Why You Should Never Say “Bien Fait” in French
OOPS! That French expression doesn’t mean what you think it means. Discover the real translation of “Bien Fait” - and why you should avoid it altogether.
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Have you ever said “Bien Fait” to a French person and wondered why they looked puzzled, hurt, or confused? That’s because this French expression doesn’t mean what you think…
Today, we’ll explore a French vocabulary mistake that I see all the time, including among my own students! You’ll learn what “Bien Fait” really means, and some alternative French expressions that can help you express what you really mean.
Find the free EXTENDED LESSON and ask me questions about this French lesson on the Comme une Française blog. It includes a full written lesson, with all the French expressions, more specific vocabulary you can use, and extra resources.
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Exactly! "Bien fait" means "that's what you get" when someone does something and it backfires on them.
@Albatrosspro1
4 жыл бұрын
So basically the meaning is only sarcastic 😂
@christopherdieudonne
4 жыл бұрын
@@Albatrosspro1 Yes, very sarcastic. LOL😂
@azuquita3856
4 жыл бұрын
Exactly, short and clear. In spanish we also used it "bien hecho! (Buhhh)"
@christopherdieudonne
4 жыл бұрын
@@azuquita3856 haha, "Bien hecho" I didn't know that. Thanks !
@bremexperience
4 жыл бұрын
It is not sarcasm at all. You're wishing ill on someone. You are happy the person got what he/she deserved. It's revenge.
I was told to use “bien fait” as a way to say “good job!” by one of my French teachers a few years ago so… bien fait to them, I guess
@vivy-kun3510
4 жыл бұрын
Big fat OOF!
@bluesmurff6163
4 жыл бұрын
French canadian here. Bien fait is actually sometime used to say you did a good job. "Tu as bien fait ton travail!" does mean "You did your job well!". However it can be used in a sarcastic way.. Like you don't like someone and they fail at someting very badly, you could tell them "bien fait". What matters is how you phrase it
@Laurent69ftm
4 жыл бұрын
@@bluesmurff6163 Yes, like she said, it has to be used in a sentence to mean "well done".
@bluesmurff6163
4 жыл бұрын
@@Laurent69ftm Yes, but what i meant is than it's a matter of tone. Many people will say bien fait and actually mean you did well
@AmidalaEmma
4 жыл бұрын
@@bluesmurff6163 ok thank god because I am canadian (anglophone but i use french at work) and I have been saying "bien fait" for years and no one ever said anything about it!!
I suppose in England we would say “Well that went well” - meaning exactly the opposite.
@jefvanhove3989
4 жыл бұрын
Thats just sarcasm/irony
@spencerlively3049
4 жыл бұрын
@@jefvanhove3989 that's what they speak in England, no?
@jefvanhove3989
4 жыл бұрын
@@spencerlively3049 i've heard that rumor too
@as.829
4 жыл бұрын
Spencer Lively yeah, I’m pretty sure that it’s their national language
@henryblunt8503
4 жыл бұрын
@@as.829 More an art form.
I didn’t know Anne Hathaway was French.
@kotare86
4 жыл бұрын
Lol
@dlevi67
4 жыл бұрын
Bien fait!
@rocketraccoon1976
4 жыл бұрын
Of course she is, didn't you watch Les Misérables?
@slappy8941
4 жыл бұрын
And half Mexican.
@calisondaix
4 жыл бұрын
I guess she lives in Paris. That's not her, tough...
My Grandmother who taught me French and German told me 'Only learn a sentence or phrase 'and Never translate a word on it's own. ' 'If you do you will make horrible mistakes.'
@rogerwilco2
4 жыл бұрын
That is a very English way to try to learn a language. I don't think it is a good way.
@KattReen
4 жыл бұрын
Making mistakes is also a form of learning
@michaelhalsall5684
4 жыл бұрын
Words are contextual, that is their meaning changes by the contex in how they are used. In English we have the word "cool". "The party was cool!" (fun) OR "The water was cool" (lacking heat)
@paulvail7863
4 жыл бұрын
I think she a very wise woman!
@felipevasconcelos6736
4 жыл бұрын
You shouldn’t translate at all. It’s much better to learn the actual definition of the word, not the word in English that has the most similar definition.
As a french person, bien fait has two meanings: when talking about someone's work: "un travail bien fait" means "Good job" It can also mean "you deserve what's happening to you". The tone used is very important.
@KK-rg8ye
4 жыл бұрын
Non mais je penses que ça dépend surtout le contexte quoi x). Mais maintenant que j’y pense pourquoi on dit “bien fait” like it doesn’t make any sense o.o
@gaumz3393
4 жыл бұрын
@@KK-rg8ye en vrai c'est sarcastique et un peu méchant genre " bien fait pour toi fallait pas chercher les problèmes "
@tatydial12
4 жыл бұрын
Yeah I was thinking the same thing. It does mean that, it's all about tone.
@babetta27
4 жыл бұрын
It's exactly the same in spanish.
@joycebrown3469
4 жыл бұрын
Help... I need a French Friend to help me learn French!!!! I love your language!!! I'm so jealous!!!
Pretty Woman's iconic line "Big mistake" was translated to "Bien fait" in french
@Reine111
4 жыл бұрын
Is there a french version of the 1990 PRETTY WOMAN? I want, please 🥺
@lihoamlo9213
4 жыл бұрын
@@Reine111 I think this person is talking about the dubbed version in french.
@kirklurkpu4470
3 жыл бұрын
And I think it's rather the subtitles he's talking about.
I always saw this as a perspective issue. In English "well done" is used to say something the person did was done in a fine manner. In French "well done" is used to say something that happened to the person you're addressing was well fit/well done to what she deserved (after doing something bad). In English it qualifies what you did. In French it qualifies what was done to you.
@TesterAnimal1
3 жыл бұрын
Sounds like the sarcastic “well good for you!” that we rosbifs use a lot!
In austria we have a french school book called BIEN FAIT
@angelikiknimidou9315
3 жыл бұрын
After watching this video, I found your comment so funny 😆😆
The subtitles show “bien fait” as “Beyonce” 😂
@danidejaneiro8378
4 жыл бұрын
That is gold
@valeriag9443
4 жыл бұрын
Dyani I read it in half Spanish and half English like bien as in really and fait as fat and I was so confused😂😂
@nyokabikirubi4756
4 жыл бұрын
Well, we deserved it.
Une autre expression très utile est « bien joué » , ce qui signifie en anglais « well played »
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
Tout à fait !
@LauraMorland
4 жыл бұрын
Yes, « bien joué » is what I use... because my impulse is always to say bien fait, and it's the simplest path for my brain to travel.
@lalegende2746
4 жыл бұрын
golongusa J’utilise « bien joué » toujours, surtout à grâce de regarder des joueurs français sur KZread 😁
@p0p525
4 жыл бұрын
That can also be used sarcastically like bien fait,,,
@thierrymassip8884
3 жыл бұрын
Except that "bien fait" applies to the "punishment" that you get because of bad deeds or inaction whereas "bien joué" qualifies an action
I didn't watch the video, however, here's what I can tell you as a native French speaker : "Bien fait" is not used as sarcasm to describe something. If you say, for instance, "C'est bien fait" (C'est = It/That is), then it becomes a genuine compliment that would mostly be used when talking about art - paintings, drawings, movies. However, you wouldn't use it for music, though I cannot explain why, French speakers would understand, but it would sound very odd to our ears. "Bien fait" on its, whilst it literally translates to "Well done", is a way to express that you find someone else's misery, failures or shortcomings deserved. It can be used when joking with a friend who explains something annoying that happened to them, or, when used seriously, it simply states that whoever experienced unpleasantness had it coming.
One of my elementary school French teachers had a little stamp that said "Bien fait" that she would put on our assignments.
@bluesmurff6163
4 жыл бұрын
What matters is whether it's used as a sarcams of not... In France " Bien fait" is mostly used that way... But it's not always the case
@duanefitzhugh4093
4 жыл бұрын
Oops
@philv3941
3 жыл бұрын
A local french teacher use "bon travail" ( good job / well done) on this kind of stamp.
Sadly, this whole telling someone "good job" doesn't work in multiple languages. I speak Japanese as well as English, and figured I'd share what I knew. In japanese, you can't say "you did good!" (良くできました!/yoku dekimashita!) Because that phrase is often used towards little kids and so is seen derogatory, as If you're looking down on them and you're being sarcastic. Instead, you have to say "良く頑張りました/ yoku ganbarimashita" which means "you worked hard" XD I guess it gives the person you're talking to the same effect, it's just not as satisfying to the speaker/us! XD
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
That's fantastic, SAiKA, thanks for sharing your knowledge of japanese with us!
@silverbowftw5225
4 жыл бұрын
Ahhh i really wanna learn japanese :(
@yanis905
4 жыл бұрын
How about otsukare sama desu?
@teaspoon3774
4 жыл бұрын
@@yanis905 As far as my weeb knowledge goes, I think it means more "thanks for the hard job"
@yanis905
4 жыл бұрын
@@teaspoon3774 Yes, this is the main meaning, but it looks like my Japanese colleagues used it quite liberally.
My French friends say "bien joué" so I follow their example and that's the one I use.
@sillililli01
4 жыл бұрын
As in, well played.
@IvanRuet
4 жыл бұрын
Correct! "Bien joué" means "Well done". 👍
@MrSimonmcc
4 жыл бұрын
The same as chwarae teg in Welsh.
@ernietubeofglass3999
4 жыл бұрын
I lived for 4 years in Québec. My ex and ex-belle-mère were my tutors as I learned my second language. Although I don`t believe "bien fait(e)" has the same potential negative connotation as it would in France, they definitely gently corrected me when I tried to logic my way into using "bien fait(e)"and instead got me into the habit of "bien joué(e)" That said, I HAVE heard my ex use "bien joué(e)" sarcastically And in Québec, you always have the option of using "trop hot, là" (though pronounced "trop hot LUH" lol ;) )
Reminds me of how Southerners in the USA, generally women, say "Bless your heart" in reaction to some other's comment, but what they mean is that they think you've been vulgar.
Lol, I just watched this video today and I already got to use this phrase. I saw a news report that people were told no after trying to return toilet paper that they couldn't resell online. I shouted, "Bien fait," at the screen. Serves them right. Bien fait!
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
Excellent use of the expression!
So it's always sarcastic. I think of the southern saying, "Bless your heart." If someone southern says that to you, it usually means that you messed up.
@Toywins
4 жыл бұрын
Or that you're not that smart... 😂😂
@sarabeth641
4 жыл бұрын
I'm from the South and most of the time when we in my area say it, we usually mean it sincerely if something bad has happened. But just like almost anything in English, it can be said sarcastically. But it's much different than this case because it can have a positive or negative meaning, whereas this always has negative.
@nathanbrisebois8756
4 жыл бұрын
Every Italian I've ever worked with will call someone handsome or beautiful when they make a mistake. You might be dumb but at least you're attractive lol It was particularly offensive if the person was not in fact attractive lol
@JC-yy8iv
4 жыл бұрын
@@sarabeth641 yeah this popular misconception about "Bless your heart" being 100% catty and sarcastic all the time seems to be something non-Southerners have latched onto as a kind of meme, and I think even some Southerners propagate the myth because they like the idea "If we say this we're not being nice", even though they could go outside any day and hear people saying it genuinely. I think people just like the idea of it as a sarcastic phrase, and sure it is fun, but it would be a huge mistake to go walking around the South assuming everyone who says "bless your heart" is being rude.
@desanipt
4 жыл бұрын
I don't think it is sarcastic. It's just that in English when you say "well done", you mean it like the person did something in a fine manner. In French it is meant as something fitting (considering the bad things you did) happened to you. In English you mean what the person did was well done. In French they mean it like what was done to the person/what happened to the person was wall deserved/was well done (to him/her not by him/her).
Thank you for reminding me how much I love French!
Your videos are super helpful, thank you so much!!
Wow, I'd never have realised that, thank goodness I never said that to anyone by accident😂 it's great how you can take such a simple phrase and make such an informative lesson!
It’s almost as if “bien fait” is meant in a sarcastic way, non? ... “Well done!” Sarcastically
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
Non. C'est un raccourci de "C'est bien fait pour toi." Ce n'est pas sarcastique.
@GaylordBonnafous
4 жыл бұрын
It's not sarcastic but much worse: "you deserve it!".
@smokerjoe5231
4 жыл бұрын
@@Commeunefrancaise Pas d'accord. Sarcastique signifie moqueur. Dire "c'est bien fait pour toi" c'est utiliser un terme positif dans un sens négatif, à des fins de moquerie. C'est typiquement sarcastique. I do not agree. Sarcastic means mocking. Saying "c'est bien fait pour toi" is using a positive term in a negative sense, for mocking purposes. It's typically sarcastic.
@marcroswellgo1233
4 жыл бұрын
"that's what you get" is a good phrase
@Roslyngal
4 жыл бұрын
I actually agree. If you come from an English-speaking background, sarcasm does cover this. We have as many levels of sarcasm as eskimos have words for snow. My view is that sarcasm is definitely treated differently in Romance languages. It’s not a strength of French, Italian, Spanish.
There’s a little town in southeast Saskatchewan, Canada close to the US border called Bienfait. I believe the locals call it ‘bean fate’.
@Gene601
4 жыл бұрын
You are correct. That's what they call it.
@GaylordBonnafous
4 жыл бұрын
Bienfait in one word means blessing. Totally different than bien fait in two words.
@siranneau
4 жыл бұрын
Bienfait is a proper noun in this situation. If you absolutely want to translate it , "benefit" is a good choice
@freecitizen2760
4 жыл бұрын
There’s a town up here called “Pouce Coupe” (“Cut Thumb”). They pronounce it “Poose-Coop”, and have no idea what it means.
@franciscofragoeiro5229
4 жыл бұрын
Franglais ahahah
Bien fait = It serves you right!
"bien fait" has the exactly meaning as "bem feito" in portuguese (makes sense since one is the literal translation of the other and vise versa)
@babetta27
4 жыл бұрын
Is the same in spanish "bien hecho". Is like you deserve what is happening to you, in a bad way.
In Spanish (castellano) we use the same term. "Bien hecho" translates to "you deserve it!" But "está bien hecho" means it's well done.
@santiagoriveralopez5009
4 жыл бұрын
No siempre, “Bien hecho” también se dice para decir buen trabajo (well done).
Expressions should be treated as a single unit and an equivalent expression found in the target language (as opposed to translating one word at a time). The difficult part is that we are often so used to using expressions in our our own language that we are not aware that they are expressions. My favourite "well done" is "bravo". It's short and sweet.
Thank you very much for that lesson. I have lived in France since 2006 and have used 'bien fait' incorrectly for almost all of them. I have subscribed!
I swear every french teacher has that outfit
Thanks for being here for us. Bravo! C'est super!
I am a teacher and I have used this "bien fait" a few times! Thanks for the clarification...
Thank you for telling us about our mistakes.
Kind of like Nelson from The Simpsons pointing at you and saying "Ha ha!"
@mavenfeliciano1710
3 жыл бұрын
Classic!
Salut Geraldine! You explain the things in everyday life context not like just bookish manner it is really very helpful. Thank you so much.
More of this please! So i can use it to speak better ironic french.
L'équivalent en anglais chez les Américains pour "C'est bien fait pour toi.", c'est, "That's what you get.". J'adore ta chaine, Géraldine! C'est trop bien!
J'ai vraiment aimé cette présentation. Votre présentation est BIEN FAITE 😀
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
Tu as tout compris, Leira ! 😋
@boink800
4 жыл бұрын
Non, c'est pas BIEN FAITE ... c'est GÉNIALE!
@CaptainNoch
4 жыл бұрын
C'est une présentation bien faite! J'espère que je l'ai utilisée correctement! 😊
@palupalu5647
4 жыл бұрын
@@CaptainNoch en français, il n'y a pas lieu de féliciter juste pour un travail bien fait. On le fait surtout quand il s'agit d'un très bon travail, remarquable, très au-dessus de la moyenne. Donc, dans ton contexte, un Français dirait : c'est une présentation très bien faite, bravo. Et dit avec un ton moqueur, ça voudrait dire l'opposé. C'est le côté latin de la chose, on aime utiliser les superlatifs.
@PavementWarrior
4 жыл бұрын
Bien joué ??
I use 'Bon travail', merci Geraldine! : ) first viewer here
@HopeGardner3amed
4 жыл бұрын
I say "Tres bien" as that is what my French teacher said if we did well.
@motherofallemails
4 жыл бұрын
beau travail also
Point two (the meaning of « bien fait » ) is used exactly the same in Portuguese 😊
This is what I like about English. As a speaker of both languages (though not fluent French) English seems to deal with this problem simply by the tone in which it's said. We can say "well done" when we genuinely mean it in a normal tone or, say "well done!" With a sarcastic tone, when we don't
En anglais “well done” peut aussi avoir deux senses, juste comme en français.
@LoverOfStuff
4 жыл бұрын
Ouais, pas beaucoup des Anglophones utilisent “well done” s’ils n’est pas sarcastique.
@TheAdrianrawls
4 жыл бұрын
@@LoverOfStuff Disagree.
@TheAdrianrawls
4 жыл бұрын
Agree. Both are used.
It's like saying "good job" *sarcastically* in English. Like, "Oh, good job! Look what you've done now."
Note that "bien fait" can be used as an adjective and this time is means "well done". Like in "c'est du travail bien fait", meaning "this is a job well done".
This is SO helpful!! So glad I found you!!
Em Cabo Verde, a expressão "bien fait" tem o mesmo significado na ligua francesa. Tem também quase a mesma pronuncia em kriolo (lingua materna fala nas ilhas de Cabo Verde)
In portuguese we use "Bem feito" exactly the same way.
Ce leçon est très utile. Je me souviens maintenant qu'on n'utilise pas l'expression bien fait pour féliciter quelqu'un....merci beaucoup.
I learnt something new. Bravo!
It seems like this is the equivalent of, “bless your heart.”
@colleenharding8665
4 жыл бұрын
YES. That!
@bluesmurff6163
4 жыл бұрын
Is bless your heart not something nice ?
@colleenharding8665
4 жыл бұрын
In the south USA, it's not nice
@rachelmitcheson5460
4 жыл бұрын
blue smurff it is a back handed compliment. For example, “Joe comes in last in every race, but he keeps on trying. Bless his heart.” Obviously Joe might be not be destined to be a runner and could put his energy into other endeavors. They won’t tell him that. They will just let him fail and fake that they are impressed or concerned. I think in German it is like Schadenfreude.
@robman2095
4 жыл бұрын
Rachel Mitcheson Schadenfreude is taking pleasure in someone else’s misfortune
Oh no!! I write this on my daughter’s homework all the time. 😫
@KimberlyGreen
4 жыл бұрын
The silver lining: now you can share with her a lesson _you_ have learned. And show her that it's never too late to improve.
@dorotheole4517
4 жыл бұрын
Native speakers: Isn't Bien fait written on homework that's been well done. I lived in France and can almost see it in my mind's eye.
@dr.dermixgirlmd7479
4 жыл бұрын
DorotheOle- I thought so too, from now on I’ll play it safe and write “bon travail”.
@DL-bh8bv
4 жыл бұрын
Hahaha
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
It's ok. Tell her! :) it's a fun mistake to make.
Merci pour la clarification 👍
Merci. J’aime cette langue!
Merci merci merci! J'ai su que cette phrase est problématique mais pas de détails
J’étais coupable ! Quand j’ai appris le français pour la première fois, j’ai dit, « Bien fait. » Heureusement, ma cousine française m’a corrigé.
@ewg6200
4 жыл бұрын
Thuan Tran Combien de fois as-tu appris le francais?
I’m in love. My french teacher was an old nun who didn’t understand that we didn’t speak french. She can make a class fluent in a year.
Merci Géraldine !
Idk if this is right or not, but I was told to use “chapeau”, short for “hats off to you”.
Hi, Im Brazilian and here we have the same expression "Bem feito" that means exactly the same, so for me the direct translation work very well :), anyway good video im loving learn French with you.
Merci beaucoup pour le video!
New sub! In Quebec, there are a million and a half rules that I need to learn and this is one of them.
@alexveer338
4 жыл бұрын
Not really... "Bien fait" in itself here sounds super unnatural and isn't necessarily sarcastic. For the sarcastic way, we'd say "Bien fait/Tant mieux pour lui!". To congratulate, we say "Good job" in itself (Don't say this in formal environments) or "Très bien", "Bravo", "C'est bien fait" if in more formal environments. "Bien joué" would only work while you're playing something here like sports or games. You'll notice that Canadian French is extremely informal and we usually speak with a whole lot of English expressions or Anglicisms.
Before watching, I assume it's like saying "brawo" in Polish where it is used sarcastically to mock someone's silly mishap.
@p0p525
4 жыл бұрын
It is
C'est genial! Merci beaucoup.
I just found your videos by recommendation from KZread and I'm absolutely delighted. Love them. So 'bien fait' is more used in a sarcastic way to comment on a mishap? Good to know ! I certainly misused it in the past. Merci, Géraldine, tes leçons sont merveilleux.
Bien fait: Serves you right. C’est bien fait: It is well done.
@tadpoleontheweb
4 жыл бұрын
@@charlottegladen8396 I’m from Quebec, Canada, so perhaps the European nuance of ‘bien fait’ is a little lost on me. But even francophones here will use anglicisms like ‘good job!’ between each other. Ah, well. C’est la vie.
"It serves her right". Would that translate as "Bien fait pour elle"? And in the plural "Bien fait pour eux/elles"?
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
Exactement, Paul !
Merci beaucoup Madame.
Merci Geraldine! I really appreciate these short videos with a useful, practical lesson to improve my colloquial French.
That top looks excellent btw.
I’d use “Bien joué”, like ladybug and chat noir did.
@leannemcelroy8482
3 жыл бұрын
Lol yesssss!
This is very helpful. Merci
Merci. Un travail bien fait.
Would the meaning of “bien fait” reminds me of the English phrase “good for you”? I more often hear “good for you” mean a negative thing, similar to how you explained “bien fait”.
@th8257
4 жыл бұрын
Nope. "Good for you" is used in English when someone is bragging about something, and you aren't impressed. E.g. statement: "I am the best looking person who ever lived" . Answer: "Good for you! [I don't care, I'm not impressed]" "Served you right!" is probably the nearest translation in English of "bien fait"
@charlesschlotter757
4 жыл бұрын
"Good for you" can go either way, depending on the context and the tone of voice. When addressed to a child who just found an Easter egg (and accompanied by a hug), it would be positive. When addressed to a bragging blowhard, it would be sarcastic.
Ah, we have that in Dutch as well: net goed! Translate as: almost well but means: it serves you right!
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
Merci Anka ! It's so wonderful to learn similarities with other languages.
@ankavoskuilen1725
4 жыл бұрын
@@Commeunefrancaise Yes, there are always more than you think. I learned french in school but I never knew about Bien fait.
Loved this video! This channel is so good!
C'est super! Merci
I would translate it as 'Well done' but in a sarcastic way.
@kingofthegarden2350
4 жыл бұрын
Travel on You Tube Yes, I would Agree. Same good be it use in English
Est-ce qu'on peut dire "Bien jouait" ?
@shanenanigans27
4 жыл бұрын
Bien joué**
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
Oui, tout à fait.
C'est très simple. Merci
Mille mercis!
Actually in English ( depending on the context), the use of ‘well done’ can be used as a put down. ‘So you got another speeding ticket - well done!’
@jamessandy5873
4 жыл бұрын
Stephen Briggs: What you're describing is called sarcasm.
@Stevecamden
4 жыл бұрын
James Sandy don’t you think ‘bien fait’ also has a sarcastic feel to it then?
Surely, this is irony. English is exactly the same - you can say “oh, well done” when somebody breaks something. Our you can shout “well done, you m****f***” when somebody cuts you up on the road. What is very useful is knowing that it has the same ironic meaning in French, and possibly is used more often in that context in French. Great to get tips like this. Now I know how to really piss the locals off next time I go to France - because all too often many of them deserve to be told “bien fait”. “Bien Fait, Monsieur Macron” par example. Just to be topical.
@fernandobanda5734
4 жыл бұрын
You mean sarcasm, not irony, and it's not the case. You are not saying "You did well" sarcastically to mean that they did bad. You are saying "It is well done that this happened (to you)".
Geraldine, I love listening to you speak French. I have been so busy with my job so I could not listen to your lessons so much, but now I am working at home and I can more easily do this. Merci beaucoup for your lovely videos and dedication 😘❤️
Thank you so much for this clarification! I’m a French teacher and I’m so thankful for your help!
As a spanglish speaker I tought it meant “really fat” as my first impression 😭😂😂idk much French sorry🙈
@sarto2010
3 жыл бұрын
Steph Maldonado Why comment then? 😕
“Bien fait” actually means “Good for you” or “You get what you deserve” Bam, saved you 7 minutes
@ThatOneDude7
4 жыл бұрын
French guy here. you missed the point of the video. Bien fait literally translates to that but culturally it means "You get what you deserve." fun fact in japanese they have a specific word for that : Zama, more commonly Zama miro
@goatkoala573
4 жыл бұрын
ThatOneDude Now I want to watch Joker in french.
@BlueAcidball
4 жыл бұрын
ThatOneDude Thanks for the correction though
@kristheoldonemarczy3622
4 жыл бұрын
Grammar NAZI
@BlueAcidball
4 жыл бұрын
Kristian Marcy How?
Merci beaucoup!
Bravo! Et merci. La vidéo est super.
So it literally translate to well done but with scaraism
My teacher says bien fait all the time....
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
ouch...
@boink800
4 жыл бұрын
Give that teacher the link to this video .. she needs to improve her French.
I have had native French speakers say to me "bien fait" very clearly indicating congratulations.
Merci, Géraldine!
Thank you. I wonder if the American company Madewell realizes this. They put bien fait all over their things
@howtubeable
4 жыл бұрын
I did a quick online search. You're right! That's hilarious!
@Commeunefrancaise
4 жыл бұрын
It's absolutely possible. I saw this in French schoolbooks for foreign learners soooo often. I always cringe.
@nwashburn3228
4 жыл бұрын
@@Commeunefrancaise But to clarify, as long as it's in a complete sentence - ça suffit, n'est-ce pas?....'Ce travail, c'est bien fait.' ou 'Le travail est bien fait.' Merci encore!
A classic trap, not "classical", FYI.
In English we do use Well done! In a sarcastic manner as well but the context and tone of voice conveys the meaning.
I get a lot of value from your videos. Good job
I have heard ‘bien joué’ used sarcastically like this.
@thierryf67
4 жыл бұрын
in french, we very often use irony and sarcasm. it's a manner to say something bad without saying it actually. Yes, it can seems hypocrit, it's mostly understood as politness. I think it's a remain of the "etiquette" in the "ancient regime", when frankly remarks should led to jail... it was better to uses elipses and irony to say something bad. French language is very marked by this.
@heather6671
4 жыл бұрын
@@thierryf67 people could go to jail for being frank? :o
@thierryf67
4 жыл бұрын
@@heather6671 Did you understood me ? I was talking about the kingdom of France, before the revolution. Centuries of abolutism left a mark on the french ways of thinking and language, i think.
@heather6671
4 жыл бұрын
@@thierryf67 I wasn't sure what you meant, so I asked. Did you mean that in the past, people in France could be jailed for speaking their mind?
@thierryf67
4 жыл бұрын
@@heather6671 Are you kidding ? Did you ever heard the absolute kings ? If you spoke against the king, of course, you could be in jailed without explanations, by means of a "lettre de cachet" (letter signed with French royal seal). I'm sorry, i don't know from were you a writting. may be you don't know about European History ?
Donc, cette est une bien fait video, n'est pas? =)
I'm so happy to have found your channel! I studied French in Paris for 18 months in the 80s, and I always love a good refresher. I also find that listening to you helps me with nuances. I will always love studying French and speaking French to native speakers whenever I get the chance.
Merci beaucoup ! This is exactly what I need