they did understand my English.)
Sometimes people ask if I do speak French and when I say no, we find a way to communicate. Often by finding someone who speaks English as well as French (or Dutch as well as French as Dutch is my native language) or we struggle with what each of us knows in the languages the other can understand.
Dealing with travel officials, you will find that these days almost all speak some English, in the past you would find one person with a button 'I speak English' in the information office in the main station in Paris for trains to the north of France, Belgium, the Netherlands and to the ferries to England (no tunnel yet.) On my last visit all in the office spoke English and mostly at a high level.
My impression is that all of France has gone through that change. In the 1980's and 1990's the people were willing but most of them did not speak any English or not enough to dare speak with a foreigner.
I think I have been in Toulouse, in the '90's but it did not stand out as special language wise. I have been in many smaller and bigger villages and towns, as well as in some of the cities and I see the same pattern all over.
If tourist are common, English is spoken in most shops and public transport. If it is a town or part of town where fewer tourist come, you may have to find younger people to help you translate. Young French people also use the world wide internet sites the English and other Europeans do, and I think they are picking up and improving their English as a result.
These days almost all young people speak some English and a lot of them speak it well, and many people who were young in the '80 and '90 are secure enough in their English to be happy to use it.
In the last 10 years or so I have been part of a group having a meeting in France once a year. As part of the meeting we set up a show in a local museum or community center or some such.
And invite the local people in.
Our groups is mostly French but has a strong English and Dutch membership. Some of our English and Dutch do speak French and speak it well, the rest does not speak French much or at all. Some of our French people do speak English (and some also German) as well as French, so people who can translate are mostly not far away.
But it is amazing how few people in France can not handle a simple face to face talk about what is on show, with only a few words of French from me and a few of English from them.
I have had a few people who just look and walk on but I have never had people getting angry because us foreigners took over their local museum or hall. Mostly they do express gratefulness that foreigners have taken the time and effort to come to them and share their passion.
The general level of English in France is way better than the general level of French in England.
I never had any French lessons and I have been traveling in France, often solo, every now and again in the last 35 years or so.
I never ran into trouble, the only time I was told to speak French (as an order rather than as a request) it was by French Canadians being loud in the hostel at night (and in that case I am pretty sure they did understand my English.)
Sometimes people ask if I do speak French and when I say no, we find a way to communicate. Often by finding someone who speaks English as well as French (or Dutch as well as French as Dutch is my native language) or we struggle with what each of us knows in the languages the other can understand.
Dealing with travel officials, you will find that these days almost all speak some English, in the past you would find one person with a button 'I speak English' in the information office in the main station in Paris for trains to the north of France, Belgium, the Netherlands and to the ferries to England (no tunnel yet.) On my last visit all in the office spoke English and mostly at a high level.
My impression is that all of France has gone through that change. In the 1980's and 1990's the people were willing but most of them did not speak any English or not enough to dare speak with a foreigner.
I think I have been in Toulouse, in the '90's but it did not stand out as special language wise. I have been in many smaller and bigger villages and towns, as well as in some of the cities and I see the same pattern all over.
If tourist are common, English is spoken in most shops and public transport. If it is a town or part of town where fewer tourist come, you may have to find younger people to help you translate. Young French people also use the world wide internet sites the English and other Europeans do, and I think they are picking up and improving their English as a result.
These days almost all young people speak some English and a lot of them speak it well, and many people who were young in the '80 and '90 are secure enough in their English to be happy to use it.
In the last 10 years or so I have been part of a group having a meeting in France once a year. As part of the meeting we set up a show in a local museum or community center or some such.
And invite the local people in.
Our groups is mostly French but has a strong English and Dutch membership. Some of our English and Dutch do speak French and speak it well, the rest does not speak French much or at all. Some of our French people do speak English (and some also German) as well as French, so people who can translate are mostly not far away.
But it is amazing how few people in France can not handle a simple face to face talk about what is on show, with only a few words of French from me and a few of English from them.
I have had a few people who just look and walk on but I have never had people getting angry because us foreigners took over their local museum or hall. Mostly they do express gratefulness that foreigners have taken the time and effort to come to them and share their passion.
The general level of English in France is way better than the general level of French in England.
edited 4 hours ago
answered 7 hours ago
Willeke♦Willeke
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I speak English and limited French and—anecdotally—most French people I've spoken to in the Île-de-France region would switch to English whenever they realized I wasn't a native French speaker, even though I had no issues understanding what they were saying in French.
While the knowledge of French would totally come in handy at grocery stores, cafes and such, you should have no issues visiting any major city in France with the working knowledge of English alone.
add a comment
|
I speak English and limited French and—anecdotally—most French people I've spoken to in the Île-de-France region would switch to English whenever they realized I wasn't a native French speaker, even though I had no issues understanding what they were saying in French.
While the knowledge of French would totally come in handy at grocery stores, cafes and such, you should have no issues visiting any major city in France with the working knowledge of English alone.
add a comment
|
I speak English and limited French and—anecdotally—most French people I've spoken to in the Île-de-France region would switch to English whenever they realized I wasn't a native French speaker, even though I had no issues understanding what they were saying in French.
While the knowledge of French would totally come in handy at grocery stores, cafes and such, you should have no issues visiting any major city in France with the working knowledge of English alone.
I speak English and limited French and—anecdotally—most French people I've spoken to in the Île-de-France region would switch to English whenever they realized I wasn't a native French speaker, even though I had no issues understanding what they were saying in French.
While the knowledge of French would totally come in handy at grocery stores, cafes and such, you should have no issues visiting any major city in France with the working knowledge of English alone.
answered 3 hours ago
undercatundercat
1,8472 gold badges4 silver badges17 bronze badges
1,8472 gold badges4 silver badges17 bronze badges
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add a comment
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You will be fine.
Toulouse Airport is an international airport, you will find enough signage (French and English) to get you in and out of the airport to the city center either on a Tram (T2), bus or a taxi.
Some officials at the airport will have working knowledge of English (be mindful of the accent :-) ); A little less at the city center.
add a comment
|
You will be fine.
Toulouse Airport is an international airport, you will find enough signage (French and English) to get you in and out of the airport to the city center either on a Tram (T2), bus or a taxi.
Some officials at the airport will have working knowledge of English (be mindful of the accent :-) ); A little less at the city center.
add a comment
|
You will be fine.
Toulouse Airport is an international airport, you will find enough signage (French and English) to get you in and out of the airport to the city center either on a Tram (T2), bus or a taxi.
Some officials at the airport will have working knowledge of English (be mindful of the accent :-) ); A little less at the city center.
You will be fine.
Toulouse Airport is an international airport, you will find enough signage (French and English) to get you in and out of the airport to the city center either on a Tram (T2), bus or a taxi.
Some officials at the airport will have working knowledge of English (be mindful of the accent :-) ); A little less at the city center.
edited 8 hours ago
Daniil
6,5021 gold badge15 silver badges65 bronze badges
6,5021 gold badge15 silver badges65 bronze badges
answered 8 hours ago
MaxMax
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Toulouse is probably as good a non-Paris city as you could get to. Consider that it's home to Airbus, so while it doesn't have that many tourists proportionally, it gets a considerable amount of solely-English-speaking traffic. As long as you stay more or less downtown you shouldn't have too much trouble dealing with basics, if only because some member of the public could be a British engineer (if they're still in the EU..).
That said, I'd make sure to get your transportation information before leaving the airport, because few bus drivers, say, are going to be able to answer your complex questions in English. Get your materials in writing at https://www.tisseo.fr/en/home and learn a few words of useful vocabulary (sortie, arret..) and you should be fine.
Be aware also that a huge proportion of the population speaks Spanish. There are over a million descendants of Spanish refugees in the area, and in my friends' experience you can get help in Spanish anywhere around Toulouse, much easier than in English.
add a comment
|
Toulouse is probably as good a non-Paris city as you could get to. Consider that it's home to Airbus, so while it doesn't have that many tourists proportionally, it gets a considerable amount of solely-English-speaking traffic. As long as you stay more or less downtown you shouldn't have too much trouble dealing with basics, if only because some member of the public could be a British engineer (if they're still in the EU..).
That said, I'd make sure to get your transportation information before leaving the airport, because few bus drivers, say, are going to be able to answer your complex questions in English. Get your materials in writing at https://www.tisseo.fr/en/home and learn a few words of useful vocabulary (sortie, arret..) and you should be fine.
Be aware also that a huge proportion of the population speaks Spanish. There are over a million descendants of Spanish refugees in the area, and in my friends' experience you can get help in Spanish anywhere around Toulouse, much easier than in English.
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Toulouse is probably as good a non-Paris city as you could get to. Consider that it's home to Airbus, so while it doesn't have that many tourists proportionally, it gets a considerable amount of solely-English-speaking traffic. As long as you stay more or less downtown you shouldn't have too much trouble dealing with basics, if only because some member of the public could be a British engineer (if they're still in the EU..).
That said, I'd make sure to get your transportation information before leaving the airport, because few bus drivers, say, are going to be able to answer your complex questions in English. Get your materials in writing at https://www.tisseo.fr/en/home and learn a few words of useful vocabulary (sortie, arret..) and you should be fine.
Be aware also that a huge proportion of the population speaks Spanish. There are over a million descendants of Spanish refugees in the area, and in my friends' experience you can get help in Spanish anywhere around Toulouse, much easier than in English.
Toulouse is probably as good a non-Paris city as you could get to. Consider that it's home to Airbus, so while it doesn't have that many tourists proportionally, it gets a considerable amount of solely-English-speaking traffic. As long as you stay more or less downtown you shouldn't have too much trouble dealing with basics, if only because some member of the public could be a British engineer (if they're still in the EU..).
That said, I'd make sure to get your transportation information before leaving the airport, because few bus drivers, say, are going to be able to answer your complex questions in English. Get your materials in writing at https://www.tisseo.fr/en/home and learn a few words of useful vocabulary (sortie, arret..) and you should be fine.
Be aware also that a huge proportion of the population speaks Spanish. There are over a million descendants of Spanish refugees in the area, and in my friends' experience you can get help in Spanish anywhere around Toulouse, much easier than in English.
answered 30 mins ago
George MGeorge M
9082 silver badges11 bronze badges
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1
As mentioned in the answer, you will have no problem to find your way, even with a limited knowledge of French. In addition, if you speak Spanish, you could find many people to speak with, as there is a large Spanish-speaking population in Toulouse (I heard once that a third of Toulousains can speak Spanish, but I cannot find a link now)
– Taladris
7 hours ago
@Taladris fantastic remark about Spanish. While I was unable to find the research you were referencing, it says here that 10% of the modern Toulouse population are of the Spanish origin and that Spanish is the second most spoken language there.
– undercat
13 mins ago