Reading French aloud is a skill you can improve quickly once you understand the core patterns. French spelling is more consistent than it first appears, and a few simple rules will unlock a large part of the vocabulary.
French is more phonetic than you think
Once you learn the main letter combinations, French becomes fairly predictable to read. The challenge is that the rules are different from English, not that they are absent.
Key letter combinations to know
- ch = “sh” sound → chat, chocolat, chercher
- gn = “ny” sound → montagne, vigne, agneau
- qu = “k” sound → qui, que, quatre
- ph = “f” sound → photo, telephone
- oi = “wah” → moi, toi, voir, boire
- ou = “oo” → vous, rouge, tout
- eau / au = “oh” → beau, gateau, chaud
- ai / ei = “eh” → faire, lait, neige
- eu = rounded “uh” → peur, feu, heureux
Accents change the sound
- é = closed “ay” → café, été, beauté
- è / ê = open “eh” → pere, fete, mere
- ç = “s” sound → francais, garcon, recu
- â / ô = slightly longer vowels → pate, cote
Stress in French
French words are stressed on the last syllable of a breath group, not on individual syllables like in English. This gives French its even, flowing rhythm.
- bo-JOUR, mer-CI, pa-ler
Avoid placing heavy stress on the first syllable, which is the natural English tendency.
A reading method that works
- Read a short sentence silently and identify any tricky letter combinations.
- Read it aloud slowly, focusing on each sound.
- Speed up to a natural pace on the second read.
- Repeat until it flows without stopping.
Good texts for practice
- French children’s books (simple vocabulary, clear sentences)
- French news subtitles (short sentences, standard pronunciation)
- Song lyrics with audio (you can compare your reading to the recording)
Final tip
Read French aloud every day, even for just five minutes. This builds the muscle memory your mouth needs for French sounds and helps your brain associate written words with their spoken form automatically.

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