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In French, baguette means "long stick". The bread name comes from this meaning, as it is a long, thin kind of bread :) We also call drum sticks "baguette", as well as anything wooden, long and thin, like a conductor baton or a magic wand!
189 1 ReplySo basically, if you want to eat a baguette in Paris, make sure you're in the right store.
41 1 ReplyYes in French we call it “Baguette de Pain” so Long stick of bread. And baguette magique is magical long stick.
38 0 Reply“Baguette de Pain”
expected this to be a stick of pain.
12 1 ReplyI know that breadfull.
7 0 Reply
You guys know there are more than just sticks out there right?
10 2 ReplyYes, there are baguettes too.
15 0 Reply
Baguette à selfie.
28 0 ReplyUnfortunately people use the English word for it which sucks because this is correct and way better.
15 0 ReplyWe can use "perche à selfie", perche being a very long baton, itself being a big stick!
2 0 Reply
20 0 ReplyCeci n'est pas une baguette
(While I was playing around with the Bing image generator, it gave me this, which I thought was too amazing not to share):
17 0 Reply
How bout quarterstaff?
16 0 ReplyThey call it a baguette royale because of the metric system
37 0 ReplyNow I'm hungry for quarters with cheese.
9 0 Reply
I'd call it a "baton", because it's bigger
15 0 ReplyBaguette un quartre?
8 1 Reply
anything wooden, long and thin
So you're saying that Jacob Rees-Mogg is considered a baguette in France?
12 1 ReplyPlease stop doing this.
7 0 Reply