French for Beginners
Your first steps in French
Why French is easier than you think
French is a Romance language closely related to many English words. About 30% of English vocabulary comes from French! The biggest challenge? French spelling and pronunciation don't always match - but there are clear patterns.
French has consistent rules for pronunciation once you learn them. Silent letters follow predictable patterns, and liaison (connecting words in speech) has clear rules. The nasal sounds may seem strange at first, but there are only 4 of them!
French verbs mostly follow three main patterns (-er, -ir, -re) with -er verbs making up 90% of all verbs. Once you know one -er verb, you can recognize thousands!
Important tips:
- • Note: final consonants are usually silent (except c, r, f, l - think "CaReFuL")
- • The letter "e" at the end is almost always silent
- • Accents change pronunciation: é (ay), è (eh), ê (eh)
The French Alphabet & Sounds
The basics of pronunciation
French uses the same 26 letters as English, but pronunciation is very different. The good news: once you know the rules, French pronunciation is quite consistent.
Important sound combinations
Nasal vowels - Unique to French!
When vowels come before n or m (and no vowel follows), they become nasal. Unlike Dutch, these are pronounced through the nose:
The French "u" - Completely different from Dutch!
This sound doesn't exist in Dutch or English. Say "ie" but with rounded lips:
Silent letters - Very important!
Liaison - Connecting words
Sometimes final consonants ARE pronounced when the next word starts with a vowel:
Greetings & Essential Phrases
The foundation of every conversation
These words and phrases appear in every French story. They are the building blocks of social interaction.
Greetings throughout the day
NOTE: French is MORE formal than Dutch - always use "vous" with strangers, unlike Dutch where "je" is becoming common:
How are you? - Questions
How are you? - Answers
Saying goodbye
Polite forms - Essential!
Important responses
Être (To Be) - The most important verb
This verb appears in almost every sentence
Just like in English, "to be" is irregular but essential. You'll see it constantly in French texts.