| I understand everyone has different experiences and I have the advantage of having personal experience to the contrary so I don’t judge this opinion, I knew people where I grew up that believed this to be fact. To better inform everyone their are plenty of French laws and announcements that are translated to English ( I moved there right before Covid and had to rely on said services at first ). https://www.service-public.fr/particuliers/vosdroits/R2771?l... And they provide state news services in various languages including English https://www.france24.com/en/
https://www.rfi.fr/en/ More complicated for your argument is there are parts of the USA that have had Spanish as the primary language since they joined the USA. San Antonio, Texas for example I don’t believe has ever been majority anglophone and it doesn’t become more anglophone the further south you go. My wife’s family has been in Texas since it was Spain, and they only in very recent generations switched to English primarily. I’m not sure if you find any of this convincing, but I hope at least realize it is a bit more complicated than you may have realized. |
This is not the point. The point is that there should not be an expectation. French is the language of France. Moving there and expecting people to communicate you in English is not something we should be celebrating.
> San Antonio, Texas for example I don’t believe has ever been majority anglophone
This is not true. 2/3rds of San Antonio households speak English at home. Then you add in people who speak another language at home but still speak English.
https://satxtoday.6amcity.com/most-common-languages-san-anto...