luvavacation
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2006
- Messages
- 913
I posted here a few months ago for help with a 25th anniversary trip driving through Canada, and you all were very, very helpful, so I am back with a rather stupid question, I am sure! Please forgive me.
We decided to plan on 4 nights in Quebec City, 2 nights in Montreal, and 2 nights in Toronto visiting my Godmother (I was a born there, going home!
). It is our 25th, first vacation without kids ever, and we are now empty nesters. We are doing it up good, staying at Fairmont in QC and Ritz in Montreal, just because we have never done anything like this before. I figure the people at these hotels will be able to help us if we need it (because I am paying an arm and a leg to them, you know), but I wonder about when we are away from the hotel exploring?
Now that our trip is close, I am doing some research into what to see each day, and I am getting panicked. You see, my French language skills are awful! I have a book to try to help me relearn something, but I only took 2 years in High School, and have forgotten most of it. Instead, I keep thinking of phrases in German (speak it a bit) and Hungarian (fluent in this), but French, nope, not coming back! Even my Russian returns, but not that French!
I figure I am fine in Montreal, as the websites I am visiting for tourism seem to be in both English and French, so if I mangle my French, I figure someone will be able to help me, right? However, in Quebec City, I find most things to be just in French, and I am not sure how we are going to manage to get around. If I am lost or unsure of something, will I be able to find someone that can help me?
We picked Quebec City and Montreal because I wanted to go somewhere that didn't just feel like an extension of America, but where it was ok if I wouldn't have time to prepare linguistically, and didn't think that would be a problem. Normally, when I go to a place that speaks a different language, I try to learn some conversational phrases so I am not lost. This time, nope, the French language eludes me. And QC looks like it might be a problem.
So what do you think? As long as I say, "Bonjour", and try to use my phrasebook, will we perhaps find people that will be able to help us in English if we are lost? I would not expect to find English speaking people in every country I go to, but I kind of thought QC, being in Canada, would appear more bilingual, you know?
I am so excited to go back to the land of my birth! I haven't been there in 26 years, so I am sure the places I remember are very different now, but I am just happy to go and be Canadian again!
We decided to plan on 4 nights in Quebec City, 2 nights in Montreal, and 2 nights in Toronto visiting my Godmother (I was a born there, going home!

Now that our trip is close, I am doing some research into what to see each day, and I am getting panicked. You see, my French language skills are awful! I have a book to try to help me relearn something, but I only took 2 years in High School, and have forgotten most of it. Instead, I keep thinking of phrases in German (speak it a bit) and Hungarian (fluent in this), but French, nope, not coming back! Even my Russian returns, but not that French!

I figure I am fine in Montreal, as the websites I am visiting for tourism seem to be in both English and French, so if I mangle my French, I figure someone will be able to help me, right? However, in Quebec City, I find most things to be just in French, and I am not sure how we are going to manage to get around. If I am lost or unsure of something, will I be able to find someone that can help me?
We picked Quebec City and Montreal because I wanted to go somewhere that didn't just feel like an extension of America, but where it was ok if I wouldn't have time to prepare linguistically, and didn't think that would be a problem. Normally, when I go to a place that speaks a different language, I try to learn some conversational phrases so I am not lost. This time, nope, the French language eludes me. And QC looks like it might be a problem.
So what do you think? As long as I say, "Bonjour", and try to use my phrasebook, will we perhaps find people that will be able to help us in English if we are lost? I would not expect to find English speaking people in every country I go to, but I kind of thought QC, being in Canada, would appear more bilingual, you know?
I am so excited to go back to the land of my birth! I haven't been there in 26 years, so I am sure the places I remember are very different now, but I am just happy to go and be Canadian again!
