Did you know that H changes the pronunciation of the group of words? 📚 Get the eBook here : bit.ly/2WpXsz2 📚 Learn more vocabulary by word families : bit.ly/350Tdyt The PDF : theperfectfrench.com/shop/pdf-course-books/the-complete-pronunciation-course-learn-the-french-pronunciation-in-55-lessons/
Bonjour Dylane et comment allez vous! You discuss the different pronunciation of H with examples & very helpful to learn French by using IPA. We are very grateful to your effort. Merci beaucoup pour votre Lesson.
not a hard concept but in the middle of a regular conversation, so hard to remember spontaneously, which is which for a particular word. But I guess memorizing a few common ones, like "haut," is pretty important.
Bonjour Dylane Merci Pour Pronunciation Lessons: By the way I have a question : (une hircondelle )! (une) it finished by e and (hircondelle) started by (muet h and i ) is it right to make link between (ne) from (une) and (hi) from word (hircondelle) , (une) word finished by a Vowel not by consonant thank you for your free pronunciation course this course was very useful for me 🥰🥰🥰🥰
Bonjour Dylane. I newly subscribed your channel, and I just started my French learning since this new year. I think pronunciation is very important when starting to learn new language. So I found this channel is very useful and wish I can improve my French. Merci beaucoup Dylane !
Welcome aboard 😀 I am very happy that you trust me with your French journey! I try to answer comments every day so don't hesitate to let me know if you have a question 🙂
Same here. I have been searching channels for learning French beginning of this year and her courses have the best organized and systematic contents. Since she offers these for free, I donated and bought her books as my tokens of appreciations. Let's promote her channels to the French learning communities as often as possibly.
What percent of the time is it must and aspire ? Thank you for these videos. I bought the course and your dictionary. So helpful (btw if you sold flash cards based on the dictionary I’d buy them).
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane There is actually a logic to it. H muet words come to French directly from Latin whereas H aspiré words are mostly Frankish in origin
Thank you for a very enjoyable and informative lesson. You probably already know this, but "Vowel" in English is not pronounced VOY-ELLE. It rhymes with the words growl, prowl, towel. It uses the long "OW" sound you find in COW or the Italian greeting CAIO with an 'L' sound tacked on the end. You wrote the sound yourself in your example HIBOU (OWL)🦉. You help so many people with their French, it's nice to try to help you a little with your English (which is almost perfect of course).👍
Thank you Martin, I really struggle with this one! I try to practice with my husband but I think he is too mice to tell me when I am wrong :D I will practice with your examples :)
I get that question a lot ;) For us it's 2 different animals but in English there are the same. It's something about their ears or something like that. I think it's the same thing about "dove" and "pigeon". In some languages there is only one word to describe them, in others there are 2 words
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane For us in Spanish, both are different animals like in France and it is related with the ears and form of the face of both animals. We call the chouette "una lechuza" and we call the hibou "un búho".
Great lesson. However, I'd appreciate it if a more experienced learner could explain why "habit" is here pronounced sometimes as ending with "i" and sometimes seems to end with a "ich" or "ish" sound. I'm totally confused.
It's a thing French speakers do when a word ends with I or U. We can often hear ush or ish at the end. Depending on the area, some do it more than others :)
I cannot for the life of me figure out when the H is acting as consonant. All the H words seem to act as vowels to me, except in the middle of a sentence. Please help!
Did you know that H changes the pronunciation of the group of words?
📚 Get the eBook here : bit.ly/2WpXsz2
📚 Learn more vocabulary by word families : bit.ly/350Tdyt
The PDF : theperfectfrench.com/shop/pdf-course-books/the-complete-pronunciation-course-learn-the-french-pronunciation-in-55-lessons/
Bonjour Dylane et comment allez vous! You discuss the different pronunciation of H with examples & very helpful to learn French by using IPA. We are very grateful to your effort. Merci beaucoup pour votre Lesson.
Un grand merci ☺️
Watched this video two times, because it is interresting. 🦉🦉🦉🦉🦉.
Merci :)
I have watched all Dylane's videos 5 to 10 times because I always find something else to learn, and new questions to ask. :)
Grand merci madame 🌹🌹
Merci à toi :)
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane 🌹🌹💐💐
not a hard concept but in the middle of a regular conversation, so hard to remember spontaneously, which is which for a particular word. But I guess memorizing a few common ones, like "haut," is pretty important.
I totally agree! But honestly I heard many times French speakers say "Les Zharicots", so don't worry too much if you make a mistake 😉
Bonjour Dylane
Merci Pour Pronunciation Lessons:
By the way I have a question : (une hircondelle )! (une) it finished by e and (hircondelle) started by (muet h and i ) is it right to make link
between (ne) from (une) and (hi) from word (hircondelle) ,
(une) word finished by a Vowel not by consonant
thank you for your free pronunciation course
this course was very useful for me 🥰🥰🥰🥰
Yes you can :)
Merci beaucoup, Dylane!
Merci à toi :)
Bonjour Dylane. I newly subscribed your channel, and I just started my French learning since this new year. I think pronunciation is very important when starting to learn new language. So I found this channel is very useful and wish I can improve my French.
Merci beaucoup Dylane !
Welcome aboard 😀 I am very happy that you trust me with your French journey! I try to answer comments every day so don't hesitate to let me know if you have a question 🙂
Same here. I have been searching channels for learning French beginning of this year and her courses have the best organized and systematic contents. Since she offers these for free, I donated and bought her books as my tokens of appreciations. Let's promote her channels to the French learning communities as often as possibly.
Un grand merci
Merci à toi :)
What percent of the time is it must and aspire ? Thank you for these videos. I bought the course and your dictionary. So helpful (btw if you sold flash cards based on the dictionary I’d buy them).
Lauren I am thinking about flashcards, probably next year :D
There isn't really a percentage actually :/ It's really a case to case
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane Thanks! And I can't wait for the flashcards!!!!
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane There is actually a logic to it. H muet words come to French directly from Latin whereas H aspiré words are mostly Frankish in origin
@@TMThesaurus x Thank you, I love language history!
Thank you for a very enjoyable and informative lesson. You probably already know this, but "Vowel" in English is not pronounced VOY-ELLE. It rhymes with the words growl, prowl, towel. It uses the long "OW" sound you find in COW or the Italian greeting CAIO with an 'L' sound tacked on the end. You wrote the sound yourself in your example HIBOU (OWL)🦉. You help so many people with their French, it's nice to try to help you a little with your English (which is almost perfect of course).👍
Thank you Martin, I really struggle with this one! I try to practice with my husband but I think he is too mice to tell me when I am wrong :D I will practice with your examples :)
J'ai une question: pourquoi n'y a-t-il pas de liaison dans l'expression "corps humain" mais y en a-t-il quand on écrit "d'humain"?
Hi Dylane, how to identify whether it’s H muet or H aspiré.
You have to remember them by heart :)
So how do we know whether it is aspiré or silent? Remember them one by one or what?
Yes ;) But only remember the ones you use
Super
☺️
Merci beaucoup dylane,, is there difference between chouette and hibou?
I get that question a lot ;)
For us it's 2 different animals but in English there are the same. It's something about their ears or something like that.
I think it's the same thing about "dove" and "pigeon". In some languages there is only one word to describe them, in others there are 2 words
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane Oh, make sense 😅 Merci!🙏🏻
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane For us in Spanish, both are different animals like in France and it is related with the ears and form of the face of both animals.
We call the chouette "una lechuza" and we call the hibou "un búho".
Comment le sais tu quand le H est muet ou aspiré ? Merci beaucoup pour votre vidéo 🙏
Malheureusement tu dois savoir cela par cœur 😕 Mais quand tu étudies, étudies toujours avec LE ou LA comme ça tu sais si c'est muet ou aspiré 🙂
@@TheperfectfrenchwithDylane ah ok, merci beaucoup ❤️
💓
Great lesson. However, I'd appreciate it if a more experienced learner could explain why "habit" is here pronounced sometimes as ending with "i" and sometimes seems to end with a "ich" or "ish" sound. I'm totally confused.
It's a thing French speakers do when a word ends with I or U. We can often hear ush or ish at the end. Depending on the area, some do it more than others :)
I cannot for the life of me figure out when the H is acting as consonant. All the H words seem to act as vowels to me, except in the middle of a sentence. Please help!
You have to remember them by heart :)
@ Ah ha! I am relieved to know that I am not just a dummy! 😆☺️
@ - Just ou of curiosity, which would be considered the worse grammar error: linking an h aspire word, or not linking an h muet word?
Super
Merci 🙂