“Une” pipe, but yes, that would be the correct way to emphasize the object.
As a matter of fact, french dubbed version of Crocodile Dundee says “ÇA, c’est un couteau” in this scene.
Source : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JYk0Xy67gA
Genre. “Les phrases dans l’image sont correctes.”. Ou pas…
Sérieux, y’a moyen d’éviter de sortir des conneries grosses comme la lune avec l’aplomb de Chatte J’ai Pété, des fois? Ça nous changera, tiens. 😮💨
Edit: yeah, the correct phrasing would indeed be “Ça, c’est un tuyau” (“Pipe”, in French, exclusively means “Smoking pipe”, and as a slang, “Face”, or “blowjob”). In the spirit of the joke, “Ça, c’est une pipe” would be acceptable, but only understandable by people who know the English term. However, “C’est une pipe” is absolutely wrong contextually: the lack of the contradiction implied by “ça” creates a semantic disconnect and the two images seem completely unrelated. Not only does it break the humorous device, but it also is absurd enough to be mildly irritating. So, no, the “phrases pictured” are not correct.
Would it not be “Ca, c’est un pipe”?
“Une” pipe, but yes, that would be the correct way to emphasize the object.
As a matter of fact, french dubbed version of Crocodile Dundee says “ÇA, c’est un couteau” in this scene.
Source : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3JYk0Xy67gA
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://www.piped.video/watch?v=3JYk0Xy67gA
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
The phrases pictured are correct.
Genre. “Les phrases dans l’image sont correctes.”. Ou pas…
Sérieux, y’a moyen d’éviter de sortir des conneries grosses comme la lune avec l’aplomb de Chatte J’ai Pété, des fois? Ça nous changera, tiens. 😮💨
Edit: yeah, the correct phrasing would indeed be “Ça, c’est un tuyau” (“Pipe”, in French, exclusively means “Smoking pipe”, and as a slang, “Face”, or “blowjob”). In the spirit of the joke, “Ça, c’est une pipe” would be acceptable, but only understandable by people who know the English term. However, “C’est une pipe” is absolutely wrong contextually: the lack of the contradiction implied by “ça” creates a semantic disconnect and the two images seem completely unrelated. Not only does it break the humorous device, but it also is absurd enough to be mildly irritating. So, no, the “phrases pictured” are not correct.
Oui oui baguette. Thanks for clarifying!
Except that the second, therefore, should be “tuyau” rather than pipe, no?
Yeah. And it should be “un” because pipes are male in french. A piping (“tuyauterie”) is female though !