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TOUCHUNCATEGORIZED
Petite Anglaise was my online pseudonym from 2004 until 2009. For the first two years, I blogged anonymously about my life in France and parenting a bilingual child. Occasionally an anecdote would feature my (also anonymous) workplace, as scenery, if you will. It was the latter that landed me in hot water, costing me my job. ABOUT PETITE ANGLAISE anglaise means, quite simply, English female, and petite means little. French people tend to refer to all English females, regardless of age or size, as petites anglaises so it seemed like the obvious choice for my nom de souris. petite anglaise started out mainly as light hearted commentaries on aspects of life in France with some anecdotesPETITE ANGLAISE
Our little family of three (plus bump) is heading to Turkey (more specifically, to the Lycian coast) for two weeks, so things will be (even) quieter than usual around here. JULY | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE 4 posts published by petiteanglaiseparis during July 2004. My favourite dress ever was a short, gauzy, off-white miss selfridge number with lots of sequins on the bodice which glowed under UV lighting. Not the most tasteful of outfits, I readily admit, but this was 1994. It was always worn with trainers as I have never mastered the black art of walking, let alone dancing for hours on end, inPARDON MY FRENCH
Pardon my French. If you look at the use of the word ‘French’ in the English language and likewise anglais (e) in French, the usage yields valuable clues as to how Brits have traditionally viewed the French, and vice versa. Phrases in English using the word French are mostly related to food and sex. The French would argue they do bothbetter.
JULY | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE | PAGE 3 When I was at school, the textbook we used in French lessons was called Tricolore.Two cartoon strips provided a bit of light relief at regular intervals: one was called Claude le Clochard (about a vagrant named Claude) and the other was Fifi la Folle (a madwoman). With hindsight I think it is a little odd that the French nation was represented by these two characters.* MAY | 2009 | PETITE ANGLAISE development. Filed under: knocked up — petiteanglaiseparis @ 5:44 pm. Meet the foetus. A little weekly ritual of mine and Tadpole’s consists of looking up on various websites the info for whatever week of pregnancy I happen to be in (the tail end of week 16 at the time of writing) and reading out the recap of baby’s development. JULY | 2005 | PETITE ANGLAISE The trees in front had grown, and now almost obscured my third floor window. I stood there for a long while, letting memories wash over me. Going to university, for me, was about becoming a new person. Starting over in a place where no-one had ever known me as a bespectacled, swotty, shy teenager. FRANCOPHOBIA IN THE USA francophobia in the USA. Filed under: french touch — petiteanglaiseparis @ 6:16 pm. Not all Americans are francophobes. Especially not those who read this site regularly. Nevertheless we have all heard about prominent figures calling for a boycott of French produce on the other side of the Atlantic, about cancelled Frenchexchanges and the
SUSPEND(ER)ED
suspend (er)ed. Filed under: working girl — petiteanglaiseparis @ 10:26 pm. My phone rings: it is Old-School Boss. I am nervous, but no more than usual. His formal, headmasterly tone always manages to unnerve me, and when I replace the receiver after one of our exchanges I often feel I have slipped back into the skin of the painfully shyand
PETITE ANGLAISEKNOCKED UPMISSING BLIGHTYTADPOLE SAYSBOOK STUFFFRENCHTOUCHUNCATEGORIZED
Petite Anglaise was my online pseudonym from 2004 until 2009. For the first two years, I blogged anonymously about my life in France and parenting a bilingual child. Occasionally an anecdote would feature my (also anonymous) workplace, as scenery, if you will. It was the latter that landed me in hot water, costing me my job. ABOUT PETITE ANGLAISE anglaise means, quite simply, English female, and petite means little. French people tend to refer to all English females, regardless of age or size, as petites anglaises so it seemed like the obvious choice for my nom de souris. petite anglaise started out mainly as light hearted commentaries on aspects of life in France with some anecdotesPETITE ANGLAISE
Our little family of three (plus bump) is heading to Turkey (more specifically, to the Lycian coast) for two weeks, so things will be (even) quieter than usual around here. JULY | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE 4 posts published by petiteanglaiseparis during July 2004. My favourite dress ever was a short, gauzy, off-white miss selfridge number with lots of sequins on the bodice which glowed under UV lighting. Not the most tasteful of outfits, I readily admit, but this was 1994. It was always worn with trainers as I have never mastered the black art of walking, let alone dancing for hours on end, inPARDON MY FRENCH
Pardon my French. If you look at the use of the word ‘French’ in the English language and likewise anglais (e) in French, the usage yields valuable clues as to how Brits have traditionally viewed the French, and vice versa. Phrases in English using the word French are mostly related to food and sex. The French would argue they do bothbetter.
JULY | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE | PAGE 3 When I was at school, the textbook we used in French lessons was called Tricolore.Two cartoon strips provided a bit of light relief at regular intervals: one was called Claude le Clochard (about a vagrant named Claude) and the other was Fifi la Folle (a madwoman). With hindsight I think it is a little odd that the French nation was represented by these two characters.* MAY | 2009 | PETITE ANGLAISE development. Filed under: knocked up — petiteanglaiseparis @ 5:44 pm. Meet the foetus. A little weekly ritual of mine and Tadpole’s consists of looking up on various websites the info for whatever week of pregnancy I happen to be in (the tail end of week 16 at the time of writing) and reading out the recap of baby’s development. JULY | 2005 | PETITE ANGLAISE The trees in front had grown, and now almost obscured my third floor window. I stood there for a long while, letting memories wash over me. Going to university, for me, was about becoming a new person. Starting over in a place where no-one had ever known me as a bespectacled, swotty, shy teenager. FRANCOPHOBIA IN THE USA francophobia in the USA. Filed under: french touch — petiteanglaiseparis @ 6:16 pm. Not all Americans are francophobes. Especially not those who read this site regularly. Nevertheless we have all heard about prominent figures calling for a boycott of French produce on the other side of the Atlantic, about cancelled Frenchexchanges and the
SUSPEND(ER)ED
suspend (er)ed. Filed under: working girl — petiteanglaiseparis @ 10:26 pm. My phone rings: it is Old-School Boss. I am nervous, but no more than usual. His formal, headmasterly tone always manages to unnerve me, and when I replace the receiver after one of our exchanges I often feel I have slipped back into the skin of the painfully shyand
DRIVING IN PARIS: A SURVIVAL GUIDE driving in Paris: a survival guide. Filed under: city of light — petiteanglaiseparis @ 12:45 pm. I passed my driving test on the third attempt. Even then, I’m not convinced this was in the best interests of the residents of York. The summer before going away to university when my mother foolishly insured me to drive her car, I managed toFRENCH TOUCH
Posts about french touch written by petiteanglaiseparis. My local park temporarily belongs to the axis of evil in the summertime. Parisians tend to live in miniscule shoeboxes with plastic red geraniums on the windowsill instead of gardens, so the park is a back yard I share with a few thousand neighbours, plus some tourists thrown in for goodmeasure.
MISC | PETITE ANGLAISE | PAGE 17 Yesterday I was mostly being held hostage by Miguel, Fatima and their impressive array of power tools. After a somewhat unusual Monday in London, which will forever be imprinted on my memory as the day I ate fish and chips for elevensies, lunch in Hospital, was served delicate amuse-bouche French pastries an hour later, and a full afternoon tea at four, being subjected to several hours of ear JULY | 2005 | PETITE ANGLAISE The trees in front had grown, and now almost obscured my third floor window. I stood there for a long while, letting memories wash over me. Going to university, for me, was about becoming a new person. Starting over in a place where no-one had ever known me as a bespectacled, swotty, shy teenager.CLAUDE LE CLOCHARD
claude le clochard. Filed under: city of light — petiteanglaiseparis @ 2:06 pm. When I was at school, the textbook we used in French lessons was called Tricolore . Two cartoon strips provided a bit of light relief at regular intervals: one was called Claude le Clochard (about a vagrant named Claude) and the other was Fifi la Folle (amadwoman).
TERMS OF ENDEARMENT
terms of endearment. When buying a naughty breakfast snack this morning at the kiosk below my office, the lady serving me (in her 40’s, liberally made-up, raucous voice of a forty a day galloise smoker) called me ‘ma biche’, as usual. Literally: doe (a deer, a female deer); but basically it’s like calling someone ‘pet’ inEnglish.
PASTEIS DE NATA
Comment by bonkers — July 21, 2007 @ 3:40 am. My absolute favourite! Comment by pb — July 21, 2007 @ 10:09 am. OCTOBER | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE I made a flippant remark in my comments box yesterday about this story reported by the BBC. A blogging air hostess known as Queen of the Sky has been fired by the airline who employed her after publishing saucy pictures of herself posing in the cabin wearing her uniform on her blog. And letting her skirt ride up a bit. Given the media attention this has generated, she’ll probably end up in HOLIDAY | PETITE ANGLAISE Despite the fact that I spent one night throwing my guts up in a bathroom which smelled of eau de septic tank Tadpole had to be taken to see a doctor with a suspected ear infection Tadpole's ear meds made her throw up On one of our boating trips, the boat left an island stop SATURDAY AFTERNOON FEVER When I visited our apartment a couple of years ago, arching my back so the agent immobilier would notice the fact that I would shortly be spawning a little Frog and move our dossier to the top of the pile, I was very taken with the hairdresser's next PETITE ANGLAISEKNOCKED UPMISSING BLIGHTYTADPOLE SAYSBOOK STUFFFRENCHTOUCHUNCATEGORIZED
Petite Anglaise was my online pseudonym from 2004 until 2009. For the first two years, I blogged anonymously about my life in France and parenting a bilingual child. Occasionally an anecdote would feature my (also anonymous) workplace, as scenery, if you will. It was the latter that landed me in hot water, costing me my job. ABOUT PETITE ANGLAISE anglaise means, quite simply, English female, and petite means little. French people tend to refer to all English females, regardless of age or size, as petites anglaises so it seemed like the obvious choice for my nom de souris. petite anglaise started out mainly as light hearted commentaries on aspects of life in France with some anecdotesPETITE ANGLAISE
Our little family of three (plus bump) is heading to Turkey (more specifically, to the Lycian coast) for two weeks, so things will be (even) quieter than usual around here. JULY | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE 4 posts published by petiteanglaiseparis during July 2004. My favourite dress ever was a short, gauzy, off-white miss selfridge number with lots of sequins on the bodice which glowed under UV lighting. Not the most tasteful of outfits, I readily admit, but this was 1994. It was always worn with trainers as I have never mastered the black art of walking, let alone dancing for hours on end, inPARDON MY FRENCH
Pardon my French. If you look at the use of the word ‘French’ in the English language and likewise anglais (e) in French, the usage yields valuable clues as to how Brits have traditionally viewed the French, and vice versa. Phrases in English using the word French are mostly related to food and sex. The French would argue they do bothbetter.
JULY | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE | PAGE 3 When I was at school, the textbook we used in French lessons was called Tricolore.Two cartoon strips provided a bit of light relief at regular intervals: one was called Claude le Clochard (about a vagrant named Claude) and the other was Fifi la Folle (a madwoman). With hindsight I think it is a little odd that the French nation was represented by these two characters.* MAY | 2009 | PETITE ANGLAISE development. Filed under: knocked up — petiteanglaiseparis @ 5:44 pm. Meet the foetus. A little weekly ritual of mine and Tadpole’s consists of looking up on various websites the info for whatever week of pregnancy I happen to be in (the tail end of week 16 at the time of writing) and reading out the recap of baby’s development. JULY | 2005 | PETITE ANGLAISE The trees in front had grown, and now almost obscured my third floor window. I stood there for a long while, letting memories wash over me. Going to university, for me, was about becoming a new person. Starting over in a place where no-one had ever known me as a bespectacled, swotty, shy teenager. FRANCOPHOBIA IN THE USA francophobia in the USA. Filed under: french touch — petiteanglaiseparis @ 6:16 pm. Not all Americans are francophobes. Especially not those who read this site regularly. Nevertheless we have all heard about prominent figures calling for a boycott of French produce on the other side of the Atlantic, about cancelled Frenchexchanges and the
SUSPEND(ER)ED
suspend (er)ed. Filed under: working girl — petiteanglaiseparis @ 10:26 pm. My phone rings: it is Old-School Boss. I am nervous, but no more than usual. His formal, headmasterly tone always manages to unnerve me, and when I replace the receiver after one of our exchanges I often feel I have slipped back into the skin of the painfully shyand
PETITE ANGLAISEKNOCKED UPMISSING BLIGHTYTADPOLE SAYSBOOK STUFFFRENCHTOUCHUNCATEGORIZED
Petite Anglaise was my online pseudonym from 2004 until 2009. For the first two years, I blogged anonymously about my life in France and parenting a bilingual child. Occasionally an anecdote would feature my (also anonymous) workplace, as scenery, if you will. It was the latter that landed me in hot water, costing me my job. ABOUT PETITE ANGLAISE anglaise means, quite simply, English female, and petite means little. French people tend to refer to all English females, regardless of age or size, as petites anglaises so it seemed like the obvious choice for my nom de souris. petite anglaise started out mainly as light hearted commentaries on aspects of life in France with some anecdotesPETITE ANGLAISE
Our little family of three (plus bump) is heading to Turkey (more specifically, to the Lycian coast) for two weeks, so things will be (even) quieter than usual around here. JULY | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE 4 posts published by petiteanglaiseparis during July 2004. My favourite dress ever was a short, gauzy, off-white miss selfridge number with lots of sequins on the bodice which glowed under UV lighting. Not the most tasteful of outfits, I readily admit, but this was 1994. It was always worn with trainers as I have never mastered the black art of walking, let alone dancing for hours on end, inPARDON MY FRENCH
Pardon my French. If you look at the use of the word ‘French’ in the English language and likewise anglais (e) in French, the usage yields valuable clues as to how Brits have traditionally viewed the French, and vice versa. Phrases in English using the word French are mostly related to food and sex. The French would argue they do bothbetter.
JULY | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE | PAGE 3 When I was at school, the textbook we used in French lessons was called Tricolore.Two cartoon strips provided a bit of light relief at regular intervals: one was called Claude le Clochard (about a vagrant named Claude) and the other was Fifi la Folle (a madwoman). With hindsight I think it is a little odd that the French nation was represented by these two characters.* MAY | 2009 | PETITE ANGLAISE development. Filed under: knocked up — petiteanglaiseparis @ 5:44 pm. Meet the foetus. A little weekly ritual of mine and Tadpole’s consists of looking up on various websites the info for whatever week of pregnancy I happen to be in (the tail end of week 16 at the time of writing) and reading out the recap of baby’s development. JULY | 2005 | PETITE ANGLAISE The trees in front had grown, and now almost obscured my third floor window. I stood there for a long while, letting memories wash over me. Going to university, for me, was about becoming a new person. Starting over in a place where no-one had ever known me as a bespectacled, swotty, shy teenager. FRANCOPHOBIA IN THE USA francophobia in the USA. Filed under: french touch — petiteanglaiseparis @ 6:16 pm. Not all Americans are francophobes. Especially not those who read this site regularly. Nevertheless we have all heard about prominent figures calling for a boycott of French produce on the other side of the Atlantic, about cancelled Frenchexchanges and the
SUSPEND(ER)ED
suspend (er)ed. Filed under: working girl — petiteanglaiseparis @ 10:26 pm. My phone rings: it is Old-School Boss. I am nervous, but no more than usual. His formal, headmasterly tone always manages to unnerve me, and when I replace the receiver after one of our exchanges I often feel I have slipped back into the skin of the painfully shyand
DRIVING IN PARIS: A SURVIVAL GUIDE driving in Paris: a survival guide. Filed under: city of light — petiteanglaiseparis @ 12:45 pm. I passed my driving test on the third attempt. Even then, I’m not convinced this was in the best interests of the residents of York. The summer before going away to university when my mother foolishly insured me to drive her car, I managed toFRENCH TOUCH
Posts about french touch written by petiteanglaiseparis. My local park temporarily belongs to the axis of evil in the summertime. Parisians tend to live in miniscule shoeboxes with plastic red geraniums on the windowsill instead of gardens, so the park is a back yard I share with a few thousand neighbours, plus some tourists thrown in for goodmeasure.
MISC | PETITE ANGLAISE | PAGE 17 Yesterday I was mostly being held hostage by Miguel, Fatima and their impressive array of power tools. After a somewhat unusual Monday in London, which will forever be imprinted on my memory as the day I ate fish and chips for elevensies, lunch in Hospital, was served delicate amuse-bouche French pastries an hour later, and a full afternoon tea at four, being subjected to several hours of ear JULY | 2005 | PETITE ANGLAISE The trees in front had grown, and now almost obscured my third floor window. I stood there for a long while, letting memories wash over me. Going to university, for me, was about becoming a new person. Starting over in a place where no-one had ever known me as a bespectacled, swotty, shy teenager.CLAUDE LE CLOCHARD
claude le clochard. Filed under: city of light — petiteanglaiseparis @ 2:06 pm. When I was at school, the textbook we used in French lessons was called Tricolore . Two cartoon strips provided a bit of light relief at regular intervals: one was called Claude le Clochard (about a vagrant named Claude) and the other was Fifi la Folle (amadwoman).
TERMS OF ENDEARMENT
terms of endearment. When buying a naughty breakfast snack this morning at the kiosk below my office, the lady serving me (in her 40’s, liberally made-up, raucous voice of a forty a day galloise smoker) called me ‘ma biche’, as usual. Literally: doe (a deer, a female deer); but basically it’s like calling someone ‘pet’ inEnglish.
PASTEIS DE NATA
Comment by bonkers — July 21, 2007 @ 3:40 am. My absolute favourite! Comment by pb — July 21, 2007 @ 10:09 am. OCTOBER | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE I made a flippant remark in my comments box yesterday about this story reported by the BBC. A blogging air hostess known as Queen of the Sky has been fired by the airline who employed her after publishing saucy pictures of herself posing in the cabin wearing her uniform on her blog. And letting her skirt ride up a bit. Given the media attention this has generated, she’ll probably end up in HOLIDAY | PETITE ANGLAISE Despite the fact that I spent one night throwing my guts up in a bathroom which smelled of eau de septic tank Tadpole had to be taken to see a doctor with a suspected ear infection Tadpole's ear meds made her throw up On one of our boating trips, the boat left an island stop SATURDAY AFTERNOON FEVER When I visited our apartment a couple of years ago, arching my back so the agent immobilier would notice the fact that I would shortly be spawning a little Frog and move our dossier to the top of the pile, I was very taken with the hairdresser's next PETITE ANGLAISEKNOCKED UPMISSING BLIGHTYTADPOLE SAYSBOOK STUFFFRENCHTOUCHUNCATEGORIZED
Petite Anglaise was my online pseudonym from 2004 until 2009. For the first two years, I blogged anonymously about my life in France and parenting a bilingual child. Occasionally an anecdote would feature my (also anonymous) workplace, as scenery, if you will. It was the latter that landed me in hot water, costing me my job. ABOUT PETITE ANGLAISE anglaise means, quite simply, English female, and petite means little. French people tend to refer to all English females, regardless of age or size, as petites anglaises so it seemed like the obvious choice for my nom de souris. petite anglaise started out mainly as light hearted commentaries on aspects of life in France with some anecdotesPETITE ANGLAISE
Our little family of three (plus bump) is heading to Turkey (more specifically, to the Lycian coast) for two weeks, so things will be (even) quieter than usual around here.PETITE ANGLAISE
I just happened to spot the new cover for the Random House paperback edition of petite, published in the US and Canada on 9 June (which I suspect will be overshadowed by Tadpole’s birthday, onFRENCH TOUCH
Posts about french touch written by petiteanglaiseparis. My local park temporarily belongs to the axis of evil in the summertime. Parisians tend to live in miniscule shoeboxes with plastic red geraniums on the windowsill instead of gardens, so the park is a back yard I share with a few thousand neighbours, plus some tourists thrown in for goodmeasure.
KNOCKED UP | PETITE ANGLAISE Posts about knocked up written by petiteanglaiseparis. Meet the foetus. A little weekly ritual of mine and Tadpole’s consists of looking up on various websites the info for whatever week of pregnancy I happen to be in (the tail end of week 16 at the time of writing) and reading out the recap of baby’s development.TADPOLE REARING
I hear the unmistakable sounds of Mr Frog and Tadpole approaching in the stairwell and fling open the front door eagerly. Despite her pitifully spotty and feverish state, Tadpole dives enthusiastically into my arms, giggling with pleasure at being reunited, finally, aftera long week apart.
MISC | PETITE ANGLAISE | PAGE 17 Yesterday I was mostly being held hostage by Miguel, Fatima and their impressive array of power tools. After a somewhat unusual Monday in London, which will forever be imprinted on my memory as the day I ate fish and chips for elevensies, lunch in Hospital, was served delicate amuse-bouche French pastries an hour later, and a full afternoon tea at four, being subjected to several hours of ear PODIATRICALLY CHALLENGED podiatrically challenged. Filed under: misc — petiteanglaiseparis @ 12:51 pm. I have been tagged with a shoe meme. Not only tagged, but challenged: “Petite, because she’ll never do it.”. Grrr. Of course this means I have to. But if it makes less than thrilling reading, it’s beyond my control. Until about the age of sixteen, Iloathed
SUSPEND(ER)ED
suspend (er)ed. Filed under: working girl — petiteanglaiseparis @ 10:26 pm. My phone rings: it is Old-School Boss. I am nervous, but no more than usual. His formal, headmasterly tone always manages to unnerve me, and when I replace the receiver after one of our exchanges I often feel I have slipped back into the skin of the painfully shyand
PETITE ANGLAISEKNOCKED UPMISSING BLIGHTYTADPOLE SAYSBOOK STUFFFRENCHTOUCHUNCATEGORIZED
Petite Anglaise was my online pseudonym from 2004 until 2009. For the first two years, I blogged anonymously about my life in France and parenting a bilingual child. Occasionally an anecdote would feature my (also anonymous) workplace, as scenery, if you will. It was the latter that landed me in hot water, costing me my job. ABOUT PETITE ANGLAISE My name is Catherine Sanderson. And to the left is an uncharacteristically flattering photo taken by a professional photographer. I dreamed about living in Paris from the moment my very first French lesson began at the age of eleven. I'm the wrong side of forty now, and Paris has been my home since 1995. IPETITE ANGLAISE
Our little family of three (plus bump) is heading to Turkey (more specifically, to the Lycian coast) for two weeks, so things will be (even) quieter than usual around here.PETITE ANGLAISE
I just happened to spot the new cover for the Random House paperback edition of petite, published in the US and Canada on 9 June (which I suspect will be overshadowed by Tadpole’s birthday, onTADPOLE REARING
I hear the unmistakable sounds of Mr Frog and Tadpole approaching in the stairwell and fling open the front door eagerly. Despite her pitifully spotty and feverish state, Tadpole dives enthusiastically into my arms, giggling with pleasure at being reunited, finally, aftera long week apart.
FRENCH TOUCH
Posts about french touch written by petiteanglaiseparis. My local park temporarily belongs to the axis of evil in the summertime. Parisians tend to live in miniscule shoeboxes with plastic red geraniums on the windowsill instead of gardens, so the park is a back yard I share with a few thousand neighbours, plus some tourists thrown in for goodmeasure.
KNOCKED UP | PETITE ANGLAISE Posts about knocked up written by petiteanglaiseparis. Meet the foetus. A little weekly ritual of mine and Tadpole’s consists of looking up on various websites the info for whatever week of pregnancy I happen to be in (the tail end of week 16 at the time of writing) and reading out the recap of baby’s development. JULY | 2004 | PETITE ANGLAISE 4 posts published by petiteanglaiseparis during July 2004. My favourite dress ever was a short, gauzy, off-white miss selfridge number with lots of sequins on the bodice which glowed under UV lighting. Not the most tasteful of outfits, I readily admit, but this was 1994. It was always worn with trainers as I have never mastered the black art of walking, let alone dancing for hours on end, in PODIATRICALLY CHALLENGED podiatrically challenged. Filed under: misc — petiteanglaiseparis @ 12:51 pm. I have been tagged with a shoe meme. Not only tagged, but challenged: “Petite, because she’ll never do it.”. Grrr. Of course this means I have to. But if it makes less than thrilling reading, it’s beyond my control. Until about the age of sixteen, Iloathed
SUSPEND(ER)ED
suspend (er)ed. Filed under: working girl — petiteanglaiseparis @ 10:26 pm. My phone rings: it is Old-School Boss. I am nervous, but no more than usual. His formal, headmasterly tone always manages to unnerve me, and when I replace the receiver after one of our exchanges I often feel I have slipped back into the skin of the painfully shyand
PETITE ANGLAISE
Our little family of three (plus bump) is heading to Turkey (more specifically, to the Lycian coast) for two weeks, so things will be (even) quieter than usual around here.PETITE ANGLAISE
I just happened to spot the new cover for the Random House paperback edition of petite, published in the US and Canada on 9 June (which I suspect will be overshadowed by Tadpole’s birthday, onPARTING WAYS
To share something precious, without incurring any guilt, any pain. To be soothed by the sound of his slow, regular breathing at my side. To be lulled into the first good night’s sleep in a week. In the morning, before we parted, there were comforting echoes of our old routine: tea, toast and marmalade. KNOCKED UP | PETITE ANGLAISE Posts about knocked up written by petiteanglaiseparis. Meet the foetus. A little weekly ritual of mine and Tadpole’s consists of looking up on various websites the info for whatever week of pregnancy I happen to be in (the tail end of week 16 at the time of writing) and reading out the recap of baby’s development.WORKING GIRL
A French industrial tribunal hearing is, in some respects, a surprisingly informal affair. Four Prud’hommes, two employers and two employees who have been elected to hold this position (all salaried employees are eligible to go and vote in these elections, I’ve yet to meet anyone who has) preside over a small salle d’audience in civilian clothing, with the addition of a medal worn KNOT TYING | PETITE ANGLAISE Filed under: knot tying — petiteanglaiseparis @ 10:51 am.NOVEMBER 1, 2013
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