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University of management & Technology
        Article Topic: Consonants & Vowels in

                 French Language




Program:              MPhil Applied Linguistics, Batch   VIII




Course title:         Phonetics and Phonology
Presented to:    Sir Nazir Malik
Presented by:    Hina Javaid 100884006




                                                                0
Sr.no   Topic                                           Pg.no
1       Abstract                                        1
2       Introduction                                    2
3       Rationale of the topic                          3
4       Description of French alphabets                 4
5       Description of French consonants                5
6       The French articles                             6
7       French phonology                                8
                Stress: Tonic Accent L accent tonique   9
                Intonation                              9
                                                        10
                Final consonants
                                                        10
                Liaison
8       Transcription of the quotes                     11
9       References:                                     12




                                                                1
Topic:
   Description of French alphabets,
       French consonants, Vowels &
                phonology
                   And
       Transcription of quotations in
                 French
Abstract:


                                        2
Learning a foreign language is a skill. This skill becomes challenging when the object language is

difficult, versatile and competent. French language is the accurate example gratia of such a

language of romance and language of galore. Being soft, exuberant and fascinating language, it

mesmerizes the folk all around the world to surpass the glamour of this language.


This article is the same attempt at the very beginning level. It describes the French alphabets

and especially French consonants in detail with their English counterparts. It is tried to

elaborate French phonology to some extent, which obviously is not sufficient as French is a

complete package of a standard language. Along with the description, side-by-side comparison

and connection is stretched to establish an affinity between English and French.


Overall, this article is a first jump into the cavernous ocean of French language.




                                                                                                     3
Introduction:
La langue française or French is a “Romance language”, descendant of Latin and is intimately
related to Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, and Romanian. It is the native tongue of over 87 million
people, official language of 29 countries and has an additional 68 million non-native speakers. It
is one of the three working languages of the European Commission along with English and
German. Despite of having 75 recognized languages prevailed in France, French is the first
obligatory and mandatory language of France. From 17th century to 20th century, French was
the foremost diplomatic language of international relations but after that this role was taken
over by English. French now sustains its status of diplomatic language proudly. French is the
language of sage. It’s erudite, cultured and rich in all of its aspects. Benjamin Franklin rightly
extolled the glory of France in such a way:


Chaque homme a deux nations et un d'entre eux est la France

Meaning: Every man has two nations and one of them is France

French-speaking people have made incursions upon the British Isles many times in the past,
most noticeably in the Norman Invasion of 1066. For this reason, although English is a Germanic
language, at least a third of the English lexicon is derived from French and 40% vocabulary of
English language is based on French origin.




                                                                                                     4
Rationale of the topic:
French is considered and used as a language of diplomacy. It is soft, romance and naïve in
nature. My intention in getting intimate with French alphabets and language lounge in these
facts, which I encountered while surfing for languages and their content;

       It is the second most taught language in the world after English.
       French words are broadly used in every dialect of most of the languages.
       40% of English words (mainly multisyllabic) are loaned from French like Amateur,
       Bayonet, Boulevard, cuisine homage, denim, prude, Cliché, Tour de stade, Repertoire,
       Ricochet, Fiance (disambiguation), Entrepreneur, Façade, Voyeurism and a lot of others
       too.
       Intimacy with French language can boost up test score 100% on SAT.
       Researches shows that studying French enhanced score on Math as compared to those
       who studied math for many years.
       To learn other languages, English, Spanish even Arabic etc; French sets a foundation
       springboard to study them.
       French is spoken in five continents and is used officially in 29 countries and 125 million
       people speak it. Moreover, it is the official language of international agencies like United
       Nations, NATO, UNESCO, International Red Cross and International Olympic Committee.
       Overall, French is the practical of life and French means global communication.




                                                                                                      5
Description of French alphabets:
The French alphabets are based on 26 Roman of Latin alphabets. The vowels include five
diacritics and two orthographic ligatures




character Symbols             pronunciation           Character Symbol            pronunciation
             (IPA                                                (IPA
             transcription)                                      transcription)
a            /a/              ah                      n          /ɛn/             Enn

b            /be/             Bay                     o          /o/              Oh

c            /se/             Say                     p          /pe/             Pay

d            /de/             Day                     q          /ky/             Ku

e            /ə/              Euh                     r          /ɛʀ/             Air

f            /ɛf/             Eff                     s          /ɛs/             Ess

g            /ʒɜ/             Jhay                    t          /te/             Tay

h            /aʃ/             Ash                     u          /y/              Oo

i            /i/              Ee                      v          /ve/             Vay

j            /ʒi/             Zhee                    w          /dubləve/        dubl-vay

k            /ka/             Kah                     x          /iks/            Eeks

l            /ɛl/             El                      y          /igrɛk/          ee-grehk

m            /ɛm/             emm                     z          /zɛd/            zedh




                                                                                                  6
Detailed description of French consonants with approximate sound in English
and examples:

French consonant/sound    approximate sound in English    translation in French
b                         boat                            bateau
c                         centre                          centre
d                         date                            date
f                         fell                            est tombé
g                         gun                             fusil
h                         Aspirated h is used in French   héros
                          hero
j                         measure                         mesure
k/q                       kite                            cerf-volant
l                         lie                             mensonge
m                         man, honey                      home, miel
n                         new                             nouveau
p                         pair                            paire
r                         run                             dirigé
s                         servant                         domestique
t                         train                           train
v                         victory                         victoire
x                         socks                           Chaussettes, expansion
z                         zebra                           zèbre
sch,                      shame                           honte
ni                        lamb                            agneau
ch                        scheme                          projet




                                                                                   7
The French articles:

In French, articles are almost required with all common nouns. They are inflected to agree in
on gender and numbers. French has 3 articles:

    1. Definite ‘la/le’
    2. Indefinite ‘une/un’
    3. partitive ‘du/de la’

Definite ‘the’ or ‘la’:

The French definite article is used with a noun referring to a specific item in the cases where
both the speaker and audience know the item. It is also used with mass nouns and plural nouns
with generic interpretation, and with abstract nouns.for example: I want to learn the French or
je veux apprendre le français

Forms of definite la:

                          singular                 plural
          before consonant before vowel or mute h1
masculine        le2                 l'             les2
feminine          la


The indefinite article ‘une/un’ or ‘a/an’:

The French article is similar to the English indefinite article a/an. The French indefinite article is
used with a noun referring to a non-specific item, or to a specific item when the speaker and
audience do not both know what the item is.

Forms of indefinite article une/un

          singular plural
masculine    un     des
feminine     une




                                                                                                         8
The partitive article ‘du/de la’ or ‘some’:

It is similar to ‘some’ and is used to indicate an indefinite portion of something uncountable, or
an indefinite number of something countable. Forms of the partitive article:

                          singular                 plural
          before consonant before vowel or mute h1
masculine        du                 de l'           des
feminine        de la




                                                                                                     9
French phonology
       Voiced stops /b d ɡ/ are typically produced fully voiced throughout.
       Voiceless stops /p t k/ are unaspirated.
       Nasals: The velar nasal /ŋ/ can occur in final position in borrowed (usually English)
       words: parking, campin, and swing. The palatal nasal /ɲ/ can occur in word initial
       position (e.g. gnon), but it is most frequently found in intervocalic, onset position or
       word-finally (e.g. montagne).

       Fricatives: French has three pairs of homorganic fricatives distinguished by voicing,
         o labiodental /f/~/v/
         o Dental /s/~/z/ like the plosives /t/~/d/, and the nasal /n/.
         o palato-alveolar /ʃ/~/ʒ/
       French has one uvula r or voiced uvular fricative as in [ʁu] roue, "wheel".
         o Vowels are lengthened before this segment.
         o   It can be reduced to an approximant, particularly in final position (e.g. fort) or
             reduced to zero in some word-final positions.
         o For some speakers, a uvular trill is also common, and an apical trill [r] occurs in
             some dialects.
       Lateral and central approximants: The lateral approximant /l/ is unvelarised in both
       onset (lire) and coda position (il).
         o In the onset, the central approximants [w], [ɥ], and [j] each correspond to a high
             vowel, /u/, /y/, and /i/ respectively.
         o There are a few minimal pairs where the approximant and corresponding vowel
             contrast, but there are also many cases where they are in free variation.
             Contrasts between /j/ and /i/ occur in final position as in /pɛj/ paye, "pay", vs.
             /pɛi/ pays, "country".




Stress: Tonic Accent - L’accent tonique

                                                                                                  10
In English, certain syllables are stressed more than others but in French; every syllable is evenly
stressed and pronounced. French is a syllable-timed language, so equal emphasis is given to
each syllable as compared to stress-rhythm language, English. For example

English stressed word                                  French counterpart
photography                                            Photographie
authority                                              autorité
nationality                                            Nationalité
passion                                                passion
education                                              éducation



Intonation

Intonation in French is slightly different from English. In general, the intonation rises only for a
yes/no question, and the rest of the time, the intonation falls. French intonation starts at a
higher pitch and falls continuously throughout the sentence, whereas in English, the stressed
syllable has a higher pitch that what precedes and follows it.

Sentence Type       English              Intonation         French                       Intonation
Yes/No Question     Are you leaving?     2-3                Est-ce que vous partez?      2-3
Information         Where are you        2-3-1              Où est-ce que vous           4-2–1
Question            going?                                  allez?
Imperative          Do it. / Don't do    (2) - 3 - 1        Fais-le. / Ne le fais pas.   4-2-1
                    it.
Exclamation         What a surprise!     2-3-1              Quelle surprise!             4-2–1


Declarative         I bought a dress.    2-3-1              J'ai acheté une robe.        3-2-1




Final consonants:

                                                                                                       11
In French, certain consonants are silent when they are the final letter of a word. Final single
consonants, in particular s, x, z, t, d, n, g and m, are normally silent. A consonant is considered
"final" when no vowel follows it even if one or more consonants follow it.

                The letters p (as in 'coup'), s (as in 'héros'), t (as in 'chat'), d (as in 'marchand),
                and x (as in 'paresseux'), are never pronounced at the end of a word.
                The final letters c, f, k, q and l, however, are normally pronounced.
                The final r is usually silent when it follows an e in a word of two or more
                syllables, but is pronounced in other cases.
                The t is pronounced when it follows a c. for example the s in les amants or vous
                avez; some are optional, depending on dialect and register.
                The letter h can be aspirated, (h aspiré), or not aspirated, (h non aspiré),
                depending on which language the word was borrowed from.
            o For example: the word héros, (hero) has an aspirated h, because when the
                definite article le is placed before it, the result is le héros, and both words must
                be pronounced separately. However, the feminine form of héros, héroïne is a
                non-aspirated h. Therefore when the definite article in front of it, it becomes
                l'héroïne, and is pronounced as one word.

Liaison:

French pronunciation follows strict rules based on spelling, but French spelling is often based more on
history than phonology. Liaison is the pronunciation of a latent word-final consonant immediately
before a following vowel sound. When the following word begins with a vowel, however, a
silent consonant may once again be pronounced, to provide a liaison or "link" between the two
words. For example the first s in deux cents euros or euros irlandais; and some are forbidden,
for example the s in beaucoup d'hommes aiment. The t of et is never pronounced and the
silent final consonant of a noun is only pronounced in the plural and in set phrases like pied-à-
terre.




                                                                                                          12
Transcription of the quotes of a French absurdist and philosopher, Albert
Camus:

"In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer."

' Dans la profondeur d'hiver, j'ai finalement appris que dans moi là posent un été
                                               invincible.'

"There are places where the mind dies so that a truth which is its very denial may be born."

      ' Il y a des endroits où l'esprit meurt pour qu'une vérité qui est sa même
                                   dénégation puisse être née.'

"At the heart of all beauty lies something inhuman, and these hills, the softness of the sky, the outline of
these trees at this very minute lose the illusory meaning with which we had clothed them, henceforth
more remote than a lost paradise... that denseness and that strangeness of the world is absurd."

   ' Au coeur de tous les mensonges de beauté quelque chose d'inhumain et ces
collines, la douceur du ciel, le contour de ces arbres à cette même minute perdent
le sens illusoire avec lequel nous les avions habillés, désormais plus lointain qu'un
    paradis perdu ... que la densité et que la singularité du monde est absurde.'




                                                                                                               13
14
Introduction:

The second-most studied foreign language in the world after English is French. Being an official;
language in 29 countries, it has got the status of language of international agencies. It is one of
the three working languages of the European Commission along with English and German

le français est la langue de roman. c'est la langue molle et tout aussi insistée.

French is the language of romance. It is soft and equally stressed language. These qualities of
French language are inspiring people to learn it for their own interest, utility and enjoyment.
English speakers, native or non-native, have interaction with this language little or more.
Almost 40% loan words are used in English language. French words for example the word: alma
matre, coup-dete, ah-hoc, ad interim, affair de ameur, debacle, intoto, en rapport, modus
operandi, exemple gratia, beau monde, magnum opus, pro tempore, visa verse, vis-à-vis, vide,
are most often used in English language also.

Description of French vowels:

A, o, and u are sometimes called hard vowels and e and i are soft vowels, because certain consonants (c,
g, s) have a "hard" and a "soft" pronunciation, depending on which vowel follows.

Long Vowels             Short Vowels            Similar English

[a]                     [ə]                     not - nut

[i]                     ----                    sheep

[e]                     [ɛ]                     wait – wet

[o]                     [ɔ]                     coat - caught

[u]                     ----                    moon




                                                                                                           15
Words in Contrast

[a] -     [ə]              rapporter          reporter

[e] -       [ə]            des mains          demain

[e] -     [ɛ]              pré                près

[o] -       [ɔ]            paume                     pomme

Unrounded           Rounded
[i]                 [y]
[e]                 [ø]
[ɛ]                 [œ]



Semi-Vowels

Semi-vowels can also be called glides or approximants.

IPA Phonetic               spelling Sample words             General spelling

[w] w                      fois, oui, Louis                  oi, ou

[ɥ] ew-ee                  lui, suisse                       ui

[j] yuh                    oreille, Mireille                 ill, y

Words in contrast

[wa] - [a]        loi              la

[ɥ] - [y]                  lui                Lu

[ej] - [e]        pareil           paré

[aj] - [a]        bail             bas




                                                                                16
Nasal Vowels

Vowels followed by M or N are usually nasal. A nasal vowel is a sound made by expelling air through the
mouth and nose without obstruction of the lips, tongue, or throat. Nasal pronunciation can be very
different from the normal pronunciation of the same vowels.

IPA       Phonetic spelling    Sample words            General spelling

  ]       awn                  gant, banc, dent        en, em, an, am, aon, aen

[ɛ]       ahn                  pain, vin, linge        in, im, yn, ym, ain, aim, ein, eim, un, um,
                                                       en, eng, oin, oing, oint, ien, yen, éen

      ]   uhn                  brun, lundi, parfum     un

  ]       ohn                  rond, ongle, front      on, om

Words in Contrast

Nasal Vowel                     Nasal Consonant

Franc                           franche

brun                           brune

indien                          indienne

bon                            bonne




                                                                                                          17
French phonology of vowel:

       Most French vowels are pronounced further forward in the mouth than their English
       counterparts.
       The tongue must remain tensed throughout the pronunciation of the vowel.
       French vowels do not diphthong. In English, vowels tend to be followed by a y sound
       (after a, e, or i) or a w sound (after o or u). In French, this is not the case - the vowel
       sound remains constant: it does not change into a y or w sound. Thus the French vowel is
       a "purer" sound than the English vowel.

Rules for French vowels:

   1. In closed syllable words, CVC, the vowels are longer as compared to open syllable
       words.
   2. In stressed open syllables, only [ø] is possible. In stressed, closed syllables, only [œ] is
       possible, unless the syllable ends in [t], [tR], or [z] - in which case, [ø] can occur.
   3. In French, no consonant follows [e] and it appears in open syllables only. In closed
       syllables, [ɛ] is used; however, [ɛ] can also be found in open syllables. (This is a major
       difference with English as [ɛ] can never be found in open syllables.)
   4. [o] Always occurs in stressed open syllables, and [ɔ] occurs in stressed closed syllables.
       Nevertheless, [o] can also occur in stressed closed syllables, depending on the spelling
       of the word: when the letter o is followed by [m], [n], [z]; when the letters au are not
       followed by [R]; and by the letter ô.
   5. Words ending in -eil or -eille are pronounced [ej], while words ending in -ail or -aille are
       pronounced [aj].




                                                                                                     18
Diacritics

In French language five types of diacritic marks are used; the acute ( ´ ), grave ( ` ), and
circumflex ( ˆ ) accents, the diaeresis (French: tréma) ( ¨ ), and the cedilla ( ¸ ). It is noteworthy
that these diacritics have no impact on the primary alphabetical order.

        A circumflex (diacritic) â ê î ô û is applied to all vowels. This diacritic effects the
        pronunciation of a, e and o but not of I and u. it is used to show the presence of
        historical letter s which is now mute and silent. Its function is to distinguish
        homophones also like jeûne [ʒøn] vs. jeune [ʒœn]) or du ("of the") vs. dû (past participle
        of devoir "to have to do something.
        French accent is only applied to e. it has acute accent é and grave accent à è ù
        A tréma (French for diaerasis, two dots on top to make the hiatus, two adjacent vowels,
        not separated by a consonant or pause and not merged into a diphthong)is put on
        vowels: ä, ë, ï, ö, ü, ÿ . It indicates that a vowel is to be pronounced separately from the
        preceding one: naïve, Noël. The diaeresis on u appears only in the biblical proper names
        Archélaüs, Capharnaüm, Emmaüs, Ésaü and Saül and diaeresis on y only occurs in some
        proper names and in modern editions of old French texts.
        Cedilla (ç): the c cedilla (ç) softens the otherwise hard /k/ sound to /s/ before the vowels
        a, o or u, for example ça /sa/. C cedilla is never used before the vowels e or i since these
        two vowels always produce a soft /s/ sound (ce, ci).
        In addition to these diacritics, a tilde diacritical mark ( ˜ ) is used on /n/ only with the
        well-known Spanish names like Cañon.




                                                                                                         19
Differences between French and English vowels:

Accent:

There are four French accents for vowels. It is essential to put accents in their proper places in French
language otherwise an incorrect or missing accent would be considered a spelling mistake which must
not be overlooked. English puts accent on words of foreign origin only.

Pronunciation of vowels

Pronunciation of French vowels is mainly different from the English vowels. French being an accented
language puts grave accent only on à è ù and acute accent on e.




The effect of the Great Vowel Shift may be seen very clearly in the English names of many of the letters
of the alphabet. A, B, C and D are pronounced /eɪ, bi:, si:, di:/ in today's English, but in contemporary
French they are /a, be, se, de/. The French names (from which the English names are derived) preserve
the English vowels from before the Great Vowel Shift. By contrast, the names of F, L, M, N and S (/ɛf, ɛl,
ɛm, ɛn, ɛs/) remain the same in both languages, because "short" vowels were unaffected by the Shift.




Transcription of Alexander Pope: An essay on man, IV, HONOUR

                Honor and shame from no condition rise.

                Act well your part: there all the honor lies

Transcription: honneur

                L'honneur et la honte d'aucune augmentation de condition.

                Acte bien votre partie : là tous les mensonges d'honneur.




                                                                                                             20
References:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_phonology

http://www.frenchlanguageguide.com/french/pronunciation/difficult-consonants.asp

http://www.frenchlanguageguide.com/french/pronunciation/vowels.asp

http://www.jump-gate.com/languages/french/french1.html

http://www.ielanguages.com/frenchphonetics.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liaison_%28linguistics%29




                                                                                   21
22

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French alphabet, consonants, vowels and phonology transcription

  • 1. University of management & Technology Article Topic: Consonants & Vowels in French Language Program: MPhil Applied Linguistics, Batch VIII Course title: Phonetics and Phonology Presented to: Sir Nazir Malik Presented by: Hina Javaid 100884006 0
  • 2. Sr.no Topic Pg.no 1 Abstract 1 2 Introduction 2 3 Rationale of the topic 3 4 Description of French alphabets 4 5 Description of French consonants 5 6 The French articles 6 7 French phonology 8 Stress: Tonic Accent L accent tonique 9 Intonation 9 10 Final consonants 10 Liaison 8 Transcription of the quotes 11 9 References: 12 1
  • 3. Topic: Description of French alphabets, French consonants, Vowels & phonology And Transcription of quotations in French Abstract: 2
  • 4. Learning a foreign language is a skill. This skill becomes challenging when the object language is difficult, versatile and competent. French language is the accurate example gratia of such a language of romance and language of galore. Being soft, exuberant and fascinating language, it mesmerizes the folk all around the world to surpass the glamour of this language. This article is the same attempt at the very beginning level. It describes the French alphabets and especially French consonants in detail with their English counterparts. It is tried to elaborate French phonology to some extent, which obviously is not sufficient as French is a complete package of a standard language. Along with the description, side-by-side comparison and connection is stretched to establish an affinity between English and French. Overall, this article is a first jump into the cavernous ocean of French language. 3
  • 5. Introduction: La langue française or French is a “Romance language”, descendant of Latin and is intimately related to Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, and Romanian. It is the native tongue of over 87 million people, official language of 29 countries and has an additional 68 million non-native speakers. It is one of the three working languages of the European Commission along with English and German. Despite of having 75 recognized languages prevailed in France, French is the first obligatory and mandatory language of France. From 17th century to 20th century, French was the foremost diplomatic language of international relations but after that this role was taken over by English. French now sustains its status of diplomatic language proudly. French is the language of sage. It’s erudite, cultured and rich in all of its aspects. Benjamin Franklin rightly extolled the glory of France in such a way: Chaque homme a deux nations et un d'entre eux est la France Meaning: Every man has two nations and one of them is France French-speaking people have made incursions upon the British Isles many times in the past, most noticeably in the Norman Invasion of 1066. For this reason, although English is a Germanic language, at least a third of the English lexicon is derived from French and 40% vocabulary of English language is based on French origin. 4
  • 6. Rationale of the topic: French is considered and used as a language of diplomacy. It is soft, romance and naïve in nature. My intention in getting intimate with French alphabets and language lounge in these facts, which I encountered while surfing for languages and their content; It is the second most taught language in the world after English. French words are broadly used in every dialect of most of the languages. 40% of English words (mainly multisyllabic) are loaned from French like Amateur, Bayonet, Boulevard, cuisine homage, denim, prude, Cliché, Tour de stade, Repertoire, Ricochet, Fiance (disambiguation), Entrepreneur, Façade, Voyeurism and a lot of others too. Intimacy with French language can boost up test score 100% on SAT. Researches shows that studying French enhanced score on Math as compared to those who studied math for many years. To learn other languages, English, Spanish even Arabic etc; French sets a foundation springboard to study them. French is spoken in five continents and is used officially in 29 countries and 125 million people speak it. Moreover, it is the official language of international agencies like United Nations, NATO, UNESCO, International Red Cross and International Olympic Committee. Overall, French is the practical of life and French means global communication. 5
  • 7. Description of French alphabets: The French alphabets are based on 26 Roman of Latin alphabets. The vowels include five diacritics and two orthographic ligatures character Symbols pronunciation Character Symbol pronunciation (IPA (IPA transcription) transcription) a /a/ ah n /ɛn/ Enn b /be/ Bay o /o/ Oh c /se/ Say p /pe/ Pay d /de/ Day q /ky/ Ku e /ə/ Euh r /ɛʀ/ Air f /ɛf/ Eff s /ɛs/ Ess g /ʒɜ/ Jhay t /te/ Tay h /aʃ/ Ash u /y/ Oo i /i/ Ee v /ve/ Vay j /ʒi/ Zhee w /dubləve/ dubl-vay k /ka/ Kah x /iks/ Eeks l /ɛl/ El y /igrɛk/ ee-grehk m /ɛm/ emm z /zɛd/ zedh 6
  • 8. Detailed description of French consonants with approximate sound in English and examples: French consonant/sound approximate sound in English translation in French b boat bateau c centre centre d date date f fell est tombé g gun fusil h Aspirated h is used in French héros hero j measure mesure k/q kite cerf-volant l lie mensonge m man, honey home, miel n new nouveau p pair paire r run dirigé s servant domestique t train train v victory victoire x socks Chaussettes, expansion z zebra zèbre sch, shame honte ni lamb agneau ch scheme projet 7
  • 9. The French articles: In French, articles are almost required with all common nouns. They are inflected to agree in on gender and numbers. French has 3 articles: 1. Definite ‘la/le’ 2. Indefinite ‘une/un’ 3. partitive ‘du/de la’ Definite ‘the’ or ‘la’: The French definite article is used with a noun referring to a specific item in the cases where both the speaker and audience know the item. It is also used with mass nouns and plural nouns with generic interpretation, and with abstract nouns.for example: I want to learn the French or je veux apprendre le français Forms of definite la: singular plural before consonant before vowel or mute h1 masculine le2 l' les2 feminine la The indefinite article ‘une/un’ or ‘a/an’: The French article is similar to the English indefinite article a/an. The French indefinite article is used with a noun referring to a non-specific item, or to a specific item when the speaker and audience do not both know what the item is. Forms of indefinite article une/un singular plural masculine un des feminine une 8
  • 10. The partitive article ‘du/de la’ or ‘some’: It is similar to ‘some’ and is used to indicate an indefinite portion of something uncountable, or an indefinite number of something countable. Forms of the partitive article: singular plural before consonant before vowel or mute h1 masculine du de l' des feminine de la 9
  • 11. French phonology Voiced stops /b d ɡ/ are typically produced fully voiced throughout. Voiceless stops /p t k/ are unaspirated. Nasals: The velar nasal /ŋ/ can occur in final position in borrowed (usually English) words: parking, campin, and swing. The palatal nasal /ɲ/ can occur in word initial position (e.g. gnon), but it is most frequently found in intervocalic, onset position or word-finally (e.g. montagne). Fricatives: French has three pairs of homorganic fricatives distinguished by voicing, o labiodental /f/~/v/ o Dental /s/~/z/ like the plosives /t/~/d/, and the nasal /n/. o palato-alveolar /ʃ/~/ʒ/ French has one uvula r or voiced uvular fricative as in [ʁu] roue, "wheel". o Vowels are lengthened before this segment. o It can be reduced to an approximant, particularly in final position (e.g. fort) or reduced to zero in some word-final positions. o For some speakers, a uvular trill is also common, and an apical trill [r] occurs in some dialects. Lateral and central approximants: The lateral approximant /l/ is unvelarised in both onset (lire) and coda position (il). o In the onset, the central approximants [w], [ɥ], and [j] each correspond to a high vowel, /u/, /y/, and /i/ respectively. o There are a few minimal pairs where the approximant and corresponding vowel contrast, but there are also many cases where they are in free variation. Contrasts between /j/ and /i/ occur in final position as in /pɛj/ paye, "pay", vs. /pɛi/ pays, "country". Stress: Tonic Accent - L’accent tonique 10
  • 12. In English, certain syllables are stressed more than others but in French; every syllable is evenly stressed and pronounced. French is a syllable-timed language, so equal emphasis is given to each syllable as compared to stress-rhythm language, English. For example English stressed word French counterpart photography Photographie authority autorité nationality Nationalité passion passion education éducation Intonation Intonation in French is slightly different from English. In general, the intonation rises only for a yes/no question, and the rest of the time, the intonation falls. French intonation starts at a higher pitch and falls continuously throughout the sentence, whereas in English, the stressed syllable has a higher pitch that what precedes and follows it. Sentence Type English Intonation French Intonation Yes/No Question Are you leaving? 2-3 Est-ce que vous partez? 2-3 Information Where are you 2-3-1 Où est-ce que vous 4-2–1 Question going? allez? Imperative Do it. / Don't do (2) - 3 - 1 Fais-le. / Ne le fais pas. 4-2-1 it. Exclamation What a surprise! 2-3-1 Quelle surprise! 4-2–1 Declarative I bought a dress. 2-3-1 J'ai acheté une robe. 3-2-1 Final consonants: 11
  • 13. In French, certain consonants are silent when they are the final letter of a word. Final single consonants, in particular s, x, z, t, d, n, g and m, are normally silent. A consonant is considered "final" when no vowel follows it even if one or more consonants follow it. The letters p (as in 'coup'), s (as in 'héros'), t (as in 'chat'), d (as in 'marchand), and x (as in 'paresseux'), are never pronounced at the end of a word. The final letters c, f, k, q and l, however, are normally pronounced. The final r is usually silent when it follows an e in a word of two or more syllables, but is pronounced in other cases. The t is pronounced when it follows a c. for example the s in les amants or vous avez; some are optional, depending on dialect and register. The letter h can be aspirated, (h aspiré), or not aspirated, (h non aspiré), depending on which language the word was borrowed from. o For example: the word héros, (hero) has an aspirated h, because when the definite article le is placed before it, the result is le héros, and both words must be pronounced separately. However, the feminine form of héros, héroïne is a non-aspirated h. Therefore when the definite article in front of it, it becomes l'héroïne, and is pronounced as one word. Liaison: French pronunciation follows strict rules based on spelling, but French spelling is often based more on history than phonology. Liaison is the pronunciation of a latent word-final consonant immediately before a following vowel sound. When the following word begins with a vowel, however, a silent consonant may once again be pronounced, to provide a liaison or "link" between the two words. For example the first s in deux cents euros or euros irlandais; and some are forbidden, for example the s in beaucoup d'hommes aiment. The t of et is never pronounced and the silent final consonant of a noun is only pronounced in the plural and in set phrases like pied-à- terre. 12
  • 14. Transcription of the quotes of a French absurdist and philosopher, Albert Camus: "In the depth of winter, I finally learned that within me there lay an invincible summer." ' Dans la profondeur d'hiver, j'ai finalement appris que dans moi là posent un été invincible.' "There are places where the mind dies so that a truth which is its very denial may be born." ' Il y a des endroits où l'esprit meurt pour qu'une vérité qui est sa même dénégation puisse être née.' "At the heart of all beauty lies something inhuman, and these hills, the softness of the sky, the outline of these trees at this very minute lose the illusory meaning with which we had clothed them, henceforth more remote than a lost paradise... that denseness and that strangeness of the world is absurd." ' Au coeur de tous les mensonges de beauté quelque chose d'inhumain et ces collines, la douceur du ciel, le contour de ces arbres à cette même minute perdent le sens illusoire avec lequel nous les avions habillés, désormais plus lointain qu'un paradis perdu ... que la densité et que la singularité du monde est absurde.' 13
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  • 16. Introduction: The second-most studied foreign language in the world after English is French. Being an official; language in 29 countries, it has got the status of language of international agencies. It is one of the three working languages of the European Commission along with English and German le français est la langue de roman. c'est la langue molle et tout aussi insistée. French is the language of romance. It is soft and equally stressed language. These qualities of French language are inspiring people to learn it for their own interest, utility and enjoyment. English speakers, native or non-native, have interaction with this language little or more. Almost 40% loan words are used in English language. French words for example the word: alma matre, coup-dete, ah-hoc, ad interim, affair de ameur, debacle, intoto, en rapport, modus operandi, exemple gratia, beau monde, magnum opus, pro tempore, visa verse, vis-à-vis, vide, are most often used in English language also. Description of French vowels: A, o, and u are sometimes called hard vowels and e and i are soft vowels, because certain consonants (c, g, s) have a "hard" and a "soft" pronunciation, depending on which vowel follows. Long Vowels Short Vowels Similar English [a] [ə] not - nut [i] ---- sheep [e] [ɛ] wait – wet [o] [ɔ] coat - caught [u] ---- moon 15
  • 17. Words in Contrast [a] - [ə] rapporter reporter [e] - [ə] des mains demain [e] - [ɛ] pré près [o] - [ɔ] paume pomme Unrounded Rounded [i] [y] [e] [ø] [ɛ] [œ] Semi-Vowels Semi-vowels can also be called glides or approximants. IPA Phonetic spelling Sample words General spelling [w] w fois, oui, Louis oi, ou [ɥ] ew-ee lui, suisse ui [j] yuh oreille, Mireille ill, y Words in contrast [wa] - [a] loi la [ɥ] - [y] lui Lu [ej] - [e] pareil paré [aj] - [a] bail bas 16
  • 18. Nasal Vowels Vowels followed by M or N are usually nasal. A nasal vowel is a sound made by expelling air through the mouth and nose without obstruction of the lips, tongue, or throat. Nasal pronunciation can be very different from the normal pronunciation of the same vowels. IPA Phonetic spelling Sample words General spelling ] awn gant, banc, dent en, em, an, am, aon, aen [ɛ] ahn pain, vin, linge in, im, yn, ym, ain, aim, ein, eim, un, um, en, eng, oin, oing, oint, ien, yen, éen ] uhn brun, lundi, parfum un ] ohn rond, ongle, front on, om Words in Contrast Nasal Vowel Nasal Consonant Franc franche brun brune indien indienne bon bonne 17
  • 19. French phonology of vowel: Most French vowels are pronounced further forward in the mouth than their English counterparts. The tongue must remain tensed throughout the pronunciation of the vowel. French vowels do not diphthong. In English, vowels tend to be followed by a y sound (after a, e, or i) or a w sound (after o or u). In French, this is not the case - the vowel sound remains constant: it does not change into a y or w sound. Thus the French vowel is a "purer" sound than the English vowel. Rules for French vowels: 1. In closed syllable words, CVC, the vowels are longer as compared to open syllable words. 2. In stressed open syllables, only [ø] is possible. In stressed, closed syllables, only [œ] is possible, unless the syllable ends in [t], [tR], or [z] - in which case, [ø] can occur. 3. In French, no consonant follows [e] and it appears in open syllables only. In closed syllables, [ɛ] is used; however, [ɛ] can also be found in open syllables. (This is a major difference with English as [ɛ] can never be found in open syllables.) 4. [o] Always occurs in stressed open syllables, and [ɔ] occurs in stressed closed syllables. Nevertheless, [o] can also occur in stressed closed syllables, depending on the spelling of the word: when the letter o is followed by [m], [n], [z]; when the letters au are not followed by [R]; and by the letter ô. 5. Words ending in -eil or -eille are pronounced [ej], while words ending in -ail or -aille are pronounced [aj]. 18
  • 20. Diacritics In French language five types of diacritic marks are used; the acute ( ´ ), grave ( ` ), and circumflex ( ˆ ) accents, the diaeresis (French: tréma) ( ¨ ), and the cedilla ( ¸ ). It is noteworthy that these diacritics have no impact on the primary alphabetical order. A circumflex (diacritic) â ê î ô û is applied to all vowels. This diacritic effects the pronunciation of a, e and o but not of I and u. it is used to show the presence of historical letter s which is now mute and silent. Its function is to distinguish homophones also like jeûne [ʒøn] vs. jeune [ʒœn]) or du ("of the") vs. dû (past participle of devoir "to have to do something. French accent is only applied to e. it has acute accent é and grave accent à è ù A tréma (French for diaerasis, two dots on top to make the hiatus, two adjacent vowels, not separated by a consonant or pause and not merged into a diphthong)is put on vowels: ä, ë, ï, ö, ü, ÿ . It indicates that a vowel is to be pronounced separately from the preceding one: naïve, Noël. The diaeresis on u appears only in the biblical proper names Archélaüs, Capharnaüm, Emmaüs, Ésaü and Saül and diaeresis on y only occurs in some proper names and in modern editions of old French texts. Cedilla (ç): the c cedilla (ç) softens the otherwise hard /k/ sound to /s/ before the vowels a, o or u, for example ça /sa/. C cedilla is never used before the vowels e or i since these two vowels always produce a soft /s/ sound (ce, ci). In addition to these diacritics, a tilde diacritical mark ( ˜ ) is used on /n/ only with the well-known Spanish names like Cañon. 19
  • 21. Differences between French and English vowels: Accent: There are four French accents for vowels. It is essential to put accents in their proper places in French language otherwise an incorrect or missing accent would be considered a spelling mistake which must not be overlooked. English puts accent on words of foreign origin only. Pronunciation of vowels Pronunciation of French vowels is mainly different from the English vowels. French being an accented language puts grave accent only on à è ù and acute accent on e. The effect of the Great Vowel Shift may be seen very clearly in the English names of many of the letters of the alphabet. A, B, C and D are pronounced /eɪ, bi:, si:, di:/ in today's English, but in contemporary French they are /a, be, se, de/. The French names (from which the English names are derived) preserve the English vowels from before the Great Vowel Shift. By contrast, the names of F, L, M, N and S (/ɛf, ɛl, ɛm, ɛn, ɛs/) remain the same in both languages, because "short" vowels were unaffected by the Shift. Transcription of Alexander Pope: An essay on man, IV, HONOUR Honor and shame from no condition rise. Act well your part: there all the honor lies Transcription: honneur L'honneur et la honte d'aucune augmentation de condition. Acte bien votre partie : là tous les mensonges d'honneur. 20
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