Dark Tranquillity headlining in Montreal on the 27th of Febuary.

Damn! I'll be there after the Québec show then! Booyyah! I'll just have to wait for confirmation now...Can't even buy the tickets yet. BTW and if this thing gets confirmed, Niklas, I'm wondering how long you plan on playing since you'll be headliner? Because, considering you'll have about 20 hours to recover from the Opeth show in Québec and since I'm pretty sure you won't use all these hours to get some sleep and practice yoga....But more seriously, I'm really looking forward to these gigs and I'm planning on buying the band some beers...(I guess it's the best way to get you dozed off and then run away with you equipment and tour bus) Anyways I'm going to stop now. I think I'm mutating into a modern male rendition of a Beatles groupie...
 
ah bon! moi pas parler français quebecois :p! seulement français belge :p
tiens tant que j'y pense, comment vous dites 90 là bas? nonante ou quatrevingts dix? et 70? septante ou soixante dix? :p
 
On dit la facon la plus longue qui consiste a separer un nombre en toute ces composantes en suite les dires les unes apres les autres. 90 = 4 x 20 + 10. Facile non? Bon de toute facon, je prefere langlais :p
 
Si je demandais ça c'est parce qu' en Belgique et en Suisse on dit pas 70 et 90 de la même façon qu'en France. Vous avez peut être jamais entendu parler de ces variantes là (beaucoup de Français aussi d'ailleurs ne le savent pas) alors ma question paraît un peu stupide sans connaître ce contexte. Voilà.
 
"I was asking because in Belgium and Switzerland you dont say 70 and 90 the same way as in France. Maybe you've never heard of that (even some french people dont know about that difference) so maybe my question seemed a little odd if you didnt know the context. There."

That'll be 2 pounds, sir :p
 
Ouais, j'ai appris cet ete qu'en Belgique vous disiez nonante et tout sa... hehe. Anyways, ya... ummm... English is so much easier than French lol.
 
I think both languages have their up- and downsides :p A lot of expressions seem more complicated than in english.. although no language says "Je t'aime ma chérie" like french does :D

:wave:
 
I have to agree that grammatically, french is much more complicated than english. However about that thing that no language says "Je t'aime ma chérie" like french...I kind of disagree. I believe that although french is known as a romantic language, italian is even more so. Even spanish sounds more fluent and romantic to me than french.
 
Taliesin said:
"I was asking because in Belgium and Switzerland you dont say 70 and 90 the same way as in France. Maybe you've never heard of that (even some french people dont know about that difference) so maybe my question seemed a little odd if you didnt know the context. There."

That'll be 2 pounds, sir :p

If my paypal account was confirmed I'd gladly send it w/ my thanks :D ;)
 
RampageSword said:
I believe that although french is known as a romantic language, italian is even more so. Even spanish sounds more fluent and romantic to me than french.
I always thought french sounds ridiculous. You should have seen me mocking it when i was trying to avoid my french lessons. :D

On the other hand, spanish is the sexiest language. :D
 
^Will it help if i mention my mind slightly changed after i took those lessons? :p