Beginner’s French Guide
French Alphabet Made Easy
With Pronunciation Tips
Your complete guide to all 26 letters, accent marks, and the sounds that make French so beautiful.
🇫🇷 Good news: The French alphabet has the same 26 letters as English. The challenge — and the beauty — lies in how they sound. This guide walks you through every letter, explains the tricky pronunciation rules, and introduces the special accented characters unique to French.
1. Overview: French vs. English Alphabet
The French alphabet (l’alphabet français) uses the same 26 Latin letters as English, but most of them are pronounced very differently. French also adds accented letters that change the sound or distinguish meaning between words. French is a phonetic language in many ways — once you learn the rules, you can predict how most words are pronounced.
One of the most important things to understand early on: many final consonants in French are silent. The word chat (cat) is pronounced “sha,” not “shat.” This is one of the biggest stumbling blocks for English speakers and we’ll tackle it head-on below.
Pro Tip: When learning French letters, focus on their names (how you say the letter itself) separately from their sounds (how they sound inside words). These are often very different in French.
2. All 26 French Letters with Pronunciation
Below is every letter of the French alphabet, its French name (how you say the letter aloud), and a simple phonetic guide. Hover over any card to highlight it.
3. The Trickiest French Sounds Explained
Several French letters behave very differently from their English counterparts. These are the ones that trip up beginners most often:
🔊 The French “R” — Le R roulé
The French R is produced at the back of the throat — it’s a uvular fricative. Think of the sound you make when gargling water. It does not roll like a Spanish R. Practice by saying “ah” and then constricting the back of your throat slightly.
Examples: rouge (red), rue (street), merci (thank you)
🔊 The French “U” — A Sound English Doesn’t Have
The French u has no equivalent in English. To produce it: shape your lips as if to say “oo” (as in “moon”), then try to say “ee” (as in “feet”) without moving your lips. That pursed, tight sound is the French U.
Examples: tu (you), lune (moon), sur (on)
🔊 C and G — Two Sounds Each
C sounds like “s” before e, i, y, and like “k” before a, o, u. A cédille (ç) always makes the “s” sound.
G sounds like the “s” in measure (zh) before e, i, y, and like the “g” in go before a, o, u.
- cerise → “suh-reez” (cherry)
- café → “kah-fay” (coffee)
- général → “zheh-neh-ral”
- gare → “gar” (train station)
🔊 Silent H — H muet vs H aspiré
The letter H is always silent in French, but it comes in two types: H muet (mute H) allows liaison with a preceding word, while H aspiré (aspirate H) blocks liaison. You must simply memorize which words have which type.
- l’homme = the man (H muet)
- le hibou = the owl (H aspiré)
- les hommes → “lay-zomm”
- les hiboux → “lay ee-boo”
🔊 The Letter J — Always “Zh”
The French J is always pronounced like the “s” in “measure” or the “g” in “beige.” It never sounds like the English “j” in “jam.”
- je → “zhuh” (I)
- jour → “zhoor” (day)
- jardin → “zhar-dan” (garden)
- bijou → “bee-zhoo” (jewel)
4. French Accent Marks — Les Accents
French uses five accent marks. These are not optional decoration — they change pronunciation, and sometimes the entire meaning of a word. For example, ou means “or” while où means “where.”
| Accent | Name | Letters Used On | Pronunciation Effect | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| é | Accent aigu | e only | Closed “ay” sound (like “pay”) | été (summer) |
| è, à, ù | Accent grave | e, a, u | Open “eh” sound; à/ù affect meaning only | père (father) |
| ê, â, î, ô, û | Accent circonflexe | All vowels | Lengthens/opens the vowel slightly | fête (party) |
| ë, ï, ü | Tréma | e, i, u | Each vowel pronounced separately | Noël (Christmas) |
| ç | Cédille | c only | Always an “s” sound (never “k”) | français (French) |
5. Vowels & Consonants: Key Rules
French Nasal Vowels
French has nasal vowels — sounds produced partly through the nose — that don’t exist in English. These occur when a vowel is followed by m or n at the end of a syllable. The m/n itself is not fully pronounced; instead, the vowel becomes nasal.
- an / en → “ahn” (like enfant)
- in / ain / ein → “an” (like pain)
- on → “ohn” (like bon)
- un → “uhn” (like un)
Silent Final Consonants
In French, most final consonants are not pronounced. A useful mnemonic is CaReFuL — the letters C, R, F, and L at the end of a word are usually pronounced; others usually aren’t.
- chat → “sha” (cat)
- les → “lay” (the, plural)
- grand → “grahn” (big)
- avec → “ah-vek” (with) ✓ C pronounced
Liaison — Linking Words Together
Liaison is one of the most distinctively French features: when a word ending in a normally-silent consonant is followed by a word beginning with a vowel or silent H, the consonant is pronounced and linked to the next word.
Example: les amis (the friends) — the S in les is usually silent, but because amis starts with a vowel, it becomes: “lay-zah-mee”. The S sounds like a Z when liaised.
6. Top 7 Pronunciation Tips for Beginners
Learn letters by singing the alphabet. The French alphabet song exists and it’s the fastest way to internalize letter names. The melody is similar to the English one — give it a try!
Don’t pronounce final consonants unless they’re C, R, F, or L. This one rule will immediately make your French sound more natural. Remember: CaReFuL.
Practice the French U every day. Say “ee” with your lips rounded into an “oo” shape. It feels odd at first, but with daily practice it becomes natural within weeks.
Work on your R from day one. The guttural R is hardest to un-learn if you develop bad habits. Practice gargling softly — you’re producing the uvular vibration needed for a proper French R.
Nasal vowels require mouth + nose. Practice by pinching your nose and noticing how the sound changes. In true nasal vowels, air flows through both the mouth and nose simultaneously.
Listen to native speakers constantly. Podcasts, French radio (like France Inter), and films with French audio are invaluable. Your ear must be trained before your mouth can follow.
Use the IPA (International Phonetic Alphabet). French dictionaries use IPA notation. Learning even the basics of IPA will let you look up any word’s pronunciation with precision.
7. Frequently Asked Questions
Is the French alphabet the same as the English alphabet?
Yes, the French alphabet has the same 26 letters as English. However, French also uses accented characters (é, è, ê, à, ç, etc.) that are technically considered variants of the base letters rather than separate letters of the alphabet.
Which French letters are always silent?
The letter H is always silent in French. Additionally, most final consonants are silent unless they are C, R, F, or L (remember: CaReFuL). The letter E at the end of a word is also typically silent or very lightly pronounced.
How long does it take to learn French pronunciation?
With daily practice of 20–30 minutes, most learners can grasp the core pronunciation rules within 4–8 weeks. The French R and nasal vowels take the longest — expect 2–3 months of consistent practice before they feel natural.
What is the hardest French sound for English speakers?
Most learners cite the French R (the uvular fricative produced at the back of the throat) and the French U (a rounded front vowel with no English equivalent) as the two most challenging sounds. Nasal vowels are also notoriously difficult for English speakers.
Do accent marks change the meaning of French words?
Yes, sometimes they do. The accent grave on certain words like ou (or) vs. où (where) and a (has) vs. à (at/to) distinguishes completely different words. In other cases, accents primarily affect pronunciation rather than meaning.
Ready to Start Speaking French?
Now that you know the French alphabet and its pronunciation rules, the next step is building your vocabulary and hearing French in action. Explore our free beginner lessons and start your journey today.
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