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)
Chapter 1

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

ou oo sound
vous (voo), beaucoup (boh-koo)
oi wah sound
moi (mwah), trois (twah)
eu uh sound
deux (duh), heureux (uh-ruh)
au/eau oh sound
beau (boh), château (shah-toh)
ai/ei eh sound
fait (feh), seize (sehz)
ch sh sound
chat (shah), chercher (shehr-shay)
qu k sound
que (kuh), quatre (kah-truh)
gn ny sound
montagne (mon-tah-nyuh), gagner (gah-nyay)
ill ee-y sound
fille (fee-yuh), famille (fah-mee-yuh)
th t sound
thé (tay), théâtre (tay-ah-truh)

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:

an/am/en/em → ahn (nasal)
Voorbeeld
dans (in)
[dahn]
💡 Like Dutch "an" but through nose
on/om → ohn (nasal)
Voorbeeld
bon (good)
[bohn]
💡 Like Dutch "on" but nasal
in/im/ain/ein → anh (nasal)
Voorbeeld
vin (wine)
[vanh]
💡 No Dutch equivalent
un/um → unh (nasal)
Voorbeeld
un (one/a)
[unh]
💡 Like "eun" but nasal
ien → ee-anh (nasal)
Voorbeeld
bien (well)
[bee-anh]
💡 Like "ieen" but nasal

The French "u" - Completely different from Dutch!

This sound doesn't exist in Dutch or English. Say "ie" but with rounded lips:

tu you
Uitspraaktip
Say Dutch "ie" with lips like "oe"
une a/one (f)
Uitspraaktip
Start with "uu" then move tongue forward
rue street
Uitspraaktip
Dutch "r" + French "u"
sur on
Uitspraaktip
Practice: "sie" with round lips
vu seen
Uitspraaktip
Not like Dutch "oe" at all!

Silent letters - Very important!

Final consonants: Usually silent except C, R, F, L
Voorbeelden: petit (puh-tee), grand (grahn), mais (meh)
Final -e: Almost always silent
Voorbeelden: table (tah-bluh), rouge (roozh), parle (pahrl)
H: Always silent
Voorbeelden: homme (ohm), heure (uhr), hôtel (oh-tel)
Final -s: Silent (except liaison)
Voorbeelden: les (lay), vous (voo), trois (twah)
Final -ent: Silent in 3rd person plural verbs
Voorbeelden: parlent (pahrl), mangent (mahnzh)

Liaison - Connecting words

Sometimes final consonants ARE pronounced when the next word starts with a vowel:

les amis (the friends)
Zonder: lay + ah-mee Met liaison: lay-zah-mee
vous avez (you have)
Zonder: voo + ah-vay Met liaison: voo-zah-vay
un ami (a friend)
Zonder: unh + ah-mee Met liaison: unh-nah-mee
petit ami (boyfriend)
Zonder: puh-tee + ah-mee Met liaison: puh-tee-tah-mee
deux heures (two hours)
Zonder: duh + uhr Met liaison: duh-zuhr
Chapter 2

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:

Bonjour Good morning/Good day (Until ~6:00 PM) Formal & informal
Nederlands equivalent: Goedemorgen/Goedemiddag
Bon après-midi Good afternoon (12:00-6:00 PM) Less common
Nederlands equivalent: Goedemiddag
Bonsoir Good evening (From ~6:00 PM) Formal & informal
Nederlands equivalent: Goedenavond
Bonne nuit Good night (When going to bed) Intimate/family
Nederlands equivalent: Welterusten
Salut Hi/Bye (All day) Informal only!
Nederlands equivalent: Hoi/Doei
Coucou Hey (All day) Very informal
Nederlands equivalent: Hé/Hoi

How are you? - Questions

Comment allez-vous? How are you? (Formal) Formal (vous)
Comment vas-tu? How are you? (Informal) Informal (tu)
Ça va? How's it going? (Very common) Informal
Comment ça va? How's it going? (Common) Neutral
Quoi de neuf? What's new? (Casual) Informal
Tu vas bien? Are you well? (Personal) Informal
Tout va bien? Everything good? (Checking in) Neutral

How are you? - Answers

Ça va bien, merci I'm fine, thanks (Standard positive) Universal
Très bien, merci Very well, thanks (Extra positive) Universal
Super! Great! (Enthusiastic) Informal
Pas mal Not bad (Neutral) Informal
Comme ci, comme ça So-so (Mixed) Informal
Bof Meh (Indifferent) Very informal
Ça pourrait aller mieux Could be better (Mildly negative) Neutral
Pas très bien Not very well (Negative) Universal
Et toi? And you? (Asking back) Informal
Et vous? And you? (Asking back) Formal

Saying goodbye

Au revoir Goodbye (Standard farewell)
Salut Bye (Informal farewell)
À bientôt See you soon (You'll see each other soon)
À plus tard See you later (Later today)
À plus See ya (Very informal)
À demain See you tomorrow (You'll meet tomorrow)
À tout à l'heure See you in a bit (Very soon)
Bonne journée Have a good day (Daytime farewell)

Polite forms - Essential!

S'il vous plaît Please (formal)
💡 Use with vous
S'il te plaît Please (informal)
💡 Use with tu
Merci Thank you
💡 Universal
Merci beaucoup Thank you very much
💡 More emphatic
De rien You're welcome
💡 Literally: of nothing
Je vous en prie You're welcome (formal)
💡 More formal
Excusez-moi Excuse me (formal)
💡 Getting attention
Pardon Sorry/Excuse me
💡 Quick apology
Je suis désolé(e) I'm sorry
💡 Real apologies
Avec plaisir With pleasure
💡 Accepting offers

Important responses

Oui Yes (wee)
Non No (nohn)
Je ne sais pas I don't know (Very useful!)
Peut-être Maybe (puh-teh-truh)
Bien sûr Of course (bee-anh soor)
D'accord Okay/Agreed (dah-kor)
Pas de problème No problem (pah duh proh-blem)
Chapter 3

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.

The conjugation - Learn this by heart!

je suis (I am)
Je suis français
I am French
tu es (you are)
Tu es gentil
You are kind
il/elle est (he/she is)
Elle est belle
She is beautiful
nous sommes (we are)
Nous sommes amis
We are friends
vous êtes (you (pl./formal) are)
Vous êtes jeunes
You are young
ils/elles sont (they are)
Ils sont étudiants
They are students

Common expressions with être

Il y a There is/are
Il y a un problème - There is a problem
(Sounds like "ya")
C'est It is/This is
C'est bon - It's good
Ce sont These/Those are
Ce sont mes amis - These are my friends
Qu'est-ce que c'est? What is it?
Qu'est-ce que c'est que ça? - What is that?
Je suis de... I'm from...
Je suis de Paris - I'm from Paris
C'est vrai It's true (Confirmation)
C'est possible It's possible (Expressing possibility)
C'est important It's important (Emphasizing)
Il est tard It's late (Time expression)
Il faut It's necessary/One must
Il faut partir - We must leave
Il fait + adjective It is + adjective
Il fait beau - The weather is nice

Practice sentences - Recognize the pattern

Le livre est sur la table The book is on the table
La pizza est bonne The pizza is good
Les enfants sont à l'école The children are at school
Où es-tu? Where are you?
Nous sommes en France We are in France
Je ne suis pas sûr I'm not sure