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Top 11 Tourist Mistakes in Paris (and how to
avoid them)
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ABOVE: Look back when you leave, and remember to
return.
Mistake #11: Saying "Adieu" instead of "Au
revoir"
- Adieu: Farewell.
- Au revoir: Good-bye (until we meet again).
To its admirers, Paris is more than a city--it's also a habit,
or even an addiction. You can see this in the Paris guidebook section at your
local bookstore:
-
General-interest guidebooks such as Rick Steves' Paris,
Frommer's Paris from $95 a Day, and Fodor's Paris target the first-visitor.
-
More experienced visitors can explore areas or topics that
whetted their interest on a previous trip with tools like Walking Paris:
Thirty Original Walks in and Around Paris, the City Walks: Paris
card series, or Born to Shop Paris.
-
By the third or fourth trip, the traveler is likely to be
reading esoteric books like Markets of Paris, Café
Life Paris, Paris by Bistro, or Métro Insolite (an
historical and present-day guide to the Paris Métro, in French).
The point we're trying to make is that Paris isn't the kind of
place where travelers come only once. Many visitors--especially those who live
in Britain or on the Continent--come again and again, and pretty soon they're
fantasizing about buying an apartment in Montmartre or a pied-à-terre
on the Left Bank.
Our advice:
-
Travel to Paris whenever you can, and for as long as you can.
-
If
you're coming for a week or longer, consider renting a
holiday apartment
in a neighborhood that you know. By staying in a flat or studio, you'll have a chance to live
your fantasy of being a Parisian--at least for a short time--and you may save a
few euros in the bargain.
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Top 11 Tourist Mistakes in Paris
(Introduction)
About the author:
Durant Imboden
is a professional travel writer, book author, and editor who focuses on European
cities and transportation.
After 4-1/2 years of covering European travel topics for About.com, Durant and
Cheryl Imboden co-founded Europe for Visitors (including Paris for Visitors) in
2001. The
site has earned "Best of the Web" honors from Forbes and The
Washington Post.
For more information, see
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Top photo copyright © Eric Hood.
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