1 / 13

French Alphabet & Pronunciation

French Alphabet & Pronunciation. a = ahh b = bay c = say d = day e = euh f = eff g = jay h = ash i = eeeee j = jee k = ka l = ell m = em. n = en o = oh p = pay q = kuh r = air s = ess t = tay u = ew v = vay w = dooble vay x = eeks y = eeee grec Z = zed. French Alphabet.

ronda
Download Presentation

French Alphabet & Pronunciation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. French Alphabet & Pronunciation French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  2. a = ahh b = bay c = say d = day e = euh f = eff g = jay h = ash i = eeeee j = jee k = ka l = ell m = em n = en o = oh p = pay q = kuh r = air s = ess t = tay u = ew v = vay w = dooble vay x = eeks y = eeee grec Z = zed French Alphabet French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  3. Final consonants are usually silent: Paris (pa-ree). • However, the consonants C, R, F & L are usually pronounced at the end of words. French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  4. Common exceptions where the last letter can be heard include: • Août (August) • Cinq (five) • Sept (seven) (can hear ‘t’ but not the ‘p’!!) • Huit (eight) • Neuf (nine) French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  5. Accents • Some but not all accents can change the sound of the letter and or the meaning of a word. The main ones are: • É accent aigu • È accent grave • Ê accent circonflexe • Ë trema • Ç cedille French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  6. ‘ç’ (cedille) changes the ‘C’ (K) into an ‘S’ sound for C followed by A, O or U. C already makes the ‘S’ sound followed by ‘E’ or ‘I’ • Français (French) • Garçon (boy) • Leçon (lesson) • Ciel (sky) • C’est (it’s) • Ce n’est pas (it’s not) • Glace (icecream) • Citron (lemon) French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  7. ‘h’ is not pronounced hôtel (ohtel), homard (omar) (lobster). • Horrible (horrible) • Henri (Henry) • Hôpital (hospital) French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  8. ‘q’ or ‘qu’ has a hard ‘k’ sound e.g. quinze (sounds like ‘cans’) (fifteen) • Quatre (four) • Quatorze (fourteen) ‘cat oars’ • Qui (who) • Quitter (to leave – can also say ‘partir’) • Cinq (five) French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  9. ‘r’ is said at the back of the throat with the tongue at the bottom of the mouth (in English the ‘r’ makes the tongue go up). It sounds like a softer version of a cat trying to get rid of a furball  • Travaille (work) • Garage (garage) • Carottes rapées (grated carrots) • Tranche (slice) • Hiver (winter) • Printemps (spring) • Réserver (to reserve) French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  10. ‘th’ is pronounced just ‘t’ which is why French native speakers have a lot of problems with our th and you may hear them say ‘zat was ze zeory on zursday ze forz’ instead of ‘that was the theory on Thursday the fourth’ although I haven’t heard this sentence too often! • Thé (tea) • Thierry (Terry or Thierry as in the footballer Thierry Henri) • Cathédrale (cathedral) • Théâtre (theatre) • Thon (tuna) French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  11. ‘u’ = oo e.g. sur (soor) (on) • Jus (juice) • Université (university) • Rugby (rugby) • Jupe (skirt) • Musique (music) French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  12. ‘ui’ (wee) e.g. huit (weet) Huître (oyster) • Huile (oil) • Cuire (to cook) • Suivre (to follow) • Lui (him) • Nuit (night) • Puis-je? (may I?) • Puis-je cuire les huîtres avec l’huile pour lui cette nuit? = May I cook the oysters with oil for him this night?! French Alphabet and Pronunciation

  13. Bravo! French Alphabet and Pronunciation

More Related