French lesson: pronunciation

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Become Fluent in French with the former private French tutor of top Hollywood celebrities.

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C'est vrai, le français coule. Bien dit, professeur Alex!

cfgauss
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i think french is the most challenging of all romance languages but i'm gonna still try it this was very helpful always good to hear native speakers

kevinjoseph
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Hello Alex! I am also Alex and I teach English (Alex's ESL World). I've studied French off and on for many years, never really reaching a level that would allow me to communicate well in France. Last year my husband and I visited Paris for the first time ever, so I studied a lot last year! Still, even though I was able to order food and have very basic conversations, I found that my listening skills needed a lot of work. Your videos are one source I've used.


I have a question, though. I often wonder about two ways to say something that seem very close to me, but I'm sure there are differences I don't know about. One is this - what is the difference between saying "Je voudrais . . ." and "J'aimerais . . ." I learned "Je voudrais" to use when I order things in a restaurant, but I've recently been hearing "J'aimerais". Can you help me with this?


By the way, I just found out you live in Southern California and teach at UC Irvine. I live in Orange County. I'm happy you're here and I hope you like living in Southern California as much as I do!

alexseslworld
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Great topic! It's true, we hardly ever learn about these little things. I think I've heard the same type of pronunciation change in words like "prochain." Le prochain train (masculine pronunciation), but le prochain arrêt (sounds like "prochaine"). Is this correct?

Looking forward to more videos like this! 👍

ZarazXero
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So Un bon ami is pronounced « un bonne ami » ? The nasal sound entirely disappears because of the liaison?

kimo