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Feeling unwell whilst in France?

Help! Attention! Urgence!

Many medical and emergency words are similar in French, but they are also different enough to lead to major confusions. Médicin doesn’t mean medicine and an emergency is urgent, but in French it’s l’urgence that takes the name.

That last sentence is confusing because of all the closely related words that are nearly the same, but  different enough to trip people up:

Doctor – le médicin

Medicine – le médicament

Emergency – une urgence

Emergency blog

A Cle France client yesterday who forgot to sign up to our newsletter - Photo by Nathan Phillips on Flickr.

In the Chemists.

When you get to la pharmacie, there will be some more things that will be confusing... If you need some headache tablets (painkillers) and ask for Nurofen or Anadin, le pharmacien (the pharmacist) won’t understand. You need to ask for du paracétamol if you want some headache tablets!

If you have a prescription, don’t be fooled by the "-tion" ending! A prescription is une ordonnance! Heuresement (fortunately), it’s easy to say what you’re allergic to with the formula être allergique à ______. You can put any food or médicament in the blank and you will be understood.

Je suis allergique à tout !

I’m allergique to everything!

Before you get to la pharmacie, chez le médcin, or l’hôpital, you need to know how to say what’s wrong. A common difference between French and English is switching between when you have to use être (to be) and avoir (to have).

Par exemple :

I have the flu.

I have a cold

I am cold.

En français :

J’ai la grippe.

Je suis erhumé.

J’ai froid.

You can always say je suis malade (I am sick) if you’re not sure how to express what’s wrong. Mais en général (but in general), aches and pains are expressed with:

le mal à _____.

Filling in the blank with whatever body part hurts. A headache is le mal à la tête, a stomachache – le mal à l’estomac, a toothache – le mal aux dents, etc.

Saying you have an ache of some sort is then easy, just rememeber to take off the article le:

J’ai mal à la tête.

I have a headache.

The same rules apply for la gueule de bois (a hangover), but remembering le vocabulaire when vous avez le mal partout (you ache everywhere) can be difficult.

If there’s any medical or emergency related topics you’d like me to cover in future articles, be sure to laisser un commentaire (leave a comment) below!

Health Insurance

Blog submitted by: Alex at The French Property Network - Cle France.

This blog was originally posted on The French Language Blog pages.

For everything you need to know about French property visit www.clefrance.co.uk


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