Comme une Française
Comme une Française
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Spoken French Practice: Drop the “ne” + improve your fluency
You’ve probably already picked up on this if you’ve been engaging in French conversation or watching French TV shows, but spoken French is almost an entirely different language than technical written French. And that “different language” has its own set of unwritten rules!
If you want to see the fastest possible improvement in your French fluency - specifically your ability to speak and understand French - it’s important to learn the specifics of spoken French… and ignore pretty much everything else. That’s why my lessons are focused on teaching you everyday spoken French, including shortcuts to help you make progress faster.
In this lesson, I’ll tell you more about one of those unwritten rules: the fact that we drop the “ne” in spoken French (most of the time). Learning these rules is one thing, but adapting them is another. That’s why we’ll also do plenty of practice exercises together!
0:00 - Intro
0:44 - “Correct” grammar : ne… pas
2:51 - Informal French: Drop the “ne”
4:00 - Informal French: Cutting “Je” and “Tu”
5:37 - Practice with me
7:45 - Final test
⭐ DOWNLOAD THE PDF OF THIS LESSON
* Read, save and/or print the full written lesson here (free) - www.commeunefrancaise.com/blog/spoken-french-practice-ne&source=youtube
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* Actual spoken French is almost a completely different language than technical written French, which is what you were taught in schools. We specialize in everyday spoken French: speaking and understanding it, at all ages and levels. - www.commeunefrancaise.com/ (add &source=youtube ?)
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At Comme une Française, we specialize in everyday spoken French. We focus on three unique aspects that are different from school French, self-study books, Duolingo, etc:
1. We focus only on the specifics of speaking/understanding/being understood in everyday French and have unique ways to help you learn it properly & faster.
2. We focus on shortcuts to help you make progress faster, which also means we tell you exactly what you can stop learning to prioritize what’s really important.
3. We use French culture as the subject to make it fun and interesting for adults.
Take care and stay safe.
😘 from Grenoble, France.
Géraldine
zhlédnutí: 35 738

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Komentáře

  • @batgirlp5561
    @batgirlp5561 Před 6 hodinami

    I need a fast-spoken french podcast but on an elementary level. Something i can put 9n in the background at work.

  • @emm7632
    @emm7632 Před 17 hodinami

    This is a very long video in which I really didn’t learn anything apart from the names of characters in Disney films I have not seen.

  • @danielemathildelydiakepple2532

    Je sais: Bonjour, ma chère ou mon cher.

  • @danielemathildelydiakepple2532

    Vous ressemblez à Liza Minelli. Cordialement d'Autriche!

  • @Kate-qq3ez
    @Kate-qq3ez Před 2 dny

    I am French and I used everyday « As-tu » . T’as is really the language of the street.

  • @lechaouirocqui1066
    @lechaouirocqui1066 Před 2 dny

    Québecoise, Celine Dion; on utilise la «ne» pas jamais au Québec (ni en Acadie ni en Louisiane. On dit «pas jamais» seulement en Louisiane)

  • @netfun8087
    @netfun8087 Před 2 dny

    I imagine it similar to spoken English phrases using “gonna” instead of “going to.” We all know “going to” is correct. No one ever writes “gonna” in an essay, or even in an informal letter (I would expect to see “gonna” in writing only in written dialogue for example in a movie script). And yet when we speak, I think it is far more common to hear “gonna” than to hear “going to.” Of course in any kind of formal or business setting I would expect to hear “going to.”

  • @LearnSpanishLearnSpanish

    Nice

  • @user-dk4sy7hg2p
    @user-dk4sy7hg2p Před 2 dny

    This woman is too fast for me, but can I marry her any way?

  • @franmaud3030
    @franmaud3030 Před 2 dny

    How about ‘quelle heure est-il?’

  • @lesvoutesparis1351
    @lesvoutesparis1351 Před 2 dny

    Worst advice !

  • @jfrancobelge
    @jfrancobelge Před 3 dny

    In Belgian Franch we still use the "ne" in many instances.

  • @JoelMartin-zs5pn
    @JoelMartin-zs5pn Před 3 dny

    Good podcast.. Mais il ne faut pas faire des visages bizarre

  • @JoelMartin-zs5pn
    @JoelMartin-zs5pn Před 3 dny

    I disagree with this advice. First of all, using “ne” is grammatically correct and though nowadays considered a bit formal, it is more elegant and the way you will generally hear Macron speak. More importantly, you won’t get “bonjour” out of your mouth before being identified as an anglophone. Namely, you won’t fool anybody anyway. As my immersion teacher in France taught us, if you omit “ne”, people are much more likely to assume that you are entirely fluent and that they don’t need to slow down and speak clearly. You will naturally tend to drop the “ne” in spoken French as you progress but there are a lot of many more important things to tend to than this.

  • @michaeldeloatch7461

    Feliciations au monde francophone de devenir parasseux comme nous anglophones! Vivent les short cuts! ;-) Seriously, the first time, some years ago now, I heard colloquial French in a film it bristled my high school French training for a moment but it feels so natural and free and 21st century.

  • @JanetGoulden
    @JanetGoulden Před 3 dny

    Although this is 2019, I am so motivated by you Geraldine, I plan to watch all your videos and progress toward your advanced classes. I retired to France last year, 2023 and carry out daily exercises on Duolingo, but feel I am not making much real progress. I live in rural community and the locals do not understand me!! But they will eventually. Thank you at the moment. I loved the recommendations on the resources for cultural learning.

    • @Commeunefrancaise
      @Commeunefrancaise Před 3 dny

      15 minutes a day can make all the difference, @JanetGoulden! If you’re looking for more fun, bite-sized lessons, you should check out our 30 Day French Challenge. For 30 days, you’ll receive a new daily challenge to improve your everyday spoken French and each one can be completed in no more that 15 minutes per day. There are no live elements to the 30 Day Challenge and is the perfect program for students who are short on time: www.commeunefrancaise.com/youtube-welcome?&source=youtubecom -Lyndsie Comme une Française Team

  • @StephaneDesnault
    @StephaneDesnault Před 3 dny

    Removing "ne" is very much more than "informal". It really sounds tacky - definitely a class marker, just like there are many english accents. Follow those instructions at your own risk. You want to sound like a rapper ? Go at it. You're in a business meeting - I wouldn't. This video is terrible advice.

  • @marieparker3822
    @marieparker3822 Před 3 dny

    I was taught how to read and write French in school. It is not enough. We need to have short oral exchanges - not yet conversations - in primary school every day, without seeing the written words (English spelling is enough to be learning at one time). Thank you so much, Geraldine, for your brilliant teaching.

  • @Bibir3321
    @Bibir3321 Před 4 dny

    Du coup j’ai appris qu’on écrit jamais le français colloquial et on parle jamais le français écrit :-/ Si on écrit le français colloquial tout le monde prostestera!

  • @mariaabc117
    @mariaabc117 Před 4 dny

    I watched her full video and she's talking about the correct way, the formal & informal way, the common, native etc. So she's teaching us, she's not wrong so nega-people kindly have Open minds please, avoir ouvre d'esprit.❤

  • @warrengould7922
    @warrengould7922 Před 4 dny

    I live in Montreal people say Ne Alors vous Ne savez rien de la langue francaise stie

    • @lechaouirocqui1066
      @lechaouirocqui1066 Před 2 dny

      When I lived there, almost no one used it. That was many years past, though.

  • @1549413
    @1549413 Před 4 dny

    Je ne suis pas d'accord. Parler de cette manière, c'est laid. Ne l'écoutez pas. It is not informal, it is slang. Ce n'est vraiment pas élégant.

  • @williamrapanos922
    @williamrapanos922 Před 4 dny

    Quebecois... Je ne sais pas Becomes S'aipa

  • @FoobsTon
    @FoobsTon Před 4 dny

    Hmm. I'd keep it in. When you're good enough to drop it, you'll drop it. Dropping it from spoken French will encourage you to drop it from written french and that's a no no.

  • @mystinaaaa
    @mystinaaaa Před 4 dny

    For adjectives: BAGS (Beauty, Age, Goodness, Size) come before. The rest after. This rule helps me a lot.

  • @jsullivan4344
    @jsullivan4344 Před 4 dny

    I’m just glad I found the street French I was learning verbs and a lot of stuff il prob not need I can read and understand some written easier than speaking it I’m struggling due to a stroke and going to France soon heeeelllp

    • @Commeunefrancaise
      @Commeunefrancaise Před 3 dny

      We’re so glad this lesson helped, @jsullivan4344! If you’re interested in more lessons like this, please join our mailing list to get a new lesson each week: www.commeunefrancaise.com/youtube-welcome?&source=youtubecom We wish you a speedy recovery! -Lyndsie Comme une Française Team

  • @michaelcrummy8397
    @michaelcrummy8397 Před 4 dny

    Merci Géraldine. Tout est compris. Bonne semaine. À bientôt.

  • @christophermacleod3726

    Je ne regrette rien?

  • @absolutefreedom8035

    I am french and most of the time skipping the "ne" makes you look very low class. I would never say " J aime pas", it s something children would say. please if you have to learn, learn to speak properly

    • @christinebrument6851
      @christinebrument6851 Před 3 dny

      Completely agree I lived in France and speaking like this would be considered low class and definitely "foreign" please do not encourage this as you suffer a lot of criticism.

    • @AvoidsPikes-
      @AvoidsPikes- Před 2 dny

      Thanks for the opinion 👌👍😊

    • @lechaouirocqui1066
      @lechaouirocqui1066 Před 2 dny

      It works in Canada and Louisiana. You never use the "ne" in either of those.

    • @ChrissieSM
      @ChrissieSM Před dnem

      Je suis tout à fait d'accord avec vous. Quand on parle avec sa famille et ses amis, c'est peut-être acceptable, mais dans les autres circonstances, non non non. La langue française est si belle, respectons-la en parlant correctement.

  • @styledcapo
    @styledcapo Před 5 dny

    I saw it in my hotel in France, I didn't know it was available on neftlix.

  • @andreh202
    @andreh202 Před 5 dny

    This is truly very helpful and a very great tip. Sorry that i should be replying in French.

  • @JoannaZng13
    @JoannaZng13 Před 5 dny

    Thank you!! I am motivated to pick up my desire to learn and i am so happy I found your channel 🙌🏽 looking forward to more lessons

  • @lindaw2178
    @lindaw2178 Před 5 dny

    I guess as an American who will be spending 10 days in France, how much should I learn? Are basic phrases enough? I appreciate these leasons, but I got along in Germany with a few phrases. If I make the effort to have some phrases to show that I respect the culture and language, I believe I can get along.

    • @TheVulcanWizard
      @TheVulcanWizard Před dnem

      I’m from America and just finished a 16 day stay in France. You’ll be just fine with basic phrases. It’s very likely that everyone you interact with will speak English (at least at hotels, restaurants, etc). 90% of the time, they would catch my accent and would start speaking English without even needing to ask.

    • @BH6242KCh
      @BH6242KCh Před 12 hodinami

      I was in Netherlands and Belgium last year and spoke to a girl from Quebec (who only spoke French) and I was able to carry a rudimentary conversation, then used some French in Brussels. Two years of high school French as a drunken teenager, nearly 40 years ago held up surprisingly well.

  • @apaul9776
    @apaul9776 Před 5 dny

    Is the discrepancy between written and oral French the fault of the French Academy deterring the evolution of the written form?

  • @nazeerababkar2860
    @nazeerababkar2860 Před 5 dny

    Merci beaucoup pour le vidéo

  • @iTube22100
    @iTube22100 Před 5 dny

    French are the faster speaker among Western languages and you still use the scissors!! 😊

    • @AvoidsPikes-
      @AvoidsPikes- Před 2 dny

      You should see how fast some British people speak. You'd almost swear that they are speaking a different language.

  • @greggilquist1208
    @greggilquist1208 Před 5 dny

    J'ai vu plusieurs de ces videos et chuis (get it? hahaha) parleur d'anglais, espagnol, portugues, bla bla bla....je vis aux Etats Unis ou il ya a beaucoup des immigrants...... J'aime ca! (haha) quand ils parlent comment un text book, PARCEQU' ils parlent beaucoup mieux que moi.... pour cette raison, je ne pense pas que je veux omettre "Ne et n'....je croix qu'ils me vont conprendre bien... and I think it is natural for an English, Spanish, Portugues speaker to perhaps hang on to some text book things, like using proper negative. Sorry, it's not difficult in any language to AT LEAST get the N consonant in the sentence to indicate negative. It's also not hard to leave the R sound in all the words that end in TRE, Quebecers! As someone who enjoys my new language, gonna leave my accent alone, merci beaucoup!!!! Because I love how non-trashy my immigrants text-book English is, it gives me hope!

  • @Moharani21
    @Moharani21 Před 5 dny

    Doesn't pas entendu use a liaison making it pazntendu

  • @Leviwosc
    @Leviwosc Před 5 dny

    This informal French is still very new to me. I understand written French fairly well. Indeed, if I speak French I use textbook grammar, most French will probably think I'm a silly man. But then when I hear French people speak among each other I hardly understand them due to all the contractions and the omitted words. French is to me, a native Dutch speaker, quite hard to learn.

    • @emmpedno2161
      @emmpedno2161 Před 5 dny

      Well French people don’t speak “French”. Hahaha. Les français ne parlent même pas français!

    • @AvoidsPikes-
      @AvoidsPikes- Před 2 dny

      I'm starting to think that French was designed to piss everybody off 😅

  • @denisepepin4662
    @denisepepin4662 Před 5 dny

    Oh wait wait wait … it is not a « question » question ( no pun intended) It is the sequencing of the words. I speak French oui oui I am from Québec. I have been learning linguistics, teaching French …. So I would have presented the « question » of « t’as » VS « tu as » Never with « As-tu « Est- e que tu as fait … = as-tu faim = ok Heard way more often BUT « tu as » Become « t’as » in as we say in linguistics « the oral familiar code » I wouldn’t have mixed a question ? and an affirmation. Alors, en français Bon je n’aurais pas Pris comme exemple Une question As-tu devient T’as Non non « Tu as « va déserté transformer en « t’as » Mais la question « As-tu « restera là, dans le code oral en comparaison avec Est-ce que tu as … ? = plus formel un petit peu , juste un petit peu. J’écris et je pense mon message n’est pas vraiment organisé. Oups désolée Avez-vous compris ? 😂 As-tu compris ? 😊

  • @yuckal
    @yuckal Před 5 dny

    Is this a modern change that started within the last few decades or did French people speak like this a hundred years ago?

    • @gofieldsandsay
      @gofieldsandsay Před 5 dny

      Hard to tell precisely. We know that people were taught to speak a much better french in the 60s. Now, it varies a lot. I easily speak "normal " french , like for example using "ne" as it is described in this video. But, because indeed many people nowadays speak often without it, i tend to mimic it not to look too snobish. But, it's not rare when i come back to a more standard french and in fact people don't really pay attention to the difference. So, one can speak a more pleasant french ( like it seems to me ) without having any problem. It's not necessary to speak this widely spread "less well behaved" french to be understood nor to be "accepted". I'm french, i use "ne" 😉.

    • @continental_drift
      @continental_drift Před 5 dny

      @@gofieldsandsay English also has these form and is used in a similar context as you outlined above. eg. I do not know I don't know don't know dunno I listen to RTL on a daily basis and can hear the different forms that Geraldine talks about, but I think it is better to understand formal French, the informal will naturally follow. Cheers 🦘

    • @gofieldsandsay
      @gofieldsandsay Před 5 dny

      @@continental_driftThanks for your precisions and ; You are doing ( very ) well and are absolutely right 🙌👌 ! Continuez ainsi (Changez pas ) ! Tous mes vœux de succès dans ce grand bain des discussions informelles croisées ( des soirées, bars etc) 🙂💪🌟 !!

    • @williamrapanos922
      @williamrapanos922 Před 4 dny

      Quebecois is even more difficult to understand lol.. Je ne sais pas Je sais pas J'sais pas J'spa

    • @gofieldsandsay
      @gofieldsandsay Před 4 dny

      @@williamrapanos922 Ah oui effectivement, le dernier ( le plus court ) 😅 ...

  • @nawimal
    @nawimal Před 5 dny

    🎉❤

  • @professorm4171
    @professorm4171 Před 5 dny

    I assume 'ne... plus', the 'ne' stays?

    • @Tony1771-yj8mc
      @Tony1771-yj8mc Před 5 dny

      You can still drop the "ne" in that case. There is a brief example at 9:04. "Il n'y a plus" becomes "ya plus".

    • @felixculpa0807
      @felixculpa0807 Před 4 dny

      Je pense pas

    • @AvoidsPikes-
      @AvoidsPikes- Před 2 dny

      ​@@felixculpa0807😅

  • @thefallenjedi66
    @thefallenjedi66 Před 5 dny

    Thats *exactly* what a frenchie would say! On a more serious note, thank you for positing these videos! They are extremely helpful!

  • @gavinwilson6556
    @gavinwilson6556 Před 5 dny

    Bonjour Géraldine ! Chais pas encore without la liaison ?

  • @ralphd.4857
    @ralphd.4857 Před 5 dny

    I hung out with Canadian French quite a bit and used to hear young people address a parent's brother as "mon oncle" in every day speech. I guess this is a sign of respect? Do they do this in France?

  • @raviswami9852
    @raviswami9852 Před 7 dny

    12:53 - I love this series ! - & have probably watched it 3 times so far ?…😂

  • @Moharani21
    @Moharani21 Před 7 dny

    I have American Netflix but don't have any French program on it.

  • @pmac5934
    @pmac5934 Před 7 dny

    Wow . I have to keep listening to you .I spent loads of tie asking French friends to slow the fuck down . You help . Ta

  • @tgilfeth
    @tgilfeth Před 7 dny

    I started learning French in the 1970s. Of course there was no internet then or youtube. This channel would have been so useful back then. But I'm glad I found it now!