FrenchNow French Liaison Rules: When to Link Words (and Not To) French liaison links a silent final consonant to the next vowel. Learn the obligatory, forbidden, and optional rules, plus the s→z and d→t sound shifts. FrenchNow June 4, 2026 • 5 min read #liaison #pronunciation #connected-speech #beginner
FrenchNow French Filler Words: Euh, Bah, Du Coup, Quoi French filler words like euh, bah, du coup, and quoi make you sound fluent, not lazy. Learn what each one does, where it goes, and how to use them naturally. FrenchNow June 4, 2026 • 6 min read #filler-words #spoken-french #fluency #du-coup #pronunciation
FrenchNow French Numbers 1 to 100: Count With Confidence French numbers 1 to 100 in one complete chart, with pronunciation, the et-un rule, hyphens, and the four-twenties system explained so you can count anywhere. FrenchNow June 4, 2026 • 6 min read #numbers #vocabulary #pronunciation #beginner
FrenchNow How to Pronounce the French R (Step by Step) The French R is a back-of-the-throat sound, not a rolled R. Learn the exact tongue position and a step-by-step drill to build it from sounds you already make. FrenchNow June 4, 2026 • 6 min read #pronunciation #french-r #accent #beginner
FrenchNow French Silent Letters: The CaReFuL Rule Final consonants in French are silent by default — except C, R, F, L. The CaReFuL rule, the silent -e, the plural-s trap, and liaison, explained simply. FrenchNow June 4, 2026 • 5 min read #pronunciation #silent-letters #careful-rule #beginner
FrenchNow French Numbers 70, 80, 90 Made Simple French numbers 70, 80, 90 are soixante-dix, quatre-vingts, and quatre-vingt-dix. Learn three build formulas to make any number 70-99 on the fly. FrenchNow June 3, 2026 • 5 min read #numbers #beginner #counting #pronunciation