French Video 1: The French Consonants and the IPA

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 27. 07. 2024
  • This is the first of a 3-part series on French pronunciation. The goal is to get familiar with the sounds of French. You'll then be able to learn them faster, either through your own studies or through my pronunciation trainers. More links below:
    Flashcard Designs for Teaching Yourself Pronunciation: blog.fluent-forever.com/gallery/
    My Pronunciation Trainers: fluent-forever.com/product/fl...
    Anki Language Learning: ankilanguagelearning.com
    More Anki Decks, including French Pronunciation: speakada.com
    Reddit's Anki Language Learning Community: / ankilanguagelearning
    A super detailed discussion of the IPA: • Pronunciation Tutorial...

Komentáře • 86

  • @abdullahm..2303
    @abdullahm..2303 Před 9 lety +82

    That's not just nice stuff, That's tremendous work. Thank you so much. I love it. I was looking for a video explaining French IPA. since I started learning French, I just knew I needed to learn IPA to get past the scattered letters of a word that is pronounced so differently from what's written. never needed IPA for English before; but for French, IPA just saved me from going crazy on French.

    • @support_gaza
      @support_gaza Před 2 lety +1

      Hello Muslim Brother! Are you arabic or from Pakistan or any other Stan country?

  • @ptkk21
    @ptkk21 Před rokem +6

    My dude, the tempo precision and accuracy in your explanations is superb.

  • @inv8890
    @inv8890 Před 7 lety +11

    This is one of the most helpful videos I have ever watched on youtube ! Thanks a ton :D

  • @ErickGarcia-lm7nw
    @ErickGarcia-lm7nw Před 4 lety +3

    amazing video even after six years I really appreciate it

  • @me4000
    @me4000 Před 4 měsíci

    This is exactly the video I've been looking for! So many pronunciation videos say, "oh, the consonants are the same as English ^_^ , it's so easy" but I could always hear the difference in French audio. Thanks for finally being the one to point this out and explaining how to make the proper sounds! The mouth-shape diagrams and comparisons (cat's car vs. cat scar, etc) help tremendously. You're the hero we don't deserve :D

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  Před 4 měsíci

      Thank you for your kind words. We're glad to hear that our video was helpful. Keep up the great work! 😊

  • @amandarollins5616
    @amandarollins5616 Před 4 lety +4

    This is so incredibly helpful!!

  • @sammosaurusrex
    @sammosaurusrex Před 4 lety +2

    Funnily enough, as a native English speaker, I’ve never struggled with throaty r’s like in French and German. R’s made with the tip of the tongue, on the other hand, those throw me for a loop.

  • @bijugangadhar7834
    @bijugangadhar7834 Před 4 lety +1

    This is a marvelous job bro Thank you so much

  • @amin001001
    @amin001001 Před rokem

    Quality material. Good job.

  • @vyaspranar2815
    @vyaspranar2815 Před 7 lety +6

    My philosophy is when one masters the fundamental phonemes of a language and their formation as lexicons then ze can easily conquer that language. I already know 4 languages. Many times tried to practice French phonemes but failed (actually I didn't put much work- as I learn languages on my own on habitual basis and it has no direct material benefit in my life). But here when I come across yours I could able to grasp it without any effort / with very minimal energy. Thanks a lot. Really helped. Certainly, soon I will know French.

  • @talsgarthewanderer6612
    @talsgarthewanderer6612 Před 5 lety +1

    It's been very helpful, thanks!

  • @leo_misha
    @leo_misha Před 7 lety +7

    I think you are the best at explaining, merci, y espero sigas haciendo buenos videos, poka !

    • @Xomper
      @Xomper Před 6 měsíci

      Wrong language, dude

  • @saisaihuang5895
    @saisaihuang5895 Před rokem

    Exactly what i am looking for, thank you so much

  • @Acer040393
    @Acer040393 Před 9 lety

    Really nice stuff!

  • @gladysma308
    @gladysma308 Před 4 lety

    Excellent!

  • @Shewit.
    @Shewit. Před 6 lety

    Thanks body,the best video ever that could help me the way I would like

  • @tramnguyenngocbao4546
    @tramnguyenngocbao4546 Před 20 dny

    insights are served.

  • @interpretertranslatorsanon5916

    You are just excellent !
    Dony SANON, Linguist

  • @paulthomas281
    @paulthomas281 Před 10 měsíci

    Super well done! I didn't know the y-w/v in 'nuage' was a distinct consonant phoneme. Thanks.

  • @changed1867
    @changed1867 Před rokem +1

    Extremely helpful!!! Thanks you

  • @Lam-ey4lm
    @Lam-ey4lm Před rokem

    This is so helpful. Thank you!!!

  • @AStrangerComplete
    @AStrangerComplete Před 10 lety +37

    It's helpful but I think it can be much better for beginners if you pronounce the sounds a little more slowly. Haha.

    • @veryallen3
      @veryallen3 Před 5 lety +7

      you could go to setting of youtube and adjust the speed

    • @kruks
      @kruks Před 3 lety +2

      Not to mention he sells a product (and a subscription now; the old one-time price Anki deck is still available though) that helps with all of this. It doesn't seem intended as a one-stop learning guide, but more of a start of what is the long journey of pronouncing a language with some major differences from English.

  • @yahyamadinahmadinah1010

    well done

  • @francescosarzi
    @francescosarzi Před 2 lety +1

    5:25 the correct ipa symbol wouldn’t be ʀ?

  • @andrewkeane9077
    @andrewkeane9077 Před 10 lety

    Very helpful vids Gabe. I'm about to start the beta testing now, can't wait.

  • @BroxStudio
    @BroxStudio Před 8 lety +4

    It's nice to see someone knew the difference between [kʰ] and [k] xD
    But just one thing, [ɥ] is a semivowel and not a consonant. For the [ɲ] consonant you could take the example "canyon" [kʰænjən].

    • @MarioBecerraC
      @MarioBecerraC Před 6 lety

      I hear the [ɥ] more as a vowel than a semivowel; actually, I had always thought it was a vowel until now. :(

    • @stefanieanduri7880
      @stefanieanduri7880 Před 3 lety

      Yes! I teach it as the glided form of [y].

  • @danilobucker
    @danilobucker Před 5 lety

    magnifique

  • @ThePassingVoid
    @ThePassingVoid Před 4 lety +1

    When i hear French people say oiseau I hear the last vowel as an [u] sound, is that normal?

  • @ramzy-6566
    @ramzy-6566 Před 2 lety +1

    amazing video.

  • @drunkviggo7263
    @drunkviggo7263 Před 3 lety

    Legendary

  • @HurrySun
    @HurrySun Před 4 lety +1

    A question about the letter u: the u in musée and the u in nuage, are they pronounced the same? So far as I know, there's only one pronunciation for this letter in French, but why are the symbols different (y for the first u and the upside-down h for the second)?

    • @colorzebra689
      @colorzebra689 Před 3 lety

      They are both pronounced similarly. The difference is that the sound plays different roles in each word. In musée, /y/ acts as a standalone vowel. In nuage, /ɥ/ is a semivowel, a vowel-like sound that acts a consonant. This means that you pronounce the /ɥ/ faster. Hope this helps!

    • @HurrySun
      @HurrySun Před 3 lety +2

      @@colorzebra689 Ahhh this makes sense to me! So in "nuage", this "u" actually plays the role of "w", so it's basically "nwage" from the English point of view. It's like the Spanish word "suave" pronounced like "swave". Gotcha! Thanks a lot for your reply!

  • @gladysma308
    @gladysma308 Před 4 lety +2

    5:55 review

  • @strongindependentblackwoma1887

    nice ipa for french, i already know the ipa for english.

  • @mrspelly7150
    @mrspelly7150 Před 7 lety +7

    MAdness in the french spelling is right. It makes the language needlessly hard to learn.

  • @laurabernaystudioforvoicetuiti

    Do you have a video that teaches step by step how a person who has 0 knowledge of French can use the IPA? For example I am teaching a group of students French, but one of them says: "But how do I know what IPA symbol to put if I have no idea how it sounds?" What does he/she do then? He/she will look at the word and then have to work out all the letters and their IPA symbols but the question is: how does one who has no knowledge of the language know that the 'eau' in 'oiseau' has the [o] IPA sound? And similarily how will they know that the 'oi' in 'oiseau' will be [wa]?? It seems like IPA is good if you already know what/how the words are pronounced. Your response would be much appreciated :)

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  Před 10 měsíci

      This may help: easypronunciation.com/en/french-letters-pronunciation-ipa-chart There are also many videos on CZcams related to this - you can search French pronunciation and IPA. 🙂

  • @Nikthehermit
    @Nikthehermit Před 3 lety

    5:31 he was the WAP blueprint

  • @ptkk21
    @ptkk21 Před rokem

    1:55 it sounds the same, but it looks different.

  • @zad0m
    @zad0m Před 3 lety

    I didn’t know about k and kh

  • @learnenglishwithfaisalhame895

    DEAR ADMIN.WOULD YOU PLZ SUGGEST ME A DICTIONARY WITH IPA FRENCH SYMBOLS?

  • @jeromej.1992
    @jeromej.1992 Před 8 lety +3

    You did get some pronunciation "wrong" but it wasn't in the highlighted consonant so it isn't that a big deal. "zoo" we pronunce it with the z sound then the same sound as in "au(x)" (as in "au marché") or "eau" (water). And tobogan. Both o are pronounced like the first. Thanks for this great vid.

    • @ThePassingVoid
      @ThePassingVoid Před 4 lety +3

      It appears that it can be pronounced 2 different ways:
      en.wiktionary.org/wiki/zoo#French

  • @ThePassingVoid
    @ThePassingVoid Před 6 lety

    Does the o in homme sound like the au in caught?

  • @CapitalTeeth
    @CapitalTeeth Před 4 lety

    My vision shakes a little bit when i pronounce that upside down R. Anyone else get that too?

  • @tarungaur5961
    @tarungaur5961 Před 4 lety

    I started learning French from IPA
    Is it right or wrong?? Pls?

    • @skeptic781
      @skeptic781 Před 3 lety

      It's good for pronunciation mate!

  • @GHUANG-ot9qo
    @GHUANG-ot9qo Před 6 lety +1

    2:55 loup l
    3:28 ʃ (same as english)
    3:35 ʒ (same)

  • @theophonchana5025
    @theophonchana5025 Před 3 lety

    Uvular R

  • @hibalee8457
    @hibalee8457 Před 7 lety +8

    It's more easier because i am an arab most sounds we actually use thank god 😭

  • @abrahamlinkin2414
    @abrahamlinkin2414 Před 3 lety +1

    5:15 The reason most of us are here.

  • @chenglao7400
    @chenglao7400 Před 5 lety +5

    I appreciate this video, but it teaches way too fast!

  • @julieryan8179
    @julieryan8179 Před rokem

    Why is this video not included with my $300 + text book???

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  Před rokem

      Hello Julie,
      We released these videos approximately eight years ago. But if you have any questions about what is included in your purchase, please get in touch with us at help.fluent-forever.com/hc/en-us/requests/new. We will gladly answer any questions you may have.

  • @yuanliangmeng9020
    @yuanliangmeng9020 Před 4 lety +1

    French t d are dental. English t d are alveolar.

  • @Emile.gorgonZola
    @Emile.gorgonZola Před 5 lety

    Note to self French L is apical not laminal ugh

  • @diegowilsonhuamanrodriguez492

    whats your mother tongue,Gabriel?

  • @memo6032
    @memo6032 Před 3 lety

    Wait the English and the French "s" are the same "s"! I always thought they were different...

  • @lepetitchat123
    @lepetitchat123 Před rokem

    Sorry this turns me off the language even more...

  • @christipher4152
    @christipher4152 Před 2 lety +1

    way too fast bruhhh

  • @harunosakura8007
    @harunosakura8007 Před 7 lety

    There is no such thing as Englishy words. Those n sounding words are pure French and was borrowed in English.

    • @Emile.gorgonZola
      @Emile.gorgonZola Před 5 lety

      Haruno Sakura 黙れ

    • @xFlRSTx
      @xFlRSTx Před 4 lety +1

      according to wiktionary:
      Most terms suffixed with -ing are borrowed directly from English, but some are not (e.g., surbooking, relooking).