Learn the French Alphabet There are two aspects to learning the - TopicsExpress



          

Learn the French Alphabet There are two aspects to learning the French alphabet (Lalphabet français) -- learning the letters and their names, and learning the sounds which are represented by letters, accent marks, and letter combinations. This lesson will teach you how to pronounce the names of the 26 letters of the French alphabet. The French sound inventory is explaned in a lesson on French pronunciation where you will learn about French vowels, consonants, accent marks, and essential pronunciaiton rules. The French alphabet is based on the Latin alphabet. It consists of the same 26 letters as the modern English alphabet, however many letters are pronounced differently. Knowing the letter names will come in handy when you need to recite an alphabet or spell each letter in a word individually as if you were in a spelling bee contest. The table below shows proper letter names. French letter Letter name IPA transcription Aa ah /a/ Bb beh /be/ Cc seh /se/ Dd deh /de/ Ee uh /ə/ Ff eff /ɛf/ Gg zheh /ʒe/ Hh ahsh /aʃ/ Ii ee /i/ Jj zhee /ʒi/ Kk kah /ka/ Ll ell /ɛl/ Mm em /ɛm/ Nn en /ɛn/ Oo oh /o/ Pp peh /pe/ Qq koo /ky/ Rr air /ɛʀ/ Ss ess /ɛs/ Tt teh /te/ Uu ooh /y/ Vv veh /ve/ Ww doobl-veh /dubləve/ Xx eeks /iks/ Yy ee-grek /igrək/ Zz zed /zɛd/ French accents In addition, the base Latin letters are extended in French with accent marks and ligatures. There are five accent marks used in written French. The accents are used to change the sounds of the French letters, graphically distinguish words whose spelling would otherwise be the same, or indicate an S that existed in old French. Each accent mark can be applied only to certain letters. The accents are required on small letters, but they are often omitted on capital letters. Accent Letters used Examples acute accent ´ (accent aigu) é only éléphant: elephant grave accent ` (accent grave) è, à, ù fièvre: fever, là: there où: where circumflex ˆ (accent circonflexe) â, ê, î, ô, û gâteau: cake, être: to be, île: island, chômage: unemployment, dû: past participle of devoir diaeresis ¨ (tréma) ë, ï, ü, ÿ Noël: Christmas, maïs: corn, aigüe: acute(fem) cedilla ¸ (cédille) ç only français: French French ligatures Æ æ - formed from the letters a and e. It is used to spell Latin and Greek borrowings like tænia and ex æquo. Œ œ - a ligature of o and e. It is most prominent in the words cœur (heart), sœur (sister), œuf (egg) and œil (eye), in which it represents the sound /œ/ or /ø/. French also uses œ in direct borrowings from Latin and Greek. So, cœliac in French is cœliaque. In such cases, the œ is pronounced /e/. In some words, e.g. phénix, the œ is changed to a more French é.
Posted on: Mon, 12 Jan 2015 15:24:16 +0000

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