How to pronounce the French alphabet

If you have never learned the French alphabet, you are not alone. It is the case for many of my students when they first start learning with me, and today is the day that you get to catch up!

In this video I’ll first go over the whole alphabet once, and if it’s hard for you to remember it all and use it, don’t worry, I got you covered. In the second half I’ll go over the patterns that can help you remember.

Now for the patterns

First the vowels: A E I O U Y

Why Y? Because the letter was borrowed from Greek by the Romans to denote the sound “Ü” which did not exist in Latin. However, because the sound was so rare, lower class people, which make up the bulk of the speakers, couldn’t pronounce it and ended up pronouncing it as “I”, hence why it’s “I grec”. So if you’re lower class, remember that we’ll win in the end, even if it might take a long time.

Then we have two patterns for consonants

B C D G P T V - more or less correspond to English ‘ee’ pronunciation
and
F L M N R S - also similar to English sounds

Finally outliers
H J K Q W X Z
What they have in common is that they’re either rare or silent

What should you learn to spell first?

If you’re just starting with learning the alphabet, I recommend you start by learning to spell your last name out loud, because it is by far the word you’ll have to spell the most for the French.

And if you like this way of learning with patterns, rules and shortcuts to make it easier, definitely subscribe to my YouTube channel and my Telegram channel so you don’t miss anything!

Your next steps

If you like this way of learning French, you will love to learn with me as a student or client. Please check out:

Pro tip: you don’t need to choose!

All my 1-1 clients are invited to join the French Accelerator free of charge.

Feel free to book a call with me now to discuss options.

About the author

Angel Pretot is a French learning coach. He helps English speakers from all over the world learn French fast and become fluent. You can work with him one-on-one (online via skype or a similar software) or join a global community of French learners in his group program the French Fluency Accelerator.

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