Joe Le Taxi
Lời bài hát:
Từ vựng có trong bài hát này:
Từ vựng | Nghĩa |
---|---|
taxi /ˈtæksi/ A1 |
|
musique /my.zik/ A1 |
|
rue /ʁy/ A1 |
|
vie /vi/ A1 |
|
rhum /ʁœm/ A2 |
|
mambo /ˈmæm.boʊ/ B1 |
|
embouteillage /ɑ̃.bu.te.jaʒ/ B2 |
|
bar /bɑːr/ A2 |
|
pont /pɔ̃/ A2 |
|
noir /nwaʁ/ B1 |
|
briller /bʁi.je/ B1 |
|
marcher /maʁ.ʃe/ B1 |
|
jaune /ʒon/ A2 |
|
petit /pə.ti/ A1 |
|
vieux /vjø/ B1 |
|
Ngữ pháp:
-
Joe le taxi, il va pas partout
➔ Use of pronoun 'il' for emphasis/clarification
➔ While grammatically correct to say 'Joe le taxi va pas partout', the inclusion of 'il' after the subject makes it more conversational and emphasizes that it's *Joe* who doesn't go everywhere. The structure is a bit colloquial.
-
Il marche pas au soda
➔ Preposition 'au' implying mode of transportation/fuel ('powered by' literally)
➔ The phrase 'marcher au' when used with a fuel or energy source, means something similar to 'powered by'. Here, it means 'He isn't powered by soda', meaning he doesn't like or depend on soda.
-
Son saxo jaune Connaît toutes les rues par cœur
➔ Inversion of subject and verb for stylistic effect (poetic/emphatic)
➔ The normal word order would be 'Son saxo jaune connaît toutes les rues par cœur'. The inversion makes it sound more lyrical. 'His yellow saxophone knows all the streets by heart.'
-
Dans sa caisse La musique à Joe
➔ Ellipsis (omission of verb) - Implied 'il y a' or 'est'. Possession using 'à'
➔ This line is shortened for poetic effect. It means, roughly, 'In his car, there is Joe's music' or 'In his car, the music belongs to Joe'. 'La musique de Joe' is also possible but 'la musique à Joe' is more common in some contexts.
-
Vas-y fonce Dans la nuit vers l'Amazone
➔ Imperative mood combined with prepositional phrase indicating direction.
➔ 'Vas-y' is a shortened form of 'Y aller', meaning 'Go'. 'Fonce' is the imperative of 'foncer', meaning 'charge' or 'go fast'. 'Vers l'Amazone' indicates direction: 'towards the Amazon'.
-
Embouteillage Il est comme ça
➔ Use of ellipsis to create a casual tone. 'Il est comme ça' is an idiom.
➔ 'Embouteillage' means traffic jam. A complete sentence might be 'Il y a un embouteillage'. 'Il est comme ça' translates to 'He is like that', meaning that's his personality, that is Joe is laidback / does not care
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