I thought about learning French because Paris is the fashion capital of the world. But i read the spanish is the next most common language after english. Which one is easier to learn>?
I’m planning to travel to Europe next year for roughly 2 months (July and August). My flight is from Sydney to London and i’m planning to stay with family in Paris as a sort of “homebase”, cost of flight is handled and so is accommodation in Paris, so that saves me a bit.
Hoping to go to England, France(obviously), Italy, Portugal and maybe a short Contiki Tour. I was thinking about taking $12,000 AU (7,500 Euro)
Not planning to live large but hoping to stay at some nice’ish hotels and do some shopping for the family and myself.
Will $12,000 AU (7,500 Euro) get me by or am i dreamin?
Are items such as clothes, electronics and food roughly equivalent to what you pay in other countries?
Planning to get Eurail pass as well
Cheers
Is $3000 canadian dollars be enough to live in France for 1 month? (4days, 3 nights in Paris (hostel); Visiting The Loire Valley and Toulouse for 1 week; 5 days with my boyfriend I don’t have to pay rent; camping and staying in hostels, instead of staying in hotels)
I’ve been told now that im out of school it is harder for me to learn a language as it is easier to when you are younger, or a child. Is this true? Me and my boyfriend are thinking of taking lessons next year as we plan to travel in a few years time and would like to know the language, he thinks French would be more common as alot of countries have French as a basic language (are there multiple french languages though?) whereas only Japan speak Japanese.
I have heard that in France, when swimming you must wear a swimming costume (one piece), however i’ve also heard wearing a tankini and bikini is okay. So i just want to clarify which is correct. This is for a local swimming pool, and not a hotel swimming pool.
Thanks in advance.
Hey, just wondering what the latest version of msn is and where to download it, thnx , Jayden
how long do you think it would take to learn French from scratch?
i am 13 and would like to learn it.
I’ve been planning a trip around France and Italy and while looking for hotels to stay in I have been reading the reviews from other guests to help decide whether it is a good place to stay at. Quite a few people have said that the hotels required them to hand over their passports and they got it back when they left. But on travel websites eg Lonely Planet they say that you should always have your passport with you in case of emergencies etc. I don’t like the idea of the hotel having my passport. Can I refuse to let them keep it while I am staying there? Perhaps I could give them a photocopy of it? Has anyone else had an experience like this, what did you do?
We drive from Calais to the South of France several times a year, and break up the journey with an over-night stop. We’ve usually been paying around 100Eu for a room in ** or *** city centre hotels. We’re keen to try some of the cheaper chains (Campanille, etc.) but on many of the websites there’s a mention of “two children” or max of three people to a room. Our three children are all under five and sometimes only one of us is travelling with them: can anyone recommend a budget hotel brand in France that will allow two parents/three kids or one parent/three kids to stay? Many thanks.
We usually take the A71/A75
I Have a holiday home in france and need to look for new home insurance. Does anyone have any recomendation of who they use for there french holiday home. it would be preferable if the company had offices in both the uk and france and was able to correspond in English. But cost is the most key decision maker.
Your ideas would be greatly appreciated.
I would like to buy a new home in france, but would be open to peoples advice on the best areas to buy in?
For example which are is cheapest to buy?
Which area is best for access from the UK?