What Are the Numbers One to Ten in French?
Let’s get started with the numbers one to ten in French.
Watch the video as many times as you need, until you feel you can give the French as the video plays!
OK, now we can see what we’ve learned. Look at the English and see if you can provide the French! We’ll take them in groups of five.
Part 1:
Part 2:
Notes on the Vocabulary
Pronunciation
You’ll notice that the spellings and the pronunciation can be a little different than what you might expect.
Let’s break this down a little bit.
First, the number one. Un is a nasal sound and the ‘n’ represents this.
Next, the letter ‘x,’ in the word deux. It is often silent at the end of words, so deux is pronounced ‘duh.’ However, this is not the case for six, where it sounds like a hissed ‘s.’ In future videos, listen out for how ‘x’ is pronounced. Sometimes it is silent, other times it is not.
What is easy to remember is that ‘qu’ in French is pronounced as a ‘k,’ so four is ‘kat-re.’ Don’t forget that ‘r’ is guttural, so it is pronounced in the throat here.
Next up, is the ‘c’ in cinq. When ‘c’ is followed by ‘e’ or ‘i,’ then it is always soft – that means it is pronounced like English ‘s.’ Therefore, cinq sounds like ‘sank,’ with a nasal quality on the ‘n.’
The ‘p’ in sept is silent, so it sounds like ‘set,’ for seven.
‘H’ is also often silent in French, although when followed by a ‘u’ it makes the ‘wh’ sound, a little similar to the English ‘wheat,’ which is what we find in the word for eight. (Notice here also that the English spelling of ‘eight,’ is equally as odd.)
More Numbers
What Are the Numbers Eleven to Twenty in French?
What Are the French Numbers 21 to 60?
How Do You Ask How Much Something Costs in French?
How To Tell the Time in French
What Are Some of the Larger Numbers in French?