French Video 2: The French Vowels

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  • Опубліковано 15 жов 2024
  • This is the second 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-fo...
    My Pronunciation Trainers: fluent-forever...
    Anki Language Learning: ankilanguagelea...
    More Anki Decks, including French Pronunciation: speakada.com
    Reddit's Anki Language Learning Community: / ankilanguagelearning
    A super detailed discussion of the IPA: • Pronunciation Tutorial...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 123

  • @is88uu
    @is88uu 8 років тому +152

    I have to say, this is the best way to learn pronunciation of a language. Lots of students do not emphasize the pronunciation, but they forget that sound is the origin of language. If someone cannot make the right sound, it is difficult to deliver the right information too.

    • @thewolfgodoflight1559
      @thewolfgodoflight1559 5 років тому +2

      It seems so obvious, but people don’t do it

    • @thewolfgodoflight1559
      @thewolfgodoflight1559 5 років тому +2

      When I took Spanish class, the only background I has was pronunciation, and I learned twice as fast as everyone else

    • @TwistedThunderKittie
      @TwistedThunderKittie 3 роки тому +2

      Same. I know children learn by imitation and with justs sounds first, but I find it goes so much quicker if I can systematize and analyze a language through the IPA, and THEN learn vocab/grammar/spelling.

  • @bernardoabf
    @bernardoabf 4 роки тому +60

    3:50 i->y
    4:15 ɛ->œ
    4:22 ɔ
    4:51 e->ø
    6:05 ã
    6:25 ɛ~
    6:28 ɔ~

  • @TheStranger255
    @TheStranger255 9 років тому +46

    It's the first time to see a French phonetic tutorial that I like. Thanks for sharing.

  • @MrUidX
    @MrUidX 7 років тому +41

    Finally a quality video that actually focuses on how to make the sound with the tongue positions and proper IPA symbols! Thank you so much, this has been really helpful!

  • @jackbaker7232
    @jackbaker7232 6 років тому +15

    I think these concepts and illustrations are invaluable ! For me 80% of learning pronunciation is knowing where I tongue should be. I just wish the narrator/teacher would slow down some, its like they are in a hurry to get through the lesson.

  • @michaelfrazier7234
    @michaelfrazier7234 8 років тому +2

    I speck Bulgarian but have studied Persian and English in the past due to the alphabet differents with The cyrillic I fell in love with IPA quickly. When I start with French I was baffled with fact that no video used ipa and just made the sound and went on. This videos is a god send thank youMerci beaucoup

  • @jakethesnake95
    @jakethesnake95 9 років тому +5

    I'm currently learning Polish, which has 2 nasal vowels, ą and ę. My fluency in French helped me a lot when learning to pronounce them.

  • @epona374
    @epona374 9 років тому +4

    Video approved by a French native speaker ! 1 of the best videos to learn the French sounds ! Brilliant idea to use IPA and compare the sounds of the 2 languages ;-)
    Nevertheless, nowadays there are not clear differences between the sounds of "pâte" & "patte" (there's only 1 unique "a" for most of Frenches!) and in most of the areas of France, no differences between the sounds of "queue" & "pelouse" !

  • @Mary-np2cu
    @Mary-np2cu 3 місяці тому

    Thank you so much for showing which sounds are shared with English and then moving on to ones slightly different from English. It helps it stick in my brain and find the sounds so much easier! Will be rewatching this one a lot

  • @phoebephoebe3037
    @phoebephoebe3037 4 роки тому +4

    The tips on tongue positions for vowels are amazing! They help a lot. Thank you!

  • @espiritufati
    @espiritufati 5 місяців тому

    The visual placement of articulation is soo helpful I've been looking in so many places, thank you!!❤

  • @sachaweb
    @sachaweb 8 років тому +9

    Excellent of course, as it's difficult to find explanations on the physiological aspects of pronunciation elsewhere, and yet they're essential to most learners. I wish however that there was more of that on the nasal vowels. It should be something like: pull the back of the tongue further towards your throat and tighten your sinuses, so that some air flows towards your nose. Autrement, ceci est très apprécié et je me réjouis d'avance de lire le livre "Fluent Forever"!

  • @jakethesnake95
    @jakethesnake95 9 років тому +2

    Une merveilleuse introduction dans la phonétique du français. Ayant déjà un niveau élevé en français depuis très longtemps, je n'en ai pas besoin, mais je ne suis pas mal certain que cette série serait très utile pour les débutants!

  • @diegowilsonhuamanrodriguez492
    @diegowilsonhuamanrodriguez492 8 років тому +2

    thank you so much ,Gabriel to know this really accelerate the learning process almost 75% .greetings from Peru

  • @aarongj1563
    @aarongj1563 9 місяців тому

    this is the best french pronunciation video I've found.

  • @Jennie_Zhi_Tv
    @Jennie_Zhi_Tv 7 років тому +1

    Every student need to watch this video, exactly what i needed.
    Thanks to whoever came up with the wonderful ideas.

  • @SQLBucketHatGirl
    @SQLBucketHatGirl 8 років тому +9

    This is exactly what i need. Merci beaucoup!

    • @bkhoavo
      @bkhoavo 6 років тому

      Sing a french song!

  • @tatjy93
    @tatjy93 3 роки тому

    Finally! I have been searching for a video that uses linguistics techniques! Merci beaucoup

  • @aaskopina
    @aaskopina 10 років тому +4

    Thank you a lot for the best and the most clear phonetics lessons :)

  • @maikersanchezleon8686
    @maikersanchezleon8686 8 місяців тому

    Excellent videos, I always follow your work.
    Only one thing I think it's important to highlight: these two sounds
    /ə/ and /ø/, aren't the same. Now that I have been studying french for a while I can notice the difference between them. And basically for the first one /ə/ your tongue stays low and your lips are kinda round but relax and ofc the pronunciation is quicker than the other sound.

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  8 місяців тому +1

      Hello there! Thank you for the comment. We wish you continued success in learning French!

  • @stoiclady3529
    @stoiclady3529 8 років тому

    Very wise and insightful way of teaching. It suffices to say it's my fourth video in a roll, and as if it was not enough you have a very charming voice! Merci!

  • @thewolfgodoflight1559
    @thewolfgodoflight1559 5 років тому +6

    “Can’t” sounds kind of funny, that cracked me up

  • @doraledesma9248
    @doraledesma9248 3 роки тому +1

    This is so helpful for an English speaker trying to learn French! Thank you so much!

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  3 роки тому

      You're very welcome! We're happy to know this was helpful to you 😃

  • @ramzy-6566
    @ramzy-6566 2 роки тому

    Thank you, all of your video amazing.

  • @patriciacharnet
    @patriciacharnet 8 років тому

    une très bonne vidéo explicative des phonèmes francophones - j'aime beaucoup la série de Gabriel Wyner et les recommande chaleureusement à tous mes étudiants anglophones - ayant le dialect parisien, je dois dire que je ne fais pas souvent la différence entre un brin d'herbe et un homme brun ou la patte du chien et j'aime les pâtes italiennes - très bon explicatif - je renvoie souvent mes étudiants britanniques sur les pages de Gabriel Wyner - une très belle contribution à l'apprentissage du français par un maître de la phonologie de la langue française - très beau travail!

  • @taylorgordon4632
    @taylorgordon4632 4 роки тому

    i love the phonetic instruction!! I am majoring in Spanish (yes, I speak it), but I am taking a French elective (always wanted to learn it to go to Paris someday) and I took a phonetics class in Spanish and it helped me with the dialects and such I have a video project for french due and I am happy I found this!

  • @latinar8558
    @latinar8558 5 років тому +1

    omg ,it’s useful,thanks a lot.I think the key to the perfect pronunciation is the right position of the tongue!!

  • @docholl93
    @docholl93 Місяць тому

    The french schwa has indeed the same quality of a french “eu” sound, the difference is “e” can be dropped most of the times while “eu” can’t. One thing, the open “o” as in “donne, homme, bloque” is usually unrounded, so that these words sound VEEERY close to how an American would pronounce “done, hum, bluck”

  • @yordysanchez2991
    @yordysanchez2991 11 місяців тому

    I really love the explanation

  • @mikedragonlord07
    @mikedragonlord07 8 років тому

    Thank you very much for making this excellent video. I was having some troubles trying to figure out how to pronounce that œ but now it looks so simple.

  • @blanchehermine
    @blanchehermine 7 років тому

    I've read that [oe] and [ə] are similar, not [ø] and [ə]: the [oe] is long, but [ə] is always short. But they both are rounded [ɛ]. Whereas ø sound is rounded [e]. And there are also forth nasal sound [œ̃].

    • @andrecastanho3186
      @andrecastanho3186 7 років тому +2

      He probably hasn't mentioned the fourth nasal vowel because there's a discussion nowadays among experts that states the vowel [œ̃] is also disappearing in modern French. I've been studying French and this vowel is not anymore distinguished from the vowel [̃ɛ̃] by many speakers in France (including the region of Paris), specially the younger ones. So, words that in the past would be pronounced differently, like "brin" /bʁɛ̃/ and "brun" /bʁœ̃/, are now pronounced the same. But this is not widespread yet.

  • @saladedefruit2529
    @saladedefruit2529 10 місяців тому

    2:25 In Quebec, Pâte is prenounced with a low-pitch a

  • @MsSkuzi
    @MsSkuzi 9 років тому

    It's so informative, and it simplifies so much!

  • @DoriceAgol
    @DoriceAgol 14 днів тому

    Thanks. But I wish you could do a live demo using lips. Drawings are great but not everyone can figure them out.

  • @betina...
    @betina... 8 років тому

    Thanks a lot for this video! Very clear and helpful.

  • @Onbehaard
    @Onbehaard 4 роки тому +1

    Interesting that the video only distinguished 3 nasal vowels. When I did French, I was taught there were 4 and was given the nmeonic "On en a un à la main". When I go to the South of France, I hear that they go further and disinguish "an" from "en", so that "en France" is said with different nasal vowels.

    • @leplusgrandsoin8656
      @leplusgrandsoin8656 3 роки тому +1

      hi, french filk here :) differences between un and main, or in and un are not made anymore in France but they still are different sounds in Belgium or Quebec (I can not hear them myself). I was never told there was any differences between en-an. Maybe it used to be but is no more :)

    • @pierrebotella3603
      @pierrebotella3603 3 роки тому +1

      I am French (from Brittany) and I distinguish by speaking [œ̃] (un, eun) from [ɛ̃] (in, ain, ein ...). In the national media in France (radios, TV, etc.) for "un" I always hear [œ̃] and not [ɛ̃]. For me this sound [œ̃] is part of what is called standard French. A French word like "humble" in my opinion best represents the phoneme [œ̃]
      when compared with the pronunciation of the word "simple" ([ɛ̃]). In fact there are plenty of examples ("un instant", "un", "quelqu'un," chacun"," aucun "," jungle "," parfum "... where you can clearly hear the sound [œ̃ ] and not [ɛ̃]) It may all depend on the region, but I speak of so-called standard French that of the media.

    • @gide5489
      @gide5489 Рік тому

      @@leplusgrandsoin8656 Gros menteur.

  • @chilipepper2696
    @chilipepper2696 9 років тому

    your videos have been amazingly helpful! thank you!!!

  • @maikosot
    @maikosot 9 місяців тому

    FABULOUS VIDEO!!!!, MERCI

  • @caninbar
    @caninbar 3 роки тому

    It's curious how you say the 'um' in parfum is pronounced with the E nasal sound, while other dictionaries say it is pronounced with the oe nasal. Furthermore, I understand the o with the line through it as a 'longer' sounding or stressed schwa sound. The schwa sound is unstressed. I've also noticed the nasal E sound as sounding more rounded in many native French speakers like the guy on the InnerFrench videos.

  • @marcellocapone4925
    @marcellocapone4925 8 років тому

    I like the sound of those shortcuts. Thanks.

  • @LeandroMeneghin
    @LeandroMeneghin 8 років тому

    There are even more nasal vowels in portugues and, in addiction to it, there are nasal dithongs and trithongs. The pronunciation is quite similar to French, cause the M and N arent pronounced after vowels.

  • @MrMirville
    @MrMirville 2 роки тому

    If you start with GA accent, french u is best approximated by English u as in occupy, education, where the "you" sound of English long u reduces to yw, where the w reduces to just a rounding of the mouth. It is actually now a more and more frequent vowel in AE. The closet thing to French eu is American er, ur or ir as in singer, burst, first with the tongue pointed towards the upper lip rather than to the front palate. When the final r is non rhotic (not grumbled) in GAE it is practically the same sound, which generally happens when that vowel if off the main stress, as in curfew. The muted e sound of French is the same as in the or behind. The more open œu as in oeuf is practically the same except that you can imitate the er sound as in verse in a non-rhotic accent of English.

  • @TheShamansQuestion
    @TheShamansQuestion 9 років тому

    Tres bien! Merci! Great video for learning my French.

  • @mariarobinson4619
    @mariarobinson4619 4 роки тому

    One sound at the TIME will really help me!!

  • @skrivbordslampan6923
    @skrivbordslampan6923 5 років тому +2

    Are all french vowels short?

  • @antonioneto9681
    @antonioneto9681 3 роки тому

    Excellent !

  • @gladysma308
    @gladysma308 4 роки тому +4

    3:36 rounded vowels
    5:20 nasal vowels
    6:20 review

  • @jilliangoodwin4287
    @jilliangoodwin4287 4 роки тому

    This is excellent thank you!!!!!!

  • @doctorstrange2750
    @doctorstrange2750 4 роки тому

    So much helpful!

  • @alexwentoutside6843
    @alexwentoutside6843 3 роки тому

    it is soooo helpful for my Philology exam !

  • @rdd90
    @rdd90 8 років тому

    Very helpful video, merci!
    5:51 So what's the difference between nom and non? Are they homophones?

  • @farawaykin
    @farawaykin 8 років тому +2

    I still don't understand all of it but this vid made my studying a bit easier, thanks. although I still think French is gonna kill me

  • @jimnewton4534
    @jimnewton4534 4 роки тому

    Did you skip the open o sound which is difficult for English speakers? Asin rose?

  • @friedrichnietzsche7805
    @friedrichnietzsche7805 6 років тому

    I see you are a native US citizen. How's your French accent though?

  • @callmeswivelhips8229
    @callmeswivelhips8229 7 років тому +2

    WHY IS IT SO COMPLICATED!!! I want to learn French, but how in the world am I going to get a handle on all this pronunciation?

  • @joshuapommet6113
    @joshuapommet6113 3 роки тому

    can you give me the ipa for immature in francais? I cant find it on the wikitionary

  • @jt1962
    @jt1962 8 років тому

    Interesante forma de aprender las vocales

  • @jumbuinruthmaya128
    @jumbuinruthmaya128 7 років тому

    I love this

  • @roisela3441
    @roisela3441 3 роки тому

    is the eu sound in the french words "heure" and "leur" and "veux" really is the same?
    sounds a bit diffirent.. can someone help?

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  3 роки тому +1

      Hi Roi! The sounds of these words should be different. It might help by using an online phonetic dictionary that can confirm the sounds for you but you should be able to differentiate. 😊

    • @roisela3441
      @roisela3441 3 роки тому

      ​@@FluentForeverApp
      thank you very much, i do have one more question if you could spare the time, in the alphabet french song
      ua-cam.com/video/5xuZxGirWQI/v-deo.html
      when they sing the letter 'e' (singing the name of the letter), it sounds like the eu sound in your video, are they really the same sound or am i hearing it wrong?
      i am trying to get an answer to this question for the last year.. i asked a ton of people but no one can give me a straight answer, i will be forever in your debt if you can help.
      So to sum up, the question is:
      Is the name of the letter 'e' equivalent to the sound "eu" in the words "queue" and "feu".

  • @Mamonoui
    @Mamonoui 2 місяці тому

    5:19 Actually, there are four nasal vowels not three, /ɛ̃/ /œ̃/ /ɑ̃/ /ɔ̃/ (you didn't say /œ̃/)

  • @luisperezmedina6724
    @luisperezmedina6724 9 років тому

    Hi! I thought there were 4 nasal vowels? I thought the "un/um" spellings made the [œ~ ] sound.
    Is this not the case in standard French?

    • @Sarangsa_96
      @Sarangsa_96 9 років тому

      My dictionary shows that there are four nasal vowels as well...

    • @M_Julian_TSP
      @M_Julian_TSP 6 років тому

      Most of the French doesn't pronounce the /œ̃/ sound, they pronounce /ɛ̃/ instead. I personally differenciate "un" and "in" (it depends on the region).

  • @edwardfan3052
    @edwardfan3052 2 роки тому +1

    The older I get, the more difficult I find it to distinguish between nuances in the pronunciation of certain vowels.

  • @helenchen4725
    @helenchen4725 Рік тому

    Is there a fourth nasal vowels - œ̃ and how to pronounce it

    • @gide5489
      @gide5489 Рік тому

      Yes, there are a lot of BS on YT on this pronouncitation, including this video, but you can find a few ones that explain it correctly. If you know how to pronounce the "u" sound, the mouth position, forwards, is the same.

  • @wenkai2907
    @wenkai2907 10 років тому

    I like it Thank you~

  • @paulthomas281
    @paulthomas281 Рік тому

    Aren't there 4 nasal vowels in French? That is what I've always seen and heard in lessons on French phonology.

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  Рік тому

      Hi Paul, that's correct! The 4th one is mainly used in the South of France so mastering the 3 covered in this video is absolutely enough to be able to nail French pronunciation. We hope this helps clarify!

    • @gide5489
      @gide5489 Рік тому

      @@FluentForeverApp French is also spoken in Québec, Belgium, Switzerland, Africa, DOM-TOM... Limiting the correct pronounciation of the un sound to south of France is wrong. Why teaching something if you don't want to do it correctly?

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  Рік тому

      Indeed, French is spoken in many countries. At the time of publishing these videos, we focused on the standard Parisian accent from France. Our point above is that the fourth nasal sound is most common in France, in the south, and therefore is the reason it is not featured in this video. We have not covered other French accents found across the world in our pronunciation training videos as there would be too many to cover. That's not to say they are any less important! We've just focused on the accent most requested by our learners. We hope this helps to clarify 😊

    • @gide5489
      @gide5489 Рік тому

      @@FluentForeverApp It was certainly too big an effort to respect French language considering 4 nasal sounds instead of 3! Btw I have my family in Paris and they all pronounce the un sound correctly. And listen to the song "Jour un" from Louane who is from the extreme North of France. She sings Jour Un not Jour In. Or Saez from Savoie, is it the South for you?

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  Рік тому

      We understand your concerns and will pass this on to your language development team for review. Thank you for the feedback!

  • @redfruit1993z
    @redfruit1993z 8 років тому

    I read a book of psychology and it said that English could never pronounce the u of aigu. Just like the French has difficulties with th. Don't know where is the psychology in that.

    • @M_Julian_TSP
      @M_Julian_TSP 6 років тому +1

      Red Fruit Pure bullshit. I'm French and I can perfectly pronounce the th sound (which is way easier to pronounce than other English sounds imo). On the other hand I have some English speaking friends that can perfectly pronounce the French U.

  • @tsubasa123ist
    @tsubasa123ist 8 років тому

    Omg i cant differentiate between oe and e upside down help me

  • @mohamadaminabdolahzade1205
    @mohamadaminabdolahzade1205 3 роки тому

    [ø] is still unclear to me as a non-native English speaker, why soooo complicated vowels???

  • @MarcoVenustus
    @MarcoVenustus 8 років тому +1

    That open nasal E sounds a lot like "ã" to me. So to all Brazilians. Can someone help me? I can't say it right.

    • @MarcoVenustus
      @MarcoVenustus 8 років тому +1

      I'm managing to speak it by pronouncing an open "e" and then making it nasal. I think it's working, but I'll only know when I speak with a french person.

    • @evermorevictorious2742
      @evermorevictorious2742 4 роки тому +1

      I agree with you.

  • @szymonbaranowski8184
    @szymonbaranowski8184 Рік тому

    nasal o and nasal a are really hard to distinguish
    despite being native sounds in polish too haha
    i heard in every nasal a nasal o
    or your versions are so close to each other lol
    insect also doesn't sound as nasal e hear

  • @szymonbaranowski8184
    @szymonbaranowski8184 Рік тому

    how do you know which e read which way in French lol

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  Рік тому

      Hi! 🙂 There are a few rules for the letter E in French.
      You can find more information about this here: grammar.collinsdictionary.com/pronunciation-guide-fr/letter-e

  • @andyedwards9011
    @andyedwards9011 4 роки тому

    I don't know where the heck you heard people pronoucnce shoe as [ʃʊu] (Australia or something??), it doesn't seem to match your American accent. Also you pronounced foot weirdly when explaining that :P

  • @LeoUnlion
    @LeoUnlion 3 роки тому

    Quelques erreurs :
    insect -> "insecte"
    éviér -> "évier"

  • @brianrahadi5469
    @brianrahadi5469 4 роки тому

    Now i can spell 'tu' properly :D

  • @SnakeyJakob
    @SnakeyJakob 9 років тому

    It would be awesome if there were a visualization of "rounding your lips"

    • @notnono5342
      @notnono5342 7 років тому +1

      Jake Ramsey you asked this ages ago but it helps to say o silently. that's most likely the position

  • @Pi3C35
    @Pi3C35 9 років тому

    Excellent video, but I was actually looking for a video with a real person pronouncing them so I could mimic them. Technology is a blessing, but I miss human interaction.

    • @DoriceAgol
      @DoriceAgol 14 днів тому

      Me too. A real human pronouncing would be super helpful 😊

  • @RzSnR
    @RzSnR 6 років тому

    Just the a's are confusing lol

  • @giantandomniscientlevitati8969
    @giantandomniscientlevitati8969 3 роки тому

    lol, I'm french trying to learn how to pronounce the english vowels, I'm such a criminal

    • @FluentForeverApp
      @FluentForeverApp  3 роки тому +1

      😀 It's perfectly ok! We just hope that you enjoyed the video and found it useful!🙂

  • @Mercure250
    @Mercure250 7 років тому

    Be careful with English vowels though, as accents can be really different from country to country...and even from region to region, especially in England.
    For example, the phoneme /ʌ/ being realized [ʌ] is not universal in the English-speaking world.

  • @IamChandEvil
    @IamChandEvil 6 років тому

    Shat. Haha

  • @DoriceAgol
    @DoriceAgol 14 днів тому

    I also think that you are far too fast and assume thay everyone understands you.

  • @wtfcomments2585
    @wtfcomments2585 7 років тому +1

    shat?