Happy 100th Birthday to Winnie the Pooh!!
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we're not kids anymore.
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@miraculousbox
Happy 100th Birthday to Winnie the Pooh!!

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How did you get all of that information on a scrap show (besides tweets and stuff)?
ML has had an early fanbase since the PV originally leaked in 2012. People saw that it was âcoming soonâ and started to gather as much information as they could on it. There werenât many articles about the show yet, but here and there new information would pop up, with either title changes or budget announcements, or a movie and however many episodes were ordered. Besides that, people snooped around and found the ZAG website, where an early synopsis was found that mentioned âMarinette Chengâ (not Dupain-Cheng), Adrien, and Fu (this synopsis was from 2013, when Felix was swapped out for Adrien). Some other synopsis here and there from animation news sites, press kits, etc. were gathered. Some storyboards and concept arts were found around the web.
tldr; people have been gathering as many breadcrumbs about this show as they possibly could for 3 years.
- Mod Arty
Does detention exist in France? Or is that strictly an American thing?
Yes it does!
However you can only have it on wednesday afternoons and saturday mornings, or during free periods.
So basically, you get a paper that your legal representative has to sign prior to the detention date. Youâll need to give it to whoeverâs going to watch you during the detention.
You can also get expelled temporarily depending on how bad your behaviour was, or expelled definitively for reasons such as a too high amount of missed classes (usually in private schools).
During detention, you get a work to do. You can get detention for not doing your homework and end up completing said homework during the detention.
Or, you can get a generic type of work to do. It can go from lines to write many times (like âIâm not gonna insult the teacher againâ 100 times), or cleaning the classroom (pretty rare), or completing a certain work given by the teacher that may constitute a grade.
Detention can only range from 1 to 4 hours. Itâs fairly rare to get a 4 hours detention and definitely needs more serious reasons than what Iâve been given to see in American TV shows.
I donât know if itâs an actual thing to put the student in detention on a whim, but in France the paper written by the teacher is actually checked by the chief supervisor who will stamp it and scold you a bit before asking from you to give back the paper signed. The chief supervisor will also make sure the reason behind detention isnât ridiculous.
It is necessary that the class rep takes you to the supervisorâs office.
In my school at least, it was however more common for the teacher to expel the student from the on-going period than give them detention. It still requires a paper to sign but can substitute detention because you donât have to wait one of the detention days or a free period to be punished, those being replaced by the period youâve been expelled from.
Youâre just shoved out of the classroom, go see the chief supervisor and you hang out in a study room. The teacher may or may not give you a work to do.
*blows a kiss* for mod maha
I HAVE WITNESSED MY SOUL LEAVING MY BODY -BLOWS A THOUSAND KISSES BACK-
How do students determine which high school (lyceé) they attend? Do they just go to the school that is closest to their home right? Is private school kind of a bad thing and held up in less regard unlike in the States?
Alright, so.
All mandatory schools (elementary, middle school and high school) in France are free and follow the exact same syllabus that is provided every year by the Ministry of Education. Itâs more or less flexible as, for example, the novels you study during the year are arbitrarily chosen by your teacher within the theme given by the Ministry. For example, if the Ministry asks for French teachers to teach autobiographies to their students, the teachers are free to choose whatever autobiographies they want.
Now, that brings us to your question: how do students choose their high schools?
Since all high schools follow the same curriculum in terms of programs, high schools are chosen for their proximity, or if they want to go to the same high school as their friends. Thatâs in general.
However, the main difference that exists between high schools in France is the teacher body. Some high schools have one that is better than the other, might involve some commuting, etc⊠Thatâs case-to-case situations. Most of the schools are good; theyâre not incredible, but theyâre good enough and I think the Ministry of Education is doing a fairly good job because they keep reforming and re-adapting the school system every single year. France is lucky to have a pretty active Ministry.
Now if you want to go from good to incredible and it is geographically possible for you, go ahead! Itâs free anyway.
On the topic of private schools, they do exist. Theyâre more sheltered, stricter. The quality of the teaching remains a fairly vague topic, and the opinions are pretty mixed.
I canât for sure tell you that the teaching is better or worse, but the quality of life there seems to be better as a lot of parents prefer to sign their children up in such establishments to avoid them learning expletives and âstreet behaviorsâ.
Iâm also reading several articles stating that private schools are more popular starting with middle school education because they seemingly provide a better environment that improves studentsâ performances. As such, 38 out 50 of the best high schools in France are private.
Some private schools in France are boarding schools, but not all of them. Almost all of them are Catholic schools, but you can find Jewish schools and Muslim schools as well, though to a lesser proportion. Itâs also important to point out that the religious teachings are optional.
However, due to the religious specificity, a lot of people donât really go there. You might not know it, but France is legally secular, and it means that freedom of worship and culture is the constitutional norm. France therefore being a multicultural country with no official religion, people donât really see the point of going to a Catholic school.
Unlike the United States, religion has very little to do with Franceâs politics and Catholics donât have much power in the government. To put it short, no one cares if the President is atheist or if he doesnât go to church on Sundays.
The relationship with religion is very uninhibited when compared to what it would be in the United States. Iâm only comparing these two countries and am not saying France is the most uninhibited country in the world when it comes to religion, but you get my point.
Though 30% of French people deem that private schools can be afforded by poorer households, a lot of them are still reluctant because they can get good enough teaching at public schools.
Because of that, private schools with a religious connotation seem like closed areas and we donât really know whatâs going on there except that it can be expensive or require a specific characteristic in your family lineage (like the Maison dâEducation de la LĂ©gion dâHonneur that only lets you in if a person from your family got the LĂ©gion dâHonneur). Itâs got a pretty selective aspect, but I doubt itâs got a bad reputation.
Iâd say it gives off an aspect of wealth, quality, and strictness?
Itâs fairly secluded as itâs well-known for its walls and closed gates. It strengthens the idea of security that a lot of parents look for, but it also makes it look like a world on its own because we have little idea of whatâs going on there, especially for private boarding schools.
However, private schools have been, for the past few years, growing more and more popular, especially for middle school and high school. It might be interesting to keep that in mind. Switches from public to private are becoming a bit more frequent, but in numbers, only a rough 20% of students are studying in private establishments.

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Thank you for your informative canon vs fanon post. I really appreciate that it's non aggressive towards fans. I feel like if more posts like that were written just as positively, there would be less drama in the fandom and more people would actually want to learn something instead of becoming stubborn and feeling attacked. This blog seems like a very valuable resource and it's run really well. My compliments to the Mods.
About a year ago, Mod Verse and I wrote a post titled âCommon Fanfiction Mistakes.â Mod Maha never let that go past the draft stage because of how salty we made it. It makes me laugh because Mod Verse, Mod Arty, and I all saw the salt and thought it was a funny post. Itâs been sitting in the drafts for a year. Some of the mistakes we saw have stayed the same as the fandom grew. Other new mistakes and continuity errors by the fandom have come about since then, along with new information about the show. Itâs amusing to me to see how much the fandom has changed. I havenât even rewritten and revisited half the stuff in that post because of how much the fandom has grown (about a third of the post was spelling mistakes such as âMarionetteâ and âAdrian,â but thatâs since been taken care of as new authors learn to not trust their English dictionaries).
When I make a sequel to that post thereâs so much I didnât touch on, Iâll keep in mind to keep the salt down and just leave it as a gentle reminder that not everything upon which the fandom agrees is canon.
This blog is meant to be a resource to writers in order to help them. None of the mods here want to instigate a fandom war over what weâve written. Some people like writing as close to canon as they possibly can. Some like creating AUs. Some accidentally lose sight of characters and characterization along the way. Weâre just here to help guide people back on track. Thatâs why we have disclaimers at the end of every post that isnât specifically about French culture.
Thank you, for reading, and reminding us to be gentle with what we write.
~Mod Harte
The Fandomâs Canon
Good morning, noon, and night, Miraculers! Recently, Iâve come across many different tropes and ideas that the entire fandom (or most of it) believes is true. This is probably due to the hiatus. This post is a partial list of what the fandom has considered canon, even though it hasnât been confirmed through the show itself nor through the creators. Please note that when âWord of Godâ is mentioned, it means that Thomas, Jeremy, and other members of Zag Animation have confirmed it, but it hasnât appeared in the show.
So keep in mind that this post is in no way trying to discredit headcanons, for all of them are good. The only objective here is to differentiate fanon from canon.
Nino takes pictures and video for the Ladyblog.
We do not know if Nino helps Alya with the Ladyblog. We donât even know if Nino is tech-savvy with source codes, video format, video editing, et cetera. This is entirely fanon.
Akuma attacks happen every few days/weeks.
Canon has confirmed that akuma attacks can happen multiple times a day. Hawk Moth has all the time in the world and he desperately wants the Miraculouses. He has sent out up to three akuma a day, though this is rare. On average, he sends out at least one per day. He sends them out at any time of the day too, as seen in the Christmas Special. (Sources: âLady Wifi,â âPrincess Fragrance,â and âAntibug,â among other episodes.)
Keep reading
I was under the impression that Hawkmoth can only create one akuma per day and active at a time. Remember, Sabrina was missing for days.
The âLady Wifiâ source is an error on my part. There were two akuma attacks in that episode and it took place over the course of two days.
âTimebreakerâ had two Alixes akumatized and Hawk Moth retained control over both of them. While this doesnât necessarily argue for multiple akuma attacks a day, it argues for the fact that Hawk Moth can control multiple akumatized villains at a time.
In âDarkblade,â the episode begins immediately after Marinette returns from saving the day; Nadja Chamack isnât even done with her news report about the super villain by the time Marinette detransforms in her room. Only a few hours later, Armand DâArgencourt is akumatized into Darkblade.
âThe Mimeâ begins with Marinette rushing home as Ladybug. She used Lucky Charm, some thing she currently only uses when she fights akumatized villains. She was surrounded by reporters who wanted interviews. Later that day, Fred HaprĂšle is akumatized into the Mime.
The episode âPrincess Fragranceâ begins with a news report about how Ladybug and Chat Noir defeated the Magician of Misfortune, an akumatized villain. Turns out, his name is Jean Duparc and he is in Ms. Mendeleievâs class. This was also referenced in the webisode âMarinetteâs Double Life,â the time period for which takes place after âPrincess Fragrance.â Later that day because of ChloĂ©, Rose is akumatized into Princess Fragrance.
In âGamer,â Marinette is writing in her diary about how Chat Noir almost discovered her identity earlier that day while fighting an akumatized villain. Some fans speculate that this happened with Darkblade, but the specific akumatized villain is unconfirmed. Several hours later, Max is akumatized into Gamer.
With âAntibug,â Sabrina was missing for several days. This is true. However, the point being made here is that unlike Ladybugâs Lucky Charm or Chat Noirâs Cataclysm, akumatization is not Hawk Mothâs ultimate power; he does not detransform. In this episode. It takes less than five minutes for ChloĂ© to be akumatized into Antibug after Vanisher is defeated, hence the multiple akuma attacks a day. Besides, Vanisher wasnât attacking anyone other than ChloĂ©. Given Marinetteâs and Adrienâs reactions and that âAntibugâ was the first time Vanisher attacked ChloĂ© in class, âAntibugâ either took place on a Monday or Hawk Moth does sometimes give slight leeway and time between akuma attacks, though not long. I would say that at least one akuma has to attack every three days at most or else the kiddos will begin to worry.
If Adrien was planning to go into business school, what's the path he would take in lycee? And would he go into prepa? Thanks for your help!
Hello, hello!
Now, thatâs my field. Basically, he could take any of the general tracks. However, it is recommended to take the ESÂ track (Social Economy) or the STMG track (Technological Sciences of Management).
Now, if he were to go into prĂ©pa or not depends on the school heâs aiming for and if heâs planning to stay in France. France has a lot of very good business schools; theyâre mostly expensive because theyâre private, but not as expensive as American colleges. Once again, college is fairly affordable in France.
Do keep in mind that in a French context, prĂ©pas and business schools are whatâs most expensive when it comes to post-lycĂ©e studies.
If he goes abroad, prĂ©pa isnât needed.
If he stays, Iâd say that heâd go into prĂ©pa and aim for prestigious schools like HEC or emlyon or ESSEC. Heâd pick the âGrande Ecoleâ program which is the program that requires the prĂ©pa.
However ESSEC and emlyon, for example, also offer bachelor courses that are more practical, more field centered. Those are called BBA (Bachelor in Business Administration).
Iâm personally taking a BBA with emlyon, and the major difference is that while the usual âGrande Ecoleâ program implies that youâve studied a hell lot of theory before they start giving you actual projects and missions to work on. The bachelor already throws you in the swimming pool.
Bachelor is close to what a business degree is in anglo-saxon countries minus the fact that you can choose your minors and your majors. Nope, they give you their own program and schedules to follow.
However, seeing Adrienâs family background, I tend to think that heâs more likely to go the traditional path and suffer study 2 years of prĂ©pa before taking the oh so scary entrance test that will open to him the doors of the most prestigious schools of France (and possibly the world considering HECâs reputation).
I still want to point out that the chances he doesnât get the schools he wants are very high and that he could retake his entire prĂ©pa program if you decide that he gets schools he didnât want, or that Gabriel didnât want. Itâs common.
It is also important to know that a majority of students retake their first year because of how hard prĂ©pa is, and if youâre really bad you can literally be kicked out. But if youâre a very, very good student, you can join the âClasse Etoile,â a.k.a. the Star Class for your 2nd prĂ©pa year and have higher chances to get into the schools you want. It implies youâre a genius.
AS A REMINDER, PREPA LASTS 2 YEARS.
FROM THEN ON YOUâLL STUDY APPROXIMATELY 3 YEARS. IT IS RECOMMENDED TO TAKE AN MBA AFTER THAT.
Now when it comes to prépas, you have a lot of very good (and selective) prépas in Paris, but some of the business schools also offer in-campus prépas that come as boarding schools.
You donât have to specifically name the school Adrien will get into, but you can decide to choose that Adrien is already following the prĂ©pa program of the school he wants. That doesnât mean that heâs gonna pass the entrance test and remain in the school though.
There is an entrance test for whatever course you decide to take. BBA? Entrance test. Post-prépa? Entrance test. Post-license? Entrance test.
PrĂ©pa is the traditional way to get into business schools in France. But you may headcanon some other students getting in after 2 years in a public university because they couldnât afford prĂ©pa, or didnât like the pressure of it. You can also get into a âGrande Ecoleâ program after a BBA but it is argued that itâs completely useless because itâs just a repeat of knowledge. A lot of people keep thinking though that âGrande Ecoleâ programs have a prestigious sound to them.
Though you end up with the same business skills, BBA and âGrande Ecoleâ programs are not the same.
On the same thread, you may follow a BBA after a prĂ©pa, but Iâll say itâs pretty useless as the program is more focused on field work and less on all the theory youâve been brought to learn during prĂ©pa.
Now to conclude, I just want to add that most business schools in France switch their entire program to English starting the 2nd/3rd year (respectively for Grande Ecole and BBA) seeing how itâs the international language. Some others also add languages like Chinese and Spanish (Like in my case).
ALL BUSINESS SCHOOLS IN FRANCE HAVEÂ TO SEND YOU ABROAD FREQUENTLY FOR INTERNSHIPS AND EXCHANGES. In that regard, the fact that theyâre private allows them to have a wide network of partners that make it easy for the students to go abroad.
The Fandomâs Canon
Good morning, noon, and night, Miraculers! Recently, Iâve come across many different tropes and ideas that the entire fandom (or most of it) believes are true. This is probably due to the hiatus. This post is a partial list of what the fandom has considered canon, even though it hasnât been confirmed through the show itself nor through the creators. Please note that when âWord of Godâ is mentioned, it means that Thomas, Jeremy, and other members of Zag Animation have confirmed it, but it hasnât appeared in the show.
So keep in mind that this post is in no way trying to discredit headcanons, for all of them are good. The only objective here is to differentiate fanon from canon.
Nino takes pictures and video for the Ladyblog.
We do not know if Nino helps Alya with the Ladyblog. We donât even know if Nino is tech-savvy with source codes, video format, video editing, et cetera. This is entirely fanon.
Akuma attacks happen every few days/weeks.
Canon has confirmed that akuma attacks can happen multiple times a day. Hawk Moth has all the time in the world and he desperately wants the Miraculouses. He has sent out up to three akuma a day, though this is rare. On average, he sends out at least one per day. He sends them out at any time of the day too, as seen in the Christmas Special. (Sources: âLady Wifi,â âPrincess Fragrance,â and âAntibug,â among other episodes.)
Wait mod verse is really leaving? Definitively, no come back, leaving?
Unfortunately, yes.
Due to various personal reasons, theyâre leaving but as stated in the post, you can still contact them on @versegm ! Theyâre a wonderful friendly person and messaging them is 10/10 good decision guaranteed, you can trust me on that :)
But donât worry, the box is still going and weâll keep doing our best to provide you with the most information possible! Thank you for your concern, it means a lot to know that people care for the mods behind the posts here!

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Leaving the box
Hello, mod Verse here! For personal reasons, I decided, as stated above, to leave the box. If you need to contact me you can find me @versegmÂ
Please be nice to the remaining mods, and send lots of love to mod Maha, because she deserves it.Â
Goodbye everyone! Itâd been fun!
I feel bad about asking follow-up questions so early (especially since you responded like ridiculously fast and so exhaustively holy shit???) but I realized I meant more like a chambre d'hĂŽte (is this the proper singular?), and I was also curious about typical capacity/layout (how many rooms and what kinds of rooms), and if breakfast is more typically French or continental?
Yes itâs the proper singular! And thank you for the translation, it does make things clearer for me haha
Culturally speaking, a chambre dâhĂŽte equates to a gĂźte. Now legally speaking, weâre going to refer to service-public.fr which is the official website of the French administration.
It needs to follow a few rules that I will sum up as much as possible :
You have to declare that you have a chambre dâhĂŽte at your city hall.
Your room has to be fully furnished for the night and you have to provide breakfast in the morning.
The landlord whoâs renting the house has to welcome the guest personally in their main residence.
Roomsâ surfaces legally have to be above 9 square metres (without counting the sanitaries) and have a ceiling higher than 2,20 m. However, it is commonly accepted that rooms be at least 12 square metres surface.
Rooms have to be able to have access to sanitaries and respect hygiene regulations.
Cleaning has to be done everyday and without any additional fees.
Prices can be chosen by the owner themselves, but you can refer to my previous post for averages.
A chambre dâhĂŽte can only offer 5 rooms and take in a maximum of 15 people, else it is legally considered a hotel.
Now to be able to offer more than a breakfast, you add a table dâhĂŽte to your offer and can only feed the 15 max people that a chambre dâhĂŽte can host.
You have to serve the same meal at the same time for everyone like a family dinner (this is exactly what is written).Â
Inform the clients of all the prices (are drinks included in the menu or do they have to pay a supplement?).
Respect the health and hygiene regulations.
If the owner wants to sell alcohol, they need to have a special restaurant authorisation.
Other than that, there are no other rules. But feel free to pick what you need from here and the other post! Good luck :D
Hey there! So aparently there's some confusion in the fandom concerning school dances - I would have thought that this is a normal thing in schools everywhere, but I've come across some people shouting that there are no school dances or parties in France. Maybe you could help to settle this once and for all?
Mod Verse :Â Hello!
Truth is- school dances are not typically a thing in France. No prom, no homecoming party.
In some really rare cases, there can be a prom night in some high schools, because itâs a thing happening in large amounts of american movies and people want to experience it, but itâs a very, very small minority.
And even that small minority has nothing to do with the school. If you want to organize prom, you organize it with your own funds, own funding activities, own rent, etc⊠Itâs just a bunch of students who really want to do it and handle everything on their own.
Mod Maha : In my old highschool, it was a tradition that students from the Economic track organise prom, because it was a private school and we technically came from social classes that allowed us to have the means to fund such an event. We do everything on our own, but the school requests from us to have a few teachers supervising the event. Other than that, they didnât care much about the rest and would care even less if we didnât organise a prom at all in the year.
Proms are really not a thing in France.
I see this a lot but then they mentioned a school dance in one of the webisodes which theyâve said are canon.
While we see where you come from, the question was about whether school dances were a thing in France or not. Them being a thing in the show is another question.
The most plausible explanation would be that ML being broadcasted abroad, they could decide to include school dances to appeal to American audience, and also because the popularity of the trope makes it a very easy episode plot. Moreover and again, while extremely rare, it is still possible for school dances to happen in France.
Now canon-wise, the show has demonstrated many aspects that are not very likely to happen in reality such as parentsâ day, or asking middle-schoolers to make a hat. So canon-wise, adding a school dance wouldnât be off the thread.
But realistically, school dances and proms are not part of the French culture and arenât very likely to happen. It might be interesting to point out that having a school dance in CollĂšge Françoise-Dupont is an extraordinary thing that makes the students even more hyped for it?
Hey there! So aparently there's some confusion in the fandom concerning school dances - I would have thought that this is a normal thing in schools everywhere, but I've come across some people shouting that there are no school dances or parties in France. Maybe you could help to settle this once and for all?
Mod Verse :Â Hello!
Truth is- school dances are not typically a thing in France. No prom, no homecoming party.
In some really rare cases, there can be a prom night in some high schools, because itâs a thing happening in large amounts of american movies and people want to experience it, but itâs a very, very small minority.
And even that small minority has nothing to do with the school. If you want to organize prom, you organize it with your own funds, own funding activities, own rent, etc... Itâs just a bunch of students who really want to do it and handle everything on their own.
Mod Maha : In my old highschool, it was a tradition that students from the Economic track organise prom, because it was a private school and we technically came from social classes that allowed us to have the means to fund such an event. We do everything on our own, but the school requests from us to have a few teachers supervising the event. Other than that, they didnât care much about the rest and would care even less if we didnât organise a prom at all in the year.
Proms are really not a thing in France.
i just started reading a bakery au and am officially HORRIFIED, because the writer genuinely seems to believe that making croissants is a <30min job.
SO LET ME TELL YâALL ABOUT CROISSANTS
croissants are a laminated dough. what this means is that you prepare the dough, then you make a butter blockâliterally a block of butter, shaped to fit within the rolled out dough, but still thin enough that you can roll it outâwhich is placed into the center of the rolled out dough and fold the edges of the dough in around it, completely covering the butter. some people say this is where you do the first refrigeration, but i personally tend to immediately do my first roll out and fold. that is literally where you roll the dough out lengthwise until itâs nice and thin, then fold it all up.
then you chill the dough
for AT LEAST THIRTY MINUTES
repeat the process of rolling, folding, and chilling ~3-4 times
thatâs about TWO FUCKING HOURS of INACTIVE RECIPE TIME
âbut, coffeebuddha,â i hear exactly no one who is writing a bakery au ask, âwhy do i need to do all of those steps? why canât i just make the dough and immediately shape and bake it?â
BECAUSE MOTHERFUCKING LAYERS, BITCHES
YOU KNOW HOW PROPER CROISSANTS, DANISH, AND PUFF PASTRY HAVE ALL THOSE DELICIOUS, FLAKY LAYERS???
THOSE LAYERS ARE A RESULT OF THE LAMINATION PROCESS, WHICH CREATES HUNDREDS OF PAPER THIN LAYERS OF BUTTER IN YOUR DOUGH. THEN WHEN YOU PUT THAT DOUGH INTO THE OVEN, THE HEAT CAUSES THE CHILLED BUTTER TO BURST OUT INTO THESE LIGHT, DELICATE LAYERS OF AIR, WHICH IS WHAT MAKES THESE PASTRIES SO LIGHT AND PUFFY AND DELICIOUSLY FULL OF GOOD OLE BUTTER FLAVOR.
in short, you cannot whip up the fully finished dough for croissants in âseveral momentsâ and you most CERTAINLY DONâT proceed to BREAK PIECES OF DOUGH OFF AND THEN ROLL THEM, OMG, ARE YOU CRAZY, WHY WOULD YOU RISK DESTROYING YOUR BEAUTIFUL LAYERS LIKE THAT, WHY DO YOU HATE BOTH YOURSELF AND GOOD THINGS??? IF YOU ARENâT GOING TO ROLL THAT SHIT OUT IN ITS ENTIRETY, THEN YOU NEED TO USE A SHARP KNIFE OR A DOUGH CUTTER TO PORTION IT OUT SO THAT YOU DONâT MANGLE ALL YOUR HARD WORK
All of that said, if youâre writing a bakery AU and would like to run anything by someone who actually works in the industry as a pastry chef, you are more than welcome to hit me up for some free advice.
This is the kind of content for which I am here.

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Hi, question off the prepa talk. So if Mari is interested in fashion, would she try to take prepa classes for that? (And maybe Adrien would do physics?)
If Mari is interested in fashion, sheâs more likely to take the artistic track in high school.
For the record, French schools have 3 highschool years. At the end of your 1st highschool year (known as Seconde or 2nde), you have to pick a track that will define the rest of your highschool classes and baccalaureate depending on what you do the best (or what you want to do later).
There are 3 general tracks (Scientific, Economic and Literary) but there are also a lot of other more specific tracks that not all highschools offer but that still exist.
Most people who want to work in graphic arts will therefore pick the STD2A track (Sciences et Technologies Du Design et des Arts AppliquĂ©s translated to Sciences and Technologies of Design and Applied Arts) and study for 2 years arts. Theyâll also spend that time creating a book that will allow them to join art schools later on.
Now what you need to know about higher education in France is that there are countless and thousand of possibilities depending on what you want to do.
I'm doing an AU that involves Chloé, one where she manages a small bed and breakfast (a Gßtes?) with her father. What can you tell me about hotels in general in Paris (pricing, management, amenity options, etc.) as well as how they vary between price points?
Hmm would you be talking about a guest house (maison dâhĂŽte)? Or an inn (auberge)? A boarding house maybe (pension de famille)?
I usually hear of a gĂźte (without the S because itâs singular haha) in rural contexts, but I do see on the internet that it counts like a guest house even in a city.
About the management, the Paris tourist office provides a few valuable informations. Basically what you need to know before we go further is that Paris is a very touristic city, and because of that, hotels follow very strict rules to provide quality and security to the huge number of tourists that Paris welcomes everyday.