What does it mean to love in French? About the benefits of sperm for a woman’s body

The singer’s voice sounded on the radio, she sang the song “Love me in French!”, and I had a question: can the French show love in a special way, what is the secret of love in French? I decided to figure it out. :)

Love in French is mutual pleasure

From time immemorial, the French have been considered very subtle in lovemaking. Therefore, love in French is always refined, refined love, where there is always a place for romance, and the main place in a relationship is given to mutual pleasure. Loving in French means not being selfish in love!


French Kiss

The so-called French kiss is known. This way of expressing love for a partner is also believed to originate from France. During this kiss, not only the lips are involved, but also the tongue, when during the kiss the partner makes caressing movements with his tongue in his partner’s mouth.


To be liberated in sex is to love in French

It is believed that the French are liberated and free when they have sex. Therefore, it is believed that loving in French means receiving all kinds of sexual pleasures without complexes or embarrassment. Such pleasures involve sexual foreplay and mutual oral sex.


Caresses in love in French

The French give a special place to oral sex in intimate life. Both French men and women love “this” very much, and for good reason. During oral sex, the muscles are more relaxed and you can better focus on how you feel during orgasm. Finally, for partners, this way of showing love is a sign of a special relationship with each other; thanks to this sex, the partner feels truly loved.


Which families are stronger?

Inner freedom is considered the best ally in love in French. Once in bed, the partners, along with their clothes, throw off all modesty and shyness. By studying your body and your partner’s, giving pleasure to each other, you become able to experience unique moments of mutual delight.


It is believed that families where spouses pamper each other with love in the French way are stronger than modest Puritan families. And this is a proven fact!

We're fascinated by all things French, so why not add some French flair to your love life? This article is about what gives French relations such a spark.

1. They don't put pressure on their relationship.

From day one, French couples do not strive to make their relationship perfect - parfait. If Remy doesn't call Celine for a few days after a date, she doesn't lose her temper and play passive-aggressive games the next time they meet. And even when the relationship becomes serious, they continue to spend a lot of time separately with their friends. The French attitude is that the world of men and the world of women are different, and there is nothing wrong with that.

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2. Their relationship is more romantic.

French men are gentlemen: they do not forget about dates, open doors for ladies and help them put on their coats. This may seem old-fashioned or even sexist to some, but French women expect this behavior from their men and consider it tres romantique.

3. They discuss their emotions

The French are very expressive. They enjoy telling each other how they feel and are not afraid to show their emotions. It makes fights more interesting and emotional, and so does make-up sex.

4. They dress for each other

The French have a charming style - that's why they are so attractive to us. Not to mention French women, who are undeniably chic in their most casual style. Next time, instead of wearing an old pair of jeans on a date, think about your outfit a little more carefully, but not too much. Remember: you should look casual. When you look better, you are confident, which is always sexy.

5. They try to work less and relax more together.

French couples have more free time, which strengthens their relationship. And it doesn’t matter whether they spend this time together or separately. Like us, they have 30 days of vacation a year, which they always spend together.

6. They love to flirt

Both men and women in France are big fans of flirting, which obviously makes relationships more romantic. A gentle hug in the morning before work, a passionate kiss before dinner - this is flirting in French. Just because you're already in a relationship doesn't mean you need to stop flirting with your loved one.

7. Their food is aphrodisiacs

French cuisine is known for its flavors and subtle nuances. Unwind with your loved one over a sensual multi-course dinner, starting with a glass of champagne and appetizers, continuing with a main course like chicken au vin (coq au vin) and ending with a decadent chocolate dessert and a delicious bottle of French wine. And it is not at all necessary to learn how to cook French dishes - just order in a French restaurant.

8. They know how to plan dates perfectly.

French couples find it very important to enjoy the culture together. The result is that they always have something to talk about that does not include the daily routine (work, school or children). When planning a date, think about options such as a museum, a walk in the park, or a good movie. This will give you food for thought and conversation.

9. They don't let their kids dominate everything in their lives.

This does not mean that the French neglect children. This means they don't let them rule their lives. French families spend time together, of course. But at the same time, parents do not forget about time alone with each other. French children know how to entertain themselves when their parents need a well-deserved rest.

10. They have adorable nicknames

How can you resist a man who calls you tresor (treasure), his chou (sweet, literally sweet cream) or his lapin (bunny)? Perhaps it just sounds nice in French, but why not replace our standard “dear”, “darling”, etc. with these cute words?

History of photography

The French, on the contrary, do not celebrate Christ on Easter, but always on weekdays. I saw it in the subway, in cafes, on the streets, everywhere. Drawing of Koka Mud for Illustrated Russia, April 1936. Koka Mud /MAD is the pseudonym of Mikhail Aleksandrovich Drizo (1887-1953). Parisian weekly Illustrated Russia. 1936. April. Issue No. 16 (570), page 05.

An Easter drawing from 1936 shows the loving French as perceived by a Russian emigrant. Did the cartoonist Mockingbird create Coca Mud? Since the 20th century is the century of photography, we will consider the issue using documentary and photographic means.

True, in such delicate matters as kissing, documentary filming, upon closer examination, could turn out to be staged, as, in particular, follows from. The court demonstrated that the photographer and LIFE lawyers were right to avoid photographic interference in the privacy of citizens. The fact that paid models sometimes appeared in the frame, and not “real” kissing couples, does not change the essence of the matter at all.

Where it is staged and where it is real life is not important. 26 love and about photographs from France 1930s-1973 by famous photographers:


2.


1926(?) / 1932-1933(?). Photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908-2004). France. Normandy. Maritime Seine. Dieppe. [On the Magnum photos website it says 1926, but I have doubts - at that time Henri was 18 years old and it seems that he was not involved in photography then] / Henri Cartier-Bresson. France. Normandy. Seine-Maritime. Dieppe. 1926.

3.


1932-1933. Photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson. France. Normandy. Maritime Seine. Dieppe / Henri Cartier-Bresson. France. Region of Haute-Normandie. The Seine-Maritime "department". Town of Dieppe. 1932 or 1933.

4.

Photographer Brassaï (1899-1984) / real name Gyula Halász (1899-1984) / Au jardin du Luxembourg. Paris. 1930s. Brassaï

5.

Photographer Brassaï. In the bistro / Brassaï. Au bistrot, 1930-1932. Brassaï. Mairie de Paris. [Format 3311 x 4421 ]. via

6.

1944(?). Photographer Robert Doisneau (1912-1994). Love and barbed wire. Paris. An occupation. Liberation. On the Atelier Robert Doisneau website, no date / Robert Doisneau. Amour et barbelés. Paris: Occupation, Liberation.

7.


1944. Photographer Robert Doisneau. Liberation of Paris / Robert Doisneau. Libération de Paris, 1944. via

8.


1945. Photographer Robert Doisneau. American soldiers. Tuileries Garden / Robert Doisneau. Soldats américains, jardin des Tuileries. 1945

9.

1948. Photographer Edouard Boubat (1923-1999). Children of Montmartre / Edouard Boubat

10.

1949. Photographer Willy Roney (1910-2009). On deck / Que Paris est beau depuis le pont du bateau-mouche. Willy Ronis. 1949

11.

1951. Photographer Robert Doisneau. Tête à Tête, Paris 1951, Robert Doisneau

12.


Circa 1950. Photographer René Maltet (1930-2000). Luxembourg Garden. Paris / René Maltête. Jardin du Luxembourg, 1950. René Maltête via

13.


1952. Henri Cartier-Bresson. Bois de Vincennes. Paris. 12th arrondissement / Henri Cartier-Bresson. France. Paris. 12è arrondissement. Bois de Vincennes /The Bois de Vincennes park. 1952. Magnum photos

14.

1952. Henri Cartier-Bresson. Bois de Vincennes. Paris / Henri Cartier-Bresson. FRANCE. Paris. The Bois de Vincennes park. 1952

15.

1952. Photographer Robert Capa (1913-1954). France. Deauville.

16.

/ Robert Capa International Center of Photography. France. Deauville. 1952

17.


1952-1953. Henri Cartier-Bresson. Schoolchildren and a couple look at Paris from Notre Dame / Henri Cartier-Bresson / Henri Cartier-Bresson. France. Paris. 1952-1953. Schoolchildren looking from the top of Notre-Dame cathedral at the Seine River. Magnum photos

18.

1954. Italian photographer Gianni Berengo Gardin (born 1930). Paris / Gianni Bérenger Gardin. Paris. 1954

19.

1955. Willie Roney. Quai des Tuileries. Willy Ronis. Paris. 1955

20.

1955. Henri Cartier-Bresson / Henri Cartier-Bresson FRANCE. Paris. 1st arrondissement. View from the top of Notre-Dame. 1955. Magnum photos

21.

1957. Photographer Robert Doisneau. Maurice Baquet and the stone muse / Robert Doisneau. Maurice Baquet et la muse de pierre, Paris. 1957

1950s Photographer Zdenek Vozenilek (1929-1981). Lovers in Montmartre / Amoureux à Montmartre…, dans les années 50.
50 weddings per 10,000 inhabitants per year.
2 million unregistered couples.
45% of couples register marriage only after two or more years of marriage.
55% of marriages end in divorce.

Almost 60% of children are born out of wedlock.

These are the statistics. Love in French is bright, but fleeting, and the very concept of family values ​​causes slight bewilderment among most French people.

Although one cannot help but admit that a Frenchman with a stroller (a fairly common phenomenon, either despite the numbers, or because of it - somehow they share these 60% of illegitimate children) is a beautiful sight, in some places even majestic. However, they are without strollers... Imagine: he is so tall, thin, with elegant curls, with a luxurious nose, in a coat and scarf. Rushing. Runs past. You and your friend fall silent mid-sentence, look at each other: “No, did you see that nose?!” – you follow with your eyes, sigh languidly, and then another one rushes past. Better. And so about all the time. Continuous visual happiness, one problem – my neck gets very tired.

This unearthly beauty is often determined not so much by appearance as by style and the ability to present well what nature has given. The secret of this almost universal skill is easy to unravel by looking closely at children. In Disneyland, for example, you can see very clearly: a one-year-old sitting in a stroller, very stylishly dressed and with all three hairs carefully styled. Yes, he simply has no chance of growing up without a sense of style.

My first French lover, a red-haired enthusiastic architect, attracted my attention, in fact, with a scarf (well, besides the fact that he almost broke his neck while walking past the door of the bar where I was standing). More precisely, a Pavloposad scarf casually thrown over a coat. My friend and I immediately gave him the code name “Man in the Carpet,” but how this “carpet” suited him!

In Paris, there are men for every taste - thin blue-eyed blonds, big-nosed brunettes with chiseled cheekbones, curly-haired Moroccans with hypnotic eyes, and ideally beautiful Afro-Frenchmen. I am a large, curvy and white-skinned girl, my target audience is determined by phenotype: all southerners are mine; and even after 5 years of regular vacations in Paris, I managed to try everything.


Easy breath

People make acquaintances in France easily, but rarely with an eye to a great and bright feeling (only 50 weddings per 10,000 inhabitants per year - we remember, right?). But you can get a full range of romantic impressions. Intimate conversations until the morning, the Eiffel Tower with all its phallic essence, the reflection of street lamps on satiny dark skin, walks along the embankments, kisses on bridges.


My beloved Parisian man (our episodic love seems to be 5 years old already, it doesn’t even happen on every visit, but when it does, it’s wonderful) once took me for a ride around the city. Ah, these narrow crooked streets of Montmartre, bathed in the setting sun, your heart skips a beat either from the fact that they are holding your hand, or from the fact that 60 km/h downhill along such streets is very, very fast. It was delightful for its cinematic quality, its correspondence to the pictures born of the young brain while reading the novels of Françoise Sagan, and at the same time for its absolute reality. Here I am, here he is, here is the Seine, here is the tower, here are our hands, here is the Bois de Boulogne at night with indecently active traffic and rabbits contemptuously measuring us with their gaze.


"Specifications

The French are certainly good in bed (however, I can only rely on my own experience here). It seems that there is a strong opinion among them that the best protection, at least from unwanted offspring, is the absence of penetration, but even without it they know many different ways to make a girl feel good. At the same time, unlike many other countries in France, I never had to insist on barrier methods of contraception when they became relevant - men, as a rule, are thrifty, they have everything with them.

If it comes to a serious relationship, then everything, they say, can be quite good. Provided that you are not irritated to the point of gnashing your teeth by environmental friendliness (“Why are you washing your plate in the sink, this is a huge waste of water! Why do you never turn off the light?!”) and economy (“Why drive a car, it’s very expensive! And harmful to environment!»).

Long happy life

As can be seen from statistics, the French are in no hurry to get married. But they can live together quite well; options are also possible here. You can simply live together and not inform the state about your status as a couple.


Or you can arrange the so-called concubinage - official cohabitation. Receive a ton of benefits in the form of tax breaks, Social Security benefits, and more, much like being married. Such a union does not apply only to inheritance rights, therefore, when it comes to having children, they still, as a rule, enter into a “marriage” - an official marriage. French marriages are not particularly strong - it seems that the French of both sexes believe too firmly that life is made for happiness and pleasure to overshadow it with relationships that have gone somewhere wrong.

So if you, like me, are a supporter of the easy come – easy go approach and intend to get the most out of your trip to France without far-reaching consequences, Paris is your choice!


Do you also consider yourself an expert on any country? Have you studied the men there and the features of national romance from A to Z? Write to us at[email protected] – perhaps you will become our next erotic-geographical expert!

We're fascinated by all things French, so why not add some French flair to your love life? This article is about what gives French relations such a spark.

From day one, French couples do not strive to make their relationship perfect - parfait. If Remy doesn't call Celine for a few days after a date, she doesn't lose her temper and play passive-aggressive games the next time they meet. And even when the relationship becomes serious, they continue to spend a lot of time separately with their friends. The French attitude is that the world of men and the world of women are different, and there is nothing wrong with that.

French men are gentlemen: they do not forget about dates, open doors for ladies and help them put on their coats. This may seem old-fashioned or even sexist to some, but French women expect this behavior from their men and consider it tres romantique.

The French have a charming style - that's why they are so attractive to us. Not to mention French women, who are undeniably chic in their most casual style. Next time, instead of wearing an old pair of jeans on a date, think about your outfit a little more carefully, but not too much. Remember: you must look casual. When you look better, you are confident, which is always sexy.

French couples have more free time, which strengthens their relationship. And it doesn’t matter whether they spend this time together or separately. Like us, they have 30 days of vacation a year, which they always spend together.

Both men and women in France are big fans of flirting, which obviously makes relationships more romantic. A gentle hug in the morning before work, a passionate kiss before dinner - this is flirting in French. Just because you're already in a relationship doesn't mean you need to stop flirting with your loved one.

French cuisine is known for its flavors and subtle nuances. Unwind with your loved one over a sensual multi-course dinner, starting with a glass of champagne and appetizers, continuing with a main course like chicken au vin (coq au vin) and ending with a decadent chocolate dessert and a delicious bottle of French wine. And it is not at all necessary to learn how to cook French dishes - just order in a French restaurant.

French couples find it very important to enjoy the culture together. The result is that they always have something to talk about that does not include the daily routine (work, school or children). When planning a date, think about options such as a museum, a walk in the park, or a good movie. This will give you food for thought and conversation.

This does not mean that the French neglect children. This means they don't let them rule their lives. French families spend time together, of course. But at the same time, parents do not forget about time alone with each other. French children know how to entertain themselves when their parents need a well-deserved rest.

How can you resist a man who calls you tresor (treasure), his chou (sweet, literally sweet cream) or his lapin (bunny)? Perhaps it just sounds nice in French, but why not replace our standard “dear”, “darling”, etc. with these cute words?


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