Party favours

Gwen C.C1Kwiziq community member

Party favours

I don't know what party favours are, let alone what the French word for them might be.

Asked 3 years ago
CécileNative French expert teacher in KwiziqCorrect answer

Hi everyone, 

Actually, in the context of a New Year's Eve party, 'cotillons'  would be party poppers, confetti, and such like to get people in the party mood.

Take a look at the following page for examples of cotillons -

Cotillons and serpentins ( streamers

https://www.dragees.fr/mariage/cotillons.html

I did look on the Hobbycraft page to see if there was an English equivalent and found ' table confetti and party poppers' so I don't believe there is an exact English term, which can sometimes happen.

'Party favours' ( import from the States? ) refers to weddings, christenings, etc. and they are little bags full of goodies given to the guests. So it may be the best word we have.

But ' cotillons' is a lovely word to learn I think, took me back in time a few years!

Chris W.C1 Kwiziq Q&A super contributor

Party favors means small gifts and trinkets given as presents to all invitees at a party.

Maarten K.C1 Kwiziq Q&A super contributor

Gwen, see link to my recent comment. wordreference is fairly good for French-English expressions. There are many that are covered. It is not perfect, but a good starting point for phrases/expressions which are often difficult to find in Larousse or Robert. 

A simple google search with the words in quotation marks can also be useful.

https://kwiziq.learnfrenchwithalexa.com/questions/view/party-favours#AnswerAddForm

Maarten K.C1 Kwiziq Q&A super contributor

Cécile,   I think that is lovely.  Thank you. 

CécileNative French expert teacher in Kwiziq

Just to let you know that after discussing this with Aurélie, I have changed 'favours' for 'novelties' ( as given by my old Collins Robert dictionary- sometimes older is better, I expect party favours weren't in circulation then !) 

Gwen C. asked:

Party favours

I don't know what party favours are, let alone what the French word for them might be.

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