@@Official-BACONM yes the translation is true but it seems confusing for non french speaker like me,all i could hear was the same pronunciation over and over again 😂😂
Mémère is not really a translation for grandmother. It is either grand-mère ou mémé. Mémère is more to describe an older lady but in a nice, humouristic way. For example, “oh là la, elle va vite la mémère sur son vélo. “
@@jasonvargas7564 I don't exactly know how to explain but they sound different, the first one (é) kind of sounds like "ay" as in "hay" (but without the y sound), and the second one (è) sounds more like the "e" in "neck"
@@jasonvargas7564 "é" and ''è'' are different sounds in French, depending if the accent is going left or right 🙂 "é'' is more like ''meh, ey'' whereas "è'"" is more like like ''bed, bet''. So, in "mémère", you have the 2 sounds. Yep!
I speak French, and we always say 'grand-mère' rather then 'mémère'. Also although, it's technically right, 'mère' is very formal and translates 'mother', 'maman' is less formal and is equivalent to 'mum'
Actually for anyone confused "mémère" is a very old slang which mean "old woman" more than "grandmother" but almost no one ever use this term nowadays and no one is using it as "grandmother".
The vigesimal system was there before decimal system. And probably there in aln europ since prehistory. When they have tried to impose decimal...the folk have continued to say 70 80 like vegesimal ... so they have surrender and instituted that.
May re ...maire/mayor ....Mar ine ... Mar riage ...matriarche ... Maternal ... Mère ..mer/mar .... Its the same in english and before to be from the french and the greek its from ...a more older language exemple ( from thé french exemple lol ) Paris ... Pars Isis ... But the english speakers Can not understand it more than they know what mean langue and age in the word language
It exists but it is very familiar and it can be perceived as pejorative. It rather designates an elderly person than a grandmother. This word puts a lot of emphasis on the old age of the person.
@@juveebhalavat9484 I allow myself to add, as it has already been said in other comments here, that this word is no longer really used. I happen to hear it again but rather speaking about an old animal (but this time in an affectionate way).
@@scol5868 Ofc, but thank you for replying in a kind way feeling it was necessary or and useful for me to know about this, since my comment went against the use of the word on day to day basis or and ever
Your name is welsh , and mean greatperson. Maredudd in welsh. In breton language meur is great and tud means person. In welsh and breton sea is mor. Dont know why in gaulish sea is became mer.
Well I'm thinking this is more canada French? because I looked up mėmėre and it does mean grand mother in the dictionary. Unless the dictionary is wrong?
@@TheAazah Not exactly. It's just that the use of mémère is coloquial where all other words were formal (mother: mère, but mom: maman). By the same idea, "grand-mère" is grandmother. Mémère has various uses, mostly as a private endearment term for grandma, or a dismissive term for old women.
Don't you think mémère is a little weird tho 🤣 mémère is more like a way to call someone , teen girls do that sometimes, but the proper way to call your grandmother is "mamie" and if you just want to say "grandmother" it's "grand-mère"
I’m french and nobody say "mémère" for grandmother, we say "grand-Mère "
Ye
Or mamie(in france) and mamy(belgium)
Wait, big mother? In English that would get us a spanking
Oui, Je suis français
Faxs
''French is not that hard'' 🤣🤣🤣
im french
Im learning french and I also think french isn't hard
Doulingo: THANK YOU THANK YOU!
@@Aliiidakingg00967 I'm French and you're the only person who thinks this 😂
@@stephaniearras okay
The audacity when he said French is not that hard...😅😅😅😅
Yes is not that hard (for mi) 😂
@@louphyjoyboyTu dis ça mais en même temps il a pris des mots faciles dans la vidéo
@@louphyjoyboyBro come to a school in French and do the "conjugaison" and the "ortographe" and tell me after
@@Patcheese Comment ça mon reuf ? Pk tu me parle en anglais mdrr
no, no, French is really not that hard. 😀
The “French is not that hard.” Got me 🤣
Goat : Meeè Meeè
I was exactly about to right this comment😅
So french is basically goat language
Now we all know that all goats speaks French 😆
@@JohnWick-lu9mk yup
Oh goat language is not that hard
“French is not that hard! 😎”
My brain: 😵💫
he wasnt even correct, thats not even how you say it
Memere
Ce n’est pas difficile (it’s not hard )
It's French and this is so hard-
For grandma its "grand-mère"
The colab we never knew we needed
EXACTLY
His true voice at the end😳💀
His attitude when he said "french is not that hard"😂😂😂
Yes it actually seems east
@@harsharajpal9444 😅😮😮😮😢😮😮uyyttt
D ont underatted us
"mère du maire et grand-mère à la mer?" Means "mother of the mayor and grandma in the sea?"
Its true translate it
@@Official-BACONM yes the translation is true but it seems confusing for non french speaker like me,all i could hear was the same pronunciation over and over again 😂😂
I started learning french by coincidence and now I even talk to GOTS too 🐐
LMAO🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣🤣
🤣🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂
😅😂
The collab i didnt know i needed
34 like but nk reply ket me fix dat
Mémère
I'm french and "mémère" is a pejorative slang word for "grand-mère"
usually said as
''la vieille memere''
Yeah it's like "pépère", it just refers to a wacky fat old man, so I wouldn't translate "mémère" to "grandmother".
@@Manu-Official no just memere but its really mean to say that
Not Always pejorative. It depends on localisation or social class
@@Manu-Official Usually said as "Sa grosse memere la pute"*
The 99,9999% of people who never said "mémère" like 😶
Mémère is not really a translation for grandmother. It is either grand-mère ou mémé. Mémère is more to describe an older lady but in a nice, humouristic way. For example, “oh là la, elle va vite la mémère sur son vélo. “
Well in another comments if you are french canadian or some places in swiss you will call it like that
Why are the accent things on the E facing different directions?
@@jasonvargas7564 I don't exactly know how to explain but they sound different, the first one (é) kind of sounds like "ay" as in "hay" (but without the y sound), and the second one (è) sounds more like the "e" in "neck"
@@jasonvargas7564 "é" and ''è'' are different sounds in French, depending if the accent is going left or right 🙂 "é'' is more like ''meh, ey'' whereas "è'"" is more like like ''bed, bet''. So, in "mémère", you have the 2 sounds. Yep!
The collab we never wanted but needed.
'French is not that hard 'got me🤣🤣🤣
*Grand-mère has left the chat*
Yes I’m English but I learn French at school so-
or la Grand -mère
Dont be stupid This is A fuck language you just foucs on Grand-mère but the other words? you dont give a shit
@@cupid_h3artsani That's what they said
Because I unplug grand mother
So you are canadian right?
We say "grand-mère" most of the time. But we do say "mémère" sometimes.
We say grand-mère in Quebec too
@@Vulcan-jp1qi yes, in different countries, we sometimes have the same words
WHY IS NOBODY TALKING ABOUT THE COLLAB ?? I LOVE THISS !!!
Me arriving in French: Me memee me mememe
“French isn’t that hard”
Him:
MER MER MERE MERE MERERR MEMEMER
muhrere muherehrurme
@@Aaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhh why should i stay away
Coke coke coke cocky cock
LMAOOOOO
Sounds like murder... 💀💀
👁️👄👁️
I just found out what my goat 🐐 was trying to tell me all these years
Lol
😂😂😂😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Underrated comment 😹
🤣🤣🤫
I just noticed every single word starts with the letter M 😂😂😂
Mémère xD sûrement dans les années 70 parce que je l'ai jamais entendu celle là xD
Ouais grave😂
Ouais c'est vrai 😂@@moamini568
Moi ma grand mère voulait qu'on l'appelle mèmère ^^
Me: trying to process him saying memememememememememe
Mer mer mer mer mer mer mer mer...
"French is not that hard"
Made me go 😂😂😂
The crossover we never expected
Learned french in high school, actually followed this line 25 years later. High five for me.
That is hi-fi 😸
Me:- You are absolutely Go"a"t
French friend :- Wow thanks 🤩
Me :- I mean literally 🐐
😂😂
France Italy and Spanish are crazy languages
Dude needs more like in his comments
I speak French and this is an insult to me and I am not sure what to do with it
Jamais de la vie on dit "mémère" pour "grandmother"
Mais grave
Tavu..
Tqt c'est google
@@priciliya.a ha ok
Moi c’est pire je dis oma
The ultimate collab
Collab that we never knew we needed
him: mother in french is mére
me who thought it was maman: well damn
Well mother is mère but mom or mommy is maman
Nobody calls their mother “mère”, we all say maman don’t worry
@@kayaraa_ I call my mom Mère
@@alexandreschmidt1305 « I call my mom Mère » 🤓🤓💸 (évidemment je rigole, ce n’est en rien dans le but de t’offenser)
@@z0ru4_ Ahah, je ne suis absolument pas riche, je pense que c'est juste l'habitude peut-être
I just realized My pet goat actually speaks French 🫠
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Me thinking that I’ll ever learn French after witnessing this
Tros drôle c’est pour ça que Je parle en Francais Je viens du Canada 🇨🇦
I speak French, and we always say 'grand-mère' rather then 'mémère'.
Also although, it's technically right, 'mère' is very formal and translates 'mother', 'maman' is less formal and is equivalent to 'mum'
If I called any of my grandmas "mémère" they'd slap me on the head.
The word has such a connotation of being old, fat, and tasteless 😬
🤣🤣🤣🤣😃 tasteless
🤐🤐
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Not in Northern Ontario Canada.
tasteless?
I didn't know eating grandmothers was a thing
The ultimate crossover
THATS the collabs we need
Thank for be motivated us to learn french 😭😭😭
🤩
🤣🤣
Does it??
I'm french and it's the first time that i hear "mémère"
First learn english properly
So, French is the real "Memer"🤣.
2 most favorite utubers in 1 vid
Nobody says "mémère" ! 😂😂
Missed the opportunity to say "SHIT :O" at the end and him saying "merde"
Hahahahahahhaha l was just scrolling to see if l wasn't alone in thinking of that too! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@juliashireen6195 im glad im not alone too😂
Yes! You are right! 😂😂😂😂😂😂
i realized how hard french is after i attended first french class at lyceum lol
I just tried to follow your saying and I went like Meow Meow Meow...😁
La mère du maire et la MÉMÈRE en mer 😂😂🤣🤣
"Mem mere memer meme mre" this is what i listened 👌🏻
« La mère du maire et la mémère en mer » (I’m French)
I'm a French Canadian and we only use "mémère" to tease slow people. We use either "Grand-mère" or "Mamie/Mamy".
Your uncle moes your tuna translate to ton tonton ton ton thon
Moi j'parle pas anglais hein.
@@jefpy Je parles français et anglais donc 😅
Almost no one says "mémère" for the grandmother 😅
J'aime ton français👍👍
See, I heard "The sea of the mother and the grandma in the mayor!"
I love it when he just gobble all the words at once .. 🤣
Laugh so hard😂😂😂😂Everything is mer in French word😂😂😂
its like "bababa?" "bababa" 😂😂
me just watching this over and over just to hear him say ‘mère de mère la mere’
I'm dying
Them/him saying grandmother in French: *mémère*
My French behind: *da fuq he saying?*
Well, I'm French and I do say mémère lol
@@Yanndieudo probably an exception then.
Them/him ? What do you mean ?
@@uvuvwevwevweonyetenyevweug5884 the people in the video
😂
All I heard was mermer 😂😂
Honestly french being difficult depends on the language you already speak
“grandmère” has left the chat.
Edit: Thanks for the 1000 likes!
Le "s" de est aussi + le sens de la phrase lol
Exact
hey sketchy Stanley I know you're not French
Il manque le trait d'union 😉
@@shadowvexx3123 I’m not but I speak French. Why?
“FrEnCh iS nOt tHaT HaRd”
Me: ?
That's what I was gonna say
And it's true
@@eddycharles8037 Say something in french
Ok voilà je parle en Francais tu veux quoi maintenant?
Actually for anyone confused "mémère" is a very old slang which mean "old woman" more than "grandmother" but almost no one ever use this term nowadays and no one is using it as "grandmother".
Unless your the kind of person who calls their grandma an old women instead
His good at speaking in french
Have him tell you about their counting system! Hilarious 😂
The vigesimal system was there before decimal system. And probably there in aln europ since prehistory.
When they have tried to impose decimal...the folk have continued to say 70 80 like vegesimal ... so they have surrender and instituted that.
He was literally sounded lika a sheeep maaamhhammma🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Lmao
Meeeeeeeeee🐑🐑meeee 🐑mmmmeeeer🐐🐐🐐
First I'm hearing of "mémère", and I've been speaking French my whole life
Mémère ?! 😂
what my exams are like:
May re ...maire/mayor ....Mar ine ... Mar riage ...matriarche ... Maternal ... Mère ..mer/mar .... Its the same in english and before to be from the french and the greek its from ...a more older language exemple ( from thé french exemple lol ) Paris ... Pars Isis ... But the english speakers Can not understand it more than they know what mean langue and age in the word language
This is way too funny
I literally go to a French school and my dad says "it's hard to speak French." Like-👁👄👁
Je suis française et en ferai ça dépend je suis d'accord pour quelqu'un qui connaît pas le français c'est compliqué
This is the first one of these tongue twisters, that my brains finally processed enough, to maybe even try remembering or learning this some day! 😅😂👌😜
Now speaking Pashto hahaha so easy to learn
Goats: mereeeeeee me me mereeeeeee maireeeedd maaaaaa
English:I can f-ing speak frenchhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh yasssssssss
I have been studying french for 7 years and I have never heard grandma as memere it's always been grand mere
yes We also study it this way
It exists but it is very familiar and it can be perceived as pejorative. It rather designates an elderly person than a grandmother. This word puts a lot of emphasis on the old age of the person.
@@scol5868 Thanks for the information, always feels good to know a little about the common language of France!
@@juveebhalavat9484 I allow myself to add, as it has already been said in other comments here, that this word is no longer really used. I happen to hear it again but rather speaking about an old animal (but this time in an affectionate way).
@@scol5868 Ofc, but thank you for replying in a kind way feeling it was necessary or and useful for me to know about this, since my comment went against the use of the word on day to day basis or and ever
Me at france after seing this:
la mer mer ila mere mere
arthur morgan " how they even come up with those word 😂
Lol my name is Meredith, but people call me Mer. Lol I love it! "Hello, my name is sea. How are you?" 😁
Your name is welsh , and mean greatperson.
Maredudd in welsh. In breton language meur is great and tud means person.
In welsh and breton sea is mor. Dont know why in gaulish sea is became mer.
"French isn't that hard"
MERE MERE MEREE MEREEE MERE ME ME RE RE
Goat: meeeeeh.
French: " tries to guess which word among infinite combinations with the same pronunciation is "
Probably funniest video I saw on Internet ever
“It’s not hard it’s just confusing”
"French is not that hard"
Me: Brooo! I can't even understand you without a translator!
I should have learned French from young age?
I french and the speak is different 😂 exemple « salut mec tu fais quoi aujourd’hui, mdr 😝 » very hard
@@aguiyo4182 haha me I speak French very well mais ça va bien aller un jour tu apprendra à comprendre ce que dit mdrrr
You’re right
Ok répondre a ma question quelle sont les deux auxiliaire du français
I really thought he was gonna end it with Merde
no i'm french and in my life i never hear sommeone says "mémére"🤣
We don’t say mémère for grandma in French it’s grand-mère
Well I'm thinking this is more canada French? because I looked up mėmėre and it does mean grand mother in the dictionary. Unless the dictionary is wrong?
@@TheAazah Not exactly. It's just that the use of mémère is coloquial where all other words were formal (mother: mère, but mom: maman). By the same idea, "grand-mère" is grandmother. Mémère has various uses, mostly as a private endearment term for grandma, or a dismissive term for old women.
Mémère and pépère is what we use for our own grandma and grandpa in Canada, and these terms are used affectionately here, not pejoratively.
Concluded I need to learn 1 word “mere”
😂😂😂 dream
I think so too 😂
EXACTLY 😅😅😅😅
Nice one dude
And Hindi speakers reading it as "mere" 😂🤣
If yk Hindi yk what I mean- 😂✌️
What does Goat say - Meey
Who is French among us - Meey
What comes after April - meeyy
*grand-mère a quitté le chat*
Who says Mémère??? Mdr 🤣
I do :D
Oh ok, because I’ve never heard this word before😅 but it’s kinda cute
No one actually! That's not really a reference for grandma's.
maybe 1 dude, maybe
@@TechTalk1x "grandma's"? grandma's=grandma is. grandmas=more than one grandma.
Me talking in french: *Mai mair mare Mier Mare
I need to send this to my teacher😅!!!
Bro I just started learning french, and you are making it seem to be impossible for me!!!😵
If you want to start a 'Get a slap from your French grandma' challenge. You can bloody sure call her "mémère" lol 😂
I'm learning French right now and this problem of pronunciate 10 different words the same way makes understanding the language very hard... 😩
Personne ne dit mémère pour sa grand-mère, on dit grand-mère
😂
if the thing at the end was there: mer mer mer me ma me me mer.
NOBODY IN FRANCE says « Memère » lmao
We called our Grandmother “Mom-Mom,” spelled “Maman.”
She had French heritage and was bilingual.
French is so hard 😂
@Supporter de 7 clubs on est d'accord
Non c facile
Not that mutch
I'm French so I'm bad at writing
Non c'est plutôt simple,mais faut bien apprendre
I said it once and I’ll say it again French is like putting all of your key binds in one button
That was actually funny 😂😂😂😂
Don't you think mémère is a little weird tho 🤣 mémère is more like a way to call someone , teen girls do that sometimes, but the proper way to call your grandmother is "mamie" and if you just want to say "grandmother" it's "grand-mère"
Mémère and pépère are terms of affection in Canadian French. It's what we call our own grandparents.
Ah désolé mdr j'avais pas fait gaffe 🤣 bon bah en tout cas maintenant je le sais donc mercii