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Thursday, March 17, 2011

French Alphabet and Pronunciation of French Language


The French alphabet (l'alphabet français) by e.seran senguttuvan
A a
B b
C c
D d
E e
F f
G g
H h
I i
J j
K k
L l
M m
[ɑ]
[be]
[se]
[de]
[ə]
[ɛf]
[ʒe]
[aʃ]
[i]
[ʒi]
[ka]
[ɛl]
[ɛm]
N n
O o
P p
Q q
R r
S s
T t
U u
V v
W w
X x
Y y
Z z
 [ɛn]
[o]
[pe]
[ky]
[ɛʀ]
[ɛs]
[te]
[y]
[ve]
[dubləve]
[iks]
[igʀɛk]
[zɛd]




Learn French Alphabets :: Fastest Way To Learn French
I think anyone starting to learn a language will find alphabets as the beginning point. If this is the first time you are learning a language beside your native language, then take this page with special importance. It is the starting line on your race to becoming a French Language expert. Good luck friend!
French Alphabets - L'Alphabet Français;





French Alphabet and Pronunciation of French Language

             The French alphabet is exactly the same as the English alphabet, except the letters are pronounced differently. Following are the approximate French pronunciations for each letter. For related topics, please click on French Language.Letter Pronouncation Letter Pronuncation;
Model (1)
           french alphabets
A                     -ah (it is pronounce like the ‘a’ in cat)
B                     -bay
C                     -say
D                     -day
E                     -er
F                      -f (it is pronounce like the english ‘f’)
G                     -jay
H                     -ash
I                       -e (it is pronounce like the english ‘e’)
J                      -jee
K                     -ca
L                     -l (it is pronounce like the english ‘l’)
M                    -m (it is pronounce like the english
N                     -n (it is pronounce like the english )
O                     -o (it is pronounce like the english  )
P                      -pay
Q                     -ku
R                     -air
S                      -s (it is pronounce like the english  )
T                      -tay
U                     -ew
V                     -they
W                    -doublethey
X                     -ix (like in six)
Y                     -egrek
Z                      -z (it is pronounce like the english  )

Model (2)

A         ah            N         en
B          bay         O         op
C          say         P          pay
D         day         Q          koo
E          uk            R         ehr
F          ef            S          es
G          ghay      T          tay
H          ash        U          oo
I            ee          V          vay
J            jhay     W         doo-blaw-vay
K          ka          X          ex
L           el          Y           ee-grek
M         em         Z zed
Model (3)


Letter
Name
/ɑ/                       ah
/be/                          beh
/se/                      seh
/de/                     deh
/ø/                       uh
/ɛf/                      eff
/ʒe/                     zheh
/aʃ/                      ahsh
/i/                        ee
/ʒi/                       zhee
/ka/                      kah
/ɛl/                       ell
/ɛm/                     em
/ɛn/                      en
/o/                        oh
/pe/                      peh
/ky/                       koo 
/ɛʁ/                       air
/ɛs/                       ess
/te/                       teh
/y/                         ooh
/ve/                       veh
/dubləve/"double v" doo-blah-yeh
/iks/                      eeks
/iɡʁɛk/ "i grec" (or)    ee-grek
/zɛd/                     zed




by e.senguttuvan, batlagundu

        Some of the individual letters can have accents, which change the way they are pronounced. Following are the different versions: â, ç, é, è, ê, î, ï. These are not different or additional letters, they are merely letters with accents.The letter H is not pronounced, or to be more accurate, is pronounced very lightly.The pronunciation of letters is also affected by their position. If the last letter of a word is a consonant, it is not pronounced unless:· the first letter of the next work is a vowel, or · the consonant is a C, F, L, or R. These four consonants are pronounced even if they are at the end of a word. The way to remember this is to remember the word "careful", which has the same four consonants. The French phrase for "How is that spelled?" is "Comment ça s'écrit?".For words with more than one syllable, the stress is always on the last syllable. If you can practice this, your French will be much better understood.

French (français)

        The French is called romance(lovable) language. French is spoken by about 265 million people in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Canada, Switzerland, Italy, the U.S, Lebanon, French Guiana, north, west and central Africa, Madagascar, some islands in the Indian Ocean, Haiti and other Caribbean islands, Indochina, New Caledonia, the New Hebrides and the French Pacific Territories.
French Alphabet has the same number of letters as English 26, but some of them have “accents” and “cedilla”, that doesn’t make their pronunciation different, only to distinguish them from other similar looking words except the cedilla ç, which is pronounced as “S” and never as “k”. The table below shows how the French letters are pronounced. This french language spoken by about 280 million people in India(pandicherry alias puducherry),France, Belgium, French Guiana, Luxembourg, Canada, Switzerland, Italy, the USA, Lebanon, north, west and central Africa(French is an official language in many African countries, most of them former French or Belgian colonies:
Benin,Burkina Faso,Burundi,Cameroon,Central African Republic,Chad,Comoros,Congo (Brazzaville),Côte d'Ivoire,Democratic Republic of the Congo,Djibouti,Equatorial Guinea (former colony of spain),Gabon,Guinea,Madagascar,Mali,Niger,Rwanda,Senegal,Seychelles,Togo,In addition, French is an administrative language and commonly used, though not on an official basis, in Mauritius and in the Maghreb states:
Algeria (languages of Algeria)
Mauritania (languages of Mauritania)
Morocco (languages of Morocco)
Tunisia (see also languages of Tunisia), Madagascar,a number of islands in the Indian Ocean, Haiti and other Caribbean islands, Indochina, New Caledonia, the New Hebrides and the French Pacific Territories. Basically, french is sweetest language ,but, doubest in pronounciation. 
The French language is descended from Latin.Latin language is mother language of european group of languages,Mostly latin speakon peoples are lived in south america.so,south america is  called latin america or latin spokened countries.latin is first appeared in writing in 842 AD when it was used in the Strasbourg Oaths. Before then Latin was the language used for literature throughout Europe. During the 10th and 11th centuries, French appeared in a number of documents and religious writings, but French literature didn't start to take off until the late 12th / early 13th century. The first great work of French literature was the 'Chanson de Roland' (Song of Roland), which was published in about 1200.
Dialects of the French language
            Acadian French
            African French
            Aostan French
            Belgian French
            Cajun French
            Cambodian French
            Canadian French
            French-based creole languages
            Guyana French
            Indian French
            Jersey Legal French
            Lao French
            Levantine French (most commonly referred to as Lebanese French)
            Louisiana Creole French
            Mauritian Creole
            Maghreb French (see also North African French)
            Meridional French
            Metropolitan French
            Missouri French
            New Caledonian French
            Newfoundland French
            Oceanic French
            Quebec French
            South East Asian French
            Swiss French
            Vietnamese French
            West Indian French
            French Colonial Empire

Learn french from english in my blog

B
C c
 
 
 
G g
H h
I i
J j
K k
L l
M m
[ɑ]
[be]
[se]
[ə]
[ɛf]
[ʒe]
[aʃ]
[i]
[ʒi]
[ka]
[ɛl]
[ɛm]
N n
O o
P p
Q q
R r
S s
T t
U u
V v
W w
X x
Y y
Z z
[ɛn]
[o]
[pe]
[ky]
[ɛʀ]
[ɛs]
 
 
[ve]
[dubləve]
[iks]
[igʀɛk]
[zɛd]

French Alphabet
Aa       as in the word “ask” and never as in the word “able”
Bb        same as in English
Cc        like “s” before "i" or "e" and when it has the cedilla “ç”; otherwise like "k” in Creole.
Dd        same as in English (many words in French alphabet are the same)
Ee         as in “elevated”
Ff          same as in English
Gg         like the "s" in the word “pleasure” before "e" or "i"; otherwise like the "g" in "God", never pronounced as “dj”.
Hh         silent most of the time.
Ii           as in the word “ink” never as in the word “island”
Jj          as in Job, but without the “d” pronounced before the J, never as {djob} but {job}
Kk         same as in English
Ll           same as in English
Mm        same as in English
Nn         same as in English
Oo         same as in English “Old” never as in “Hot” which is pronounced somehow like {hat}
Pp         same as in English
Qq         same as in English
Rr         same as in English but slightly like as in “gh” as in Merci
Ss         same as in English
Tt          same as in English not as sharp. 
Uu         as in the “ultra”, never as in the word “up” or “university” 
Vv        same as in English
Ww      as in English although rare (mainly found in borrowed words)
Xx         same as in English
Yy        same as in English although rare.
Zz         same as in English