L’alphabet français / The French Alphabet

The French alphabet has 26 letters, just like English. However, the pronunciation of letter names is quite different—each letter has a specific name used when spelling aloud. Mastering these names is your first step to reading and spelling in French. The 26 Letters Letter French Name IPA Example Word A a a [a] ami [ami] … Read more

Les accents français: é, è, ê, ë, à, â, etc. / French Accents

French uses 5 accent marks that change how letters are pronounced or distinguish between words that would otherwise look identical. They primarily modify pronunciation (especially on the letter “e”) and are essential for reading and writing French correctly. The 5 French Accents Accent French Name English Name Used On é accent aigu [aksɑ̃ tegy] acute … Read more

Les lettres muettes / Silent Letters

In French, many letters are written but not pronounced—French spelling often preserves historical letters that are no longer spoken. Most final consonants are silent, and certain letters in the middle of words can also be silent. Learning these patterns will help you predict pronunciation and speak naturally. 1. Silent Final Consonants Most consonants at the … Read more

Les combinaisons de lettres / Letter Combinations

In French, certain letters combine to create new sounds. These combinations (digraphs and trigraphs) produce sounds different from their individual letters. Once you learn these patterns, you can read almost any French word correctly. 1. Vowel Combinations When vowels appear together, they often make a single sound: Combination IPA Examples ou [u] vous [vu] — … Read more

La liaison / Linking words

La liaison is when you pronounce the final consonant of a word together with the vowel at the beginning of the next word. Many French words end with silent consonants, but when the next word starts with a vowel or silent “h”, that consonant comes alive and links to the next word—making French sound smooth … Read more

L’élision: j’, l’, d’, n’ / Elision before vowels

In French, elision occurs when certain short words lose their final vowel before a word beginning with a vowel or silent h. The dropped vowel is replaced by an apostrophe (‘). This is mandatory—not optional—and makes French sound smooth and natural. Words like je, le, la, de, ne, que, and se lose their final -e … Read more