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FRENCH WORD OF THE DAY

French Expression of the Day: Caillou dans la chaussure

This one might come in handy when you’re complaining about French bureaucracy.

French word of the day: Caillou dans la chaussure
French word of the day: Caillou dans la chaussure

Why do I need to know Caillou dans la chaussure?

Because, sometimes, you just need to tell someone about your frustration with life’s little, annoying, metaphorically painful niggles.

What does it mean?

Caillou dans la chaussure – roughly pronounced kay-oo don la shass-your – translates as ‘stone in the shoe’, is a phrase as old as time, and means exactly what it says.

You can use this in a literal sense, for example if you’re hiking and get gravel in your boots, but it’s more usually used as a metaphor.

When someone says they have a pebble in their shoe, it means that something is not right – and it describes the metaphorical feeling of something troublesome that is more painful than it really needs to be and is creating bigger problems than its size would suggest.

You can use it about your own problems, and it’s also used to describe something that is a big problem for someone else – in English you might say something is the ‘millstone around their neck’ to describe a big, weighty problem that won’t go away.

Use it like this

Nouvelle-Calédonie : le gros caillou dans la chaussure de Macron – New Caledonia is the millstone around Macron’s neck

Nous connaissons tous cette sensation désagréable d’avoir un caillou coincé dans notre chaussure – We all know that unpleasant feeling of having a stone stuck in our shoe.

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FRENCH WORD OF THE DAY

French Word of the Day: Piquer

You may be familiar with the formal definition for this French term, but you should know its informal usage too.

French Word of the Day: Piquer

Why do I need to know piquer?

Because the informal definition for this word might come in handy when taking crowded public transportation.

What does it mean?

Piquer – roughly pronounced pee-kay – technically means to sting, stab or generally pierce the skin with something sharp.

You probably heard this word quite a lot during the pandemic when people were getting their Covid-19 vaccines, as piqûre is the informal word for injection. This is also the term used for a bee or insect sting.

But piquer has another meaning as well – colloquially, it means to steal or to informally take something, similar to ‘grab’ in English. 

For example, you could use it to tell someone you had your wallet stolen on the train – Il a piqué mon portefeuille / he stole my wallet. A synonym would be voler (formal) or chiper (informal).

There is also another expression – piquer une tête – which refers to ‘plunging head first’ into water or simply taking a dip. 

Use it like this

Il a essayé de me piquer mon téléphone, mais je me suis accrochée pour le garder. – He tried to steal my phone, but I held on to it.

L’abeille m’a piqué pendant que j’étais assis dans le jardin. – The bee stung me while I sat in the garden.

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