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G: The French alphabet

Grammar
The French Alphabet · L'alphabet français
Characters AaBbCcDdEeFfGgHhIiJjKkLlMm
Pronunciation ahbaysaydayuhehfzhayahsheezheekahehlehm
Characters NnOoPpQqRrSsTtUuVvWwXxYyZz
Pronunciation ehnohpaykewehrehstayewvaydoo-bluh-vayeeksee-grehkzehd

In addition, French uses several accents which are worth understanding. These are: à, è, ù, (grave accents) and é (acute accent). A circumflex applies to all vowels: â, ê, î, ô, û. A tréma (French for dieresis) is also applied: ä, ë, ï, ö, ü, ÿ. Two combined letters are used: æ and œ, and a cedilla is used on the c to make it sound like an English s: ç.

V: Basic phrases

Vocabulary
Basic Phrases · Les expressions de base
bonjour, saluthello (formal), hi (informal)
Comment allez-vous ? (formal),
Comment vas-tu ? (informal),
Comment ça va ? / Ça va ? (informal)
(lit: How you go/How it goes?)
ça va (très) bienI'm doing (very) well (lit. It goes (very) well)
mercithank you
et toi ? et vous ?and you? (informal) and you? (formal)
pas malnot bad
bienwell
pas si bien/pas très biennot so well
comme ci, comme çaso-so
Désolé(e)I'm sorry.
quoi de neuf ?what's up with you? (lit. what's new)
pas grand-chosenot much (lit. no big-thing)
au revoirbye
à demainsee you tomorrow (lit. at tomorrow)
à plus tardsee you later
Au revoir, à demain.Bye, see you tomorrow

V: Numbers

Vocabulary
Numbers · Les nombres
un1une unité (a unity)
deux2 
trois3 
quatre4 
cinq5 
six6 
sept7 
huit8 
neuf9 
dix10une dizaine (one ten)
onze11 
douze12une douzaine (one dozen)
treize13 
quatorze14 
quinze15 
seize16 
dix-sept17 
dix-huit18 
dix-neuf19 
vingt20 
vingt et un21 
vingt [deux - neuf]22-29
trente30 
trente et un31 
trente [deux - neuf]32-39 
quarante40 
cinquante50 
soixante60 
soixante-dix70 
soixante et onze71 
soixante-[douze - dix-neuf]72-79 
quatre-vingts80 
quatre-vingt-un81 
quatre-vingt-[deux - neuf]82-89 
quatre-vingt-dix90 
quatre-vingt-[onze - dix-neuf]91-99 
cent100une centaine (one hundred)
[deux - neuf] cents200-900 
deux cent un201 
neuf cent un901 
mille1.000un millier (one thousand)
(un) million1.000.000 
(un) milliard1.000.000.000 
(un) billion1.000.000.000.000 

Things of note about numbers

  • For 70-79, it builds upon "soixante" but past that it builds upon a combination of terms for 80-99
  • Only the first (21,31,41,51,61 and 71, but not 81 nor 91) have "et un" without a hyphen; but past this it is simply both words consecutively (vingt-six, trente-trois, etc.) with a hyphen in between.
  • For 100-199, it looks much like this list already save that "cent" is added before the rest of the number; this continues up to 1000 and onward.

V: Asking for the day/date/time

Vocabulary
Asking For The Day, Date, Time · Demander le jour, la date, le temps
Asking for the day.
1aAujourd'hui c'est quel jour?Today is what day?(oh-zhur-dewee seh kehl zhoor)
1bAujourd'hui c'est [jour].Today is [day].
2aDemain c'est quel jourTomorrow is what day?(duh-ma(n) seh kehl zhoor)
2bDemain c'est [jour].Tomorrow is [day].
Asking for the date.
3aQuelle est la date
(aujourd'hui)?
What is the date
(today)?
(kehl eh lah daht)
3bC'est le [#] [month].It's [month] [#].
Asking for the time.
4aQuelle heure est-il? What hour/time is it? (kehl ewr eh-teel)
4bIl est quelle heure?(eel eh kehl ewr)
5Il est [nombre] heure(s).It is [number] hours.(eel eh [nombre] ewr)

V: Time

In French, “il est” is used to express the time; though it would literally translate as “he is”, it is actually, in this case, equivalent to “it is” (unpersonal "il"). Unlike in English, it is always important to use “heures” (“hours”) when referring to the time. In English, it is OK to say, “It’s nine,” but this wouldn’t make sense in French. The French time system traditionally uses a 24-hour scale. Shorthand for writing times in French follows the format "17h30", which would represent 5:30PM in English.

Vocabulary
Time · Le temps
Quelle heure est-il ?What time is it?
Il est une heure.It is one o’clock.
Il est trois heures.It is three o’clock.
Il est dix heures.It is ten o’clock.
Il est midi.It is noon.
Il est minuit.It is midnight.
Il est quatre heures cinq.It is five past four.
Il est quatre heures et quart.It is a quarter past four.
Il est quatre heures quinze.It is four fifteen.
Il est quatre heures et demie.It is half past four.
Il est dix-neuf heures moins le quart.It is a quarter to seven, or six forty-five.
Il est quatre heures trente.It is four thirty.
Il est cinq heures moins vingt.It is twenty to five.
Il est quatre heures quarante.It is four forty.

V: The days of the week.

Vocabulary
The days of the week · Les jours de la semaine
FrenchPronunciationEnglishOrigin
lundi/lœ̃di/ (luh(n)-dee)Monday(Moon)
mardi/maʁdi/ (mahr-dee)Tuesday(Mars)
mercredi/mɛʁkʁədi/ (mehr-kruh-dee)Wednesday(Mercury)
jeudi/ʒødi/ (zhur-dee)Thursday(Jupiter)
vendredi/vɑ̃dʁədi/ (vah(n)-druh-dee)Friday(Venus)
samedi/samdi/ (sahm-dee)Saturday(Saturn)
dimanche/dimɑ̃ʃ/ (dee-mah(n)sh)Sunday(Dies Domini)
  • The days of the week are not capitalized in French.
  • For phrases relating to the day of the week, see the phrasebook.

Notes:

  • What day is it today? is equivalent to Quel jour sommes-nous ?.
  • Quel jour sommes-nous ? can be answered with Nous sommes..., C'est... or On est... (last two are less formal).
  • Nous sommes... is not used with hier, aujourd’hui, or demain. C'était (past) or C'est (present/future) must be used accordingly.

V: The months of the year

Vocabulary
The months of the year · Les mois de l'année
FrenchPron.English
janvier/ʒɑ̃vje/ (zhah(n)-vyay)January
février/fevʁije/ (fay-vree-yay)February
mars/maʁs/ (mahrs)March
avril/avʁil/ (ahv-reel)April
mai/mɛ/ (meh)May
juin/ʒɥɛ̃/ (zhoo-a(n))June
juillet/ʒɥijɛ/ (zhoo-ee-yeh)July
août/ut/, /u/ (oot/oo)August
septembre/sɛptɑ̃bʁ/ (sehp-tah(n)-br)September
octobre/ɔktɔbʁ/ (ohk-toh-br)October
novembre/nɔvɑ̃bʁ/ (noh-vah(n)-br)November
décembre/desɑ̃bʁ/ (day-sah(n)-br)December

V: Relative date and time

Vocabulary
Relative Date and Time · Date et heure relatives
Times of Day
le lever du jourdaybreak
lit:the rise of the day
le lever du soleilsunrise
lit: the rise of the sun
le soleil levantrising sun.
le matinmorning
...du matinA.M., lit: of the mornng
hier matinyesterday morning
le midinoon, midday
l'après-midi (m)afternoon
le soirevening, in the evening
...du soirP.M. lit: of the evening
le coucher du soleilsunset
la nuitnight
Relative Days
avant-hierthe day before yesterday
hieryesterday
aujourd'huitoday
ce soirtonight
demaintomorrow
après-demainthe day after tomorrow

V: Seasons

Vocabulary
The Seasons · Les Saisons
la saison/la sɛ.zɔ̃/ (lah seh-zoh(n))season
le printemps /lə pʁɛ̃.tɑ̃/ (luh pra(n)-taw(n))Spring
l'été (m)/le.te/ (lay-tay)Summer
l'automne (m)/lo.tɔn/ (loh-tawn)Autumn
l'hiver (m)/li.vɛʁ/ (lee-vehr)Winter

Dialogue · A conversation between friends · Une conversation entre amis

File:A conversation between friends.ogg
Daniel Bonjour Hervé. Comment vas-tu ?
Hello, Hervé. How are you?
Hervé Je vais bien, merci. Et toi ça va ?
I'm good,1 thank you. And you, it goes (fine)?
Daniel Ça va bien. Est-ce que2 tu viens à mon anniversaire ? J'organise une petite fête.
It goes well. You're coming to my party? I'm organizing a little party.
Hervé C'est quand ?
When is it?
Daniel Le 3 mars à 20h.
March 3 at 08:00 PM.
Hervé Le 3 mars, entendu. Tu fais ça chez toi3 ?
March 3, agreed. You're having it at your place?
Daniel Oui c'est chez moi. J'ai invité une vingtaine d'amis. On va danser toute la nuit.
Yes, it's at my place. I have invited (a set of) twenty friends. We4 are going to dance all night.
Hervé C'est très gentil de m'inviter, merci. A bientôt.
It's very nice to invite me, thank you. So long.
Daniel A demain, bonne journée.
Until tomorrow, good day.

^1 Bien... is an adverb meaning well. Its adjective equivalent is bon(ne), which means good. Since je vais, meaning I go, uses an action verb,
the adverb bien is used. In English, I'm good, which uses the linking verb am, is followed by an adjective rather than an adverb.


^2 Est-ce que... doesn't mean anything (like the Spanish upside down question mark) and is used to start a question.
This can be used in a similar manner to do in English. Instead of You want it?, one can say Do you want it?


^3 chez... is a preposition meaning at the house of.... Chez moi is used to say at my place. Chez [name] is used to say at [name's] place.

^4 on... can mean we or one.

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