The French R Explained Simply for English Speakers

March 26, 2026

The French r is one of the first sounds that marks a learner as a foreigner. But it is also one of the most trainable. With a clear understanding of where it comes from and a few minutes of daily practice, most people can produce a convincing French r within a few weeks.

Where the French r comes from

The English r is produced near the front of the mouth. The French r is produced at the back of the throat, near the uvula (the small dangling piece at the back of your mouth). It creates a soft friction sound, almost like a gentle gargling.

How to practice it step by step

  1. Say the English word “ah” and hold the sound.
  2. Without moving your tongue, try to make a friction sound at the very back of your throat, as if you are lightly clearing it.
  3. That friction is the French r. Soften it until it is not too harsh.
  4. Now try it before a vowel: ra, re, ri, ro, ru

Common words to practice with

  • rouge = red
  • rue = street
  • merci = thank you
  • parler = to speak
  • voiture = car
  • restaurant = restaurant
  • regarder = to watch

The r at the end of words

The final r in French infinitives ending in -er is usually silent.

  • parler, manger, aller → the r is not pronounced

But in other verb forms and nouns, the final r is pronounced.

  • voir, avoir, venir, partir, coeur, soirr is pronounced

Double r in French

When you see rr, it is simply a slightly stronger version of the same sound.

  • arreter, erreur, courrir

Final tip

Do not aim for perfection immediately. A slightly imperfect French r is far better than using the English r. Native speakers will still understand you, and your pronunciation will improve naturally the more you listen and speak.

alex

About the author

alex

French teacher and content creator sharing practical lessons, study tips, and everyday French to help learners progress with confidence.

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