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- Use real examples — Cognates, café conversations, daily life
- Interactive practice — Quizzes, speaking exercises, visual learning
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Why This Course Works
Neuroscience-backed
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Speaking practice
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Start Learning NowMaster French: From Zero to Hero 🇫🇷 Polyglottes.org
Your structured journey from a complete beginner (A0) to a confident, independent speaker (B1).
Welcome to Your French Adventure!
Have you always dreamed of ordering a croissant in Paris, discussing cinema in a cozy café, or living in a French-speaking country? You are in the right place.
This learning path is specifically designed to take you step-by-step through the beautiful complexity of the French language. No overwhelming grammar books or boring lists—just practical vocabulary, interactive tools, and cultural insights that make sense.
« Learning a language is not just about words; it’s about seeing the world through a different lens. »
The Roadmap
- 1 Step A0-A1: Survival skills, basic needs, and daily life.
- 2 Step A2: Building sentences and expressing opinions.
- 3 Step B1: Total independence and fluid conversations.
Ready to start? Scroll down to Step 1 and let’s dive in! 🚀

Start Learning French Today
Let’s learn French with an easy method : you don’t need any previous knowledge of French to start[cite: 11]. You don’t even need to be « particularly bright »—you just need to be consistent!
- 1. Use the language immediately: Start with sentences from day one. Do not spend weeks on grammar rules.
- 2. Sentence-First Approach: Grammar is introduced naturally as you encounter it in sentences.
- 3. The Dual Method: Study exercises (Part I) and check detailed notes (Part II) together to understand your mistakes.
- 4. Regular Revision: Aim to revise everything after every 5 lessons to build a strong foundation.
Commencez votre apprentissage aujourd’hui
Apprenons le français de manière facile : vous n’avez besoin d’aucune connaissance préalable pour commencer. Il n’est même pas nécessaire d’être « particulièrement brillant »—il suffit d’être régulier.!
- 1. Utilisez la langue tout de suite : Manipulez des phrases dès le premier jour au lieu de passer des semaines sur des règles théoriques.
- 2. Priorité à la phrase : La grammaire est introduite naturellement, au fur et à mesure de vos besoins.
- 3. La méthode double : Travaillez les exercices et consultez les notes détaillées simultanément pour comprendre vos erreurs.
- 4. Révision régulière : Faites un bilan toutes les 5 leçons pour consolider vos acquis.
Let’s start with transparent words or cognates :
💡 The Magic of Cognates
You already know these words! French and English are closer than you think.
| ENGLISH | FRANÇAIS | |
|---|---|---|
| 🌿 Nature & Animals | ||
| 🦁 | Animal | Animal |
| 🐘 | Elephant | Éléphant |
| 🦒 | Giraffe | Girafe |
| 🌳 | Nature | Nature |
| 🐊 | Crocodile | Crocodile |
| 🍕 Food & Drinks | ||
| 🍎 | Fruit | Fruit |
| 🥗 | Salad | Salade |
| 🍅 | Tomato | Tomate |
| 🥕 | Carrot | Carotte |
| 🍜 | Soup | Soupe |
| 🍫 | Chocolate | Chocolat |
| 🚗 Transport & Places | ||
| 🚕 | Taxi | Taxi |
| 🚌 | Bus | Bus |
| 🚆 | Train | Train |
| 🏨 | Hotel | Hôtel |
| 🍽️ | Restaurant | Restaurant |
| 🎨 Art & Culture | ||
| 🎨 | Art | Art |
| 🎵 | Music | Musique |
| 🎹 | Piano | Piano |
| 📷 | Photo | Photo |
| 🎬 | Cinema | Cinéma |
| 💡 Concepts & Science | ||
| 🧪 | Science | Science |
| ℹ️ | Information | Information |
| ❓ | Question | Question |
| 💡 | Solution | Solution |
| 🆗 | Normal | Normal |
And hundreds more! You see? You are already more than a beginner.
Step 1: The Articles (Le, La, Les)
In French, every object has a « gender ». Don’t panic, it’s easier than it looks!
1. The Definite Articles (The)
Use these when you are talking about a specific thing:
Le train, Le restaurant
La gare, La salade
Ex: L’hôtel, L’animal, L’ami.
2. The Indefinite Articles (A / An)
Use these for « any » object, not a specific one:
| UN | Masculine | Un taxi, Un café |
| UNE | Feminine | Une auto, Une soupe |
| DES | Plural (Some) | Des hôtels, Des fruits |
🎓 Polyglottes.org Pro-Tip:
« Always learn the article WITH the noun. Don’t just learn ‘gare’ (station), learn ‘la gare’. This way, the gender becomes part of the word’s music in your head. »
🎯 Quick Practice: Le or La?
Choose the correct article for these transparent words.
1. ___ Restaurant
2. ___ Salade
3. ___ Radio
Tip: If it ends in -e, it’s often feminine!
🎯 Quiz : Un, Une or Des?
Complete the phrases with the correct indefinite article.
1. ___ Banane (F)
2. ___ Fruits (Plural)
3. ___ Café (M)
4. ___ Tomates (Plural)
5. ___ Omelette (F)
6. ___ Taxi (M)
7. ___ Hôtels (Plural)
8. ___ Gare (F)
9. ___ Éléphant (M)
10. ___ Guitare (F)
Remember: « Des » is for plural, regardless of gender! 🇫🇷
🇫🇷 Step 2: Simple Sentence Structures
The train is fast.
An important question.
The photo is original.
🔑 Step 2: The 30 Essential Keywords
The building blocks of everyday French sentences.
| FRANÇAIS | ENGLISH | FRANÇAIS | ENGLISH |
|---|---|---|---|
| Et | And | Avec | With |
| Mais | But | Pour | For |
| Ici | Here | Là-bas | There |
| Oui | Yes | Non | No |
| Aujourd’hui | Today | Maintenant | Now |
| Petit | Small | Grand | Big |
| Homme | Man | Femme | Woman |
| Enfant | Child | Ami | Friend |
| Maison | House | Rue | Street |
| Chambre | Room | Livre | Book |
| Eau | Water | Pain | Bread |
| Bon | Good | Mauvais | Bad |
| Où | Where | Quand | When |
| Pourquoi | Why | Comment | How |
| Toujours | Always | Souvent | Often |
🧠 Vocabulary Quiz: True or False?
Do you remember the meaning of these 30 essential words?
1. The French word « Et » means « But » in English.
2. « Maison » means « House ».
3. « Aujourd’hui » means « Yesterday ».
4. « Avec » means « With ».
5. « Petit » means « Big ».
6. « Eau » means « Water ».
7. « Maintenant » means « Never ».
8. « Homme » means « Man ».
9. « Toujours » means « Sometimes ».
10. « Pain » means « Bread ».
🎯 Practice: Complete the sentences
Pick the right word to match the English translation.
1. Le ___ est rapide. (The train is fast.)
2. La femme est ___ avec l’ami. (The woman is here with the friend.)
3. Je mange ___ pain. (I eat some bread.)
4. L’hôtel est très ___. (The hotel is very modern.)
5. ___ arrive aujourd’hui ? (Who arrives today?)
🇫🇷 Cultural Note: Monsieur & Madame
How to address people in modern France.
Used for any man, regardless of his marital status.
Used for any adult woman today.
⚠️ What happened to « Mademoiselle »?
In older textbooks (like the original Adams & Wilson), you will see Mademoiselle (Mlle) used for unmarried women.
However, since 2012, « Mademoiselle » has been officially removed from all French administrative forms.
Today, it is considered more professional and respectful to use Madame for all adult women, whether they are married or not. « Mademoiselle » is now mostly reserved for young girls or used in very specific, informal contexts.
Pro tip: When in doubt, always use « Madame ». It’s the safest and most polite choice in modern France!
📖 Reading Practice: A Simple Encounter
Read the text and answer the questions below.
Monsieur Truc est ici. Il est avec Madame Gentille.
La maison est moderne et calme.
Monsieur Truc mange un fruit et Madame Gentille mange une salade.
Le taxi arrive maintenant dans la rue.
Questions (in English):
1. Who is Monsieur Truc with?
2. What is Madame Gentille eating?
3. Where is the taxi arriving?
In the house (à la maison)
🖼️ Step 3: Picture Description
Instruction: Read the description. Hover over the colored words to see the English translation.
Consigne : Lisez la description. Passez votre souris sur les mots en couleur pour voir la traduction.
Dans la chambreroom, un petitsmall chatcat rouxginger dort sur le canapésofa confortablecomfortable. SurOn la tabletable en boiswood, il y a un cafécoffee chaudhot et des livresbooks ouvertsopen. Près deNear la fenêtrewindow, on voit un grandbig arbre à chatcat tree et des plantesplants vertesgreen. Le chiendog blancwhite est sur le tapisrug, devantin front of la téléTV. Un ordinateurcomputer et un smartphonesmartphone sont sur le bureaudesk. SousUnder la chaisechair, il y a une paire de basketspair of sneakers. Dans le fauteuilarmchair bleublue, l’ambiance est calmecalm. Un oiseaubird est dans sa cagecage près des rideauxcurtains. Au fond, on aperçoit un largewide litbed avec une lampelamp noireblack.

Colors in French
🎨 Les Couleurs — Colors
Essential adjectives to describe everything in French.
Blanc
White
Beige
Beige
Noir
Black
Rouge
Red
Bleu
Blue
Vert
Green
Jaune
Yellow
Orange
Orange
Marron
Brown
Rose
Pink
Gris
Grey
Look at the image again :

🧐 Describing the image
Instruction: Look at the picture. Is the color correct? Select « Vrai » (True) or « Faux » (False).
In the kitchen (la cuisine)

🍳 La cuisine — The kitchen
Instruction : Lisez la description de la cuisine.
Dans cette cuisinekitchen lumineuse, il y a une grande fenêtrewindow ouverte sur le jardin. SurOn le comptoir, on voit des fruitsfruits colorés dans des corbeillesbaskets et des légumesvegetables frais dans un panierwicker basket. La cafetièrecoffee maker et la bouilloirekettle sont prêtes pour le petit-déjeuner. À côté, le frigofridge est moderne et blanc. Près de l’ éviersink, il y a de la vaisselledishes propre. Plusieurs ustensiles de cuisinecooking utensils sont suspendus au mur, bien organisés. L’ambiance est très agréable et propreclean.
Let’s learn some new words.
🍎 Petit dictionnaire illustré
Visual vocabulary for food and drinks.
| Emoji | Français | English |
|---|---|---|
| FRUITS | ||
| 🍎 | La pomme | The Apple |
| 🍌 | La banane | The Banana |
| 🍓 | La fraise | The Strawberry |
| 🍇 | Le raisin | The Grape |
| 🍊 | L’orange | The Orange |
| LÉGUMES / VEGETABLES | ||
| 🥕 | La carotte | The Carrot |
| 🍅 | La tomate | The Tomato |
| 🥦 | Le brocoli | The Broccoli |
| 🥔 | La pomme de terre | The Potato |
| Aliments | ||
| 🥖 | Le pain / La baguette | The bread |
| 🧀 | Le fromage | The Cheese |
| 🥚 | L’oeuf | The Egg |
| 🥩 | La viande | The meat |
| 🐟 | Le poisson | The fish |
| 🍫 | Le chocolat | The chocolate |
| BOISSONS / DRINKS | ||
| 💧 | L’eau | The water |
| ☕ | Le café | The coffee |
| 🍵 | Le thé | The Tea |
| 🍷 | Le vin | The wine |
| 🥛 | Le lait | The milk |
Now let’s see some easy verbs :
⚙️ Step 4: Action Verbs (1st Group)
Mastering verbs ending in -ER.
The Secret Formula:
To conjugate, remove the -er (the ending) and add these new endings to the root:
-e, -es, -e, -ons, -ez, -ent
| Je mange | I eat |
| Tu manges | You eat |
| Il / Elle mange | He / She eats |
| Nous mangeons* | We eat |
| Vous mangez | You eat (plural/formal) |
| Ils / Elles mangent | They eat |
Tu parles
Il parle
Nous parlons
Vous parlez
Ils parlent
Tu marches
Il marche
Nous marchons
Vous marchez
Ils marchent
📝 Practice: 10 Sentences with « manger »
See how the verb changes with each subject.
- Je mange une pomme. (I eat an apple.)
- Tu manges une banane. (You eat a banana.)
- Il mange du fromage. (He eats some cheese.)
- Nous mangeons du chocolat. (We eat some chocolate.)
- Vous mangez une salade. (You eat a salad.)
- Ils mangent du poisson. (They eat some fish.)
- Elles mangent des fraises. (They eat some strawberries.)
- Julie mange une carotte. (Julie eats a carrot.)
- Pierre mange du pain. (Pierre eats some bread.)
- Julie et Pierre mangent une tomate. (Julie and Pierre eat a tomato.)
The ending is the same!
At the café (au café)

☕ Au café du coin
Hover over the underlined words to see their meaning.
Un couplecouple est assisseated / sitting à une tabletable, dans un cafécoffee shop. La femmewoman brunebrunette / dark haired boitdrinks / is drinking un café avec de la chantillywhipped cream. L’hommeman, brun aussi, boit un Perrier rondellesparkling water with a lemon slice et il a aussi un morceau de gâteaupiece of cake. Les deux sont contentshappy, ils discutentare chatting.
🤔 Quiz: Check your understanding
Hover over the questions for English translation!
🥛 Step 4: The verb BOIRE (To Drink)
Learning an irregular 3rd group verb.
Why « 3rd Group »? (Grammar Note)
Unlike 1st group verbs (like manger), 3rd group verbs are irregular. In the verb BOIRE, notice how the root changes from « Boi- » to « Buv- » for Nous and Vous, then back to « Boiv- » for the plural. It’s like a puzzle!
| Je bois | I drink |
| Tu bois | You drink |
| Il / Elle boit | He / She drinks |
| Nous buvons | We drink |
| Vous buvez | You drink (plur.) |
| Ils / Elles boivent | They drink |
Practice Sentences:
- 1. Je bois un café chaud. (I am drinking a hot coffee.)
- 2. Tu bois de l’eau minérale. (You are drinking mineral water.)
- 3. Nous buvons un thé glacé. (We are drinking an iced tea.)
- 4. Vous buvez un verre de vin. (You are drinking a glass of wine.)
- 5. Ils boivent un Perrier rondelle. (They are drinking a Perrier with lemon.)
🧪 Quiz: the verb « boire » (drink) in the present tense – Boire au Présent
Is the translation or the grammar correct? Hover for help!
Let’s have a break !
Going Further: French Food Culture
Recommended reading to understand French culture
Want to truly understand French people? Their relationship with food reveals everything about their culture, values, and daily life.
Discover the truth behind 5 major myths about French eating habits: Do they really eat baguettes every day? Is French cuisine only haute gastronomy? Why are French people slimmer despite eating rich foods?
Opens in a new tab • 5-minute read
⭐ RÉCAPITULATIF ⭐
Tout ce que tu as maîtrisé dans cette leçon !
🏠 La maison & objets
- 🪑 Meubles : Un sofa, un fauteuil, un lit.
- 🍳 Cuisine : Un frigo, un évier, une cafetière.
- 🖼️ Déco : Une fenêtre, des rideaux, des plantes.
🍎 Les aliments
🎨 Les couleurs
⚙️ Conjugaison (présent)
Terminaisons régulières : -e, -es, -e, -ons, -ez, -ent.
Irrégulier : Je bois, nous buvons, ils boivent.
💡 Boissons et grammaire
💧 Eau, ☕ Café, 🍵 Thé, 🍷 Vin, 🥛 Lait.
👑 Step 5: Conjugaison
Mastering ÊTRE (To Be) and AVOIR (To Have).
| Je suis | I am |
| Tu es | You are |
| Il / Elle est | He / She is |
| Nous sommes | We are |
| Vous êtes | You are (plur.) |
| Ils / Elles sont | They are |
| J’ai | I have |
| Tu as | You have |
| Il / Elle a | He / She has |
| Nous avons | We have |
| Vous avez | You have (plur.) |
| Ils / Elles ont | They have |
Examples in Context:
⚡ Practice: Être vs Avoir
Translate the English phrases into French. Hover for the English prompt!
⚠️ The « To Be » Trap: AVOIR vs ÊTRE
In French, you often « HAVE » a feeling rather than « BEING » it.
Use AVOIR (Physical Sensations)
In English you say « I am… », in French you say « I have… »
- 😋 J’ai faim (I am hungry)
- 💧 J’ai soif (I am thirsty)
- ❄️ J’ai froid (I am cold)
- 🔥 J’ai chaud (I am hot)
- 😴 J’ai sommeil (I am sleepy)
- 🎂 J’ai 20 ans (I am 20 years old)
- 😨 J’ai peur (I am afraid)
Use ÊTRE (Identity & States)
This matches the English usage of « To Be ».
- 😊 Je suis content (I am happy)
- 😔 Je suis triste (I am sad)
- 💪 Je suis fort (I am strong)
- 🇫🇷 Je suis français (I am French)
- 🛋️ Je suis assis (I am sitting)
- 🩺 Je suis malade (I am sick)
- ⏳ Je suis en retard (I am late)
👩 Présentation de Laura
Hoover to see the translation – Survole les mots en bleu pour voir la traduction.
Salut ! Je suisI am Laura. J’ai 25 ansI am 25 years old (lit: I have 25 years) et je suis françaiseI am French. Je suis parisienneI am from Paris mais je visI live à Nice. Aujourd’hui, c’est l’hiverit is winter. Il fait froidthe weather is cold et j’ai froidI am cold (feeling) ! Je suis frileuseI am sensitive to the cold, mais il fait beauthe weather is beautiful alors je suis contenteI am happy. Comme j’ai faimI am hungry et j’ai soifI am thirsty, je vais aller manger quelque chosesomething dans un café à côté d’icinear here.
👤 Vocabulaire : How to describe someone – Décrire quelqu’un
Apprendre à décrire les personnes et soi-même.
👥 Qui est-ce ?
- 👨 Un homme
- 👩 Une femme
- 👦 Un enfant (Garçon)
- 👧 Un enfant (Fille)
- 👫 Un couple
📏 La Taille
- 🦒 Grand / Grande
- 🐧 Petit / Petite
- ⚖️ De taille moyenne
💍 État Civil
- 👰 Marié / Mariée
- 🚶 Célibataire
- ❤️ En couple
💇 Les Cheveux
💪 Le Corps
Exemple : « Je suis marié et je suis grand. »
Jouons ! Let’s play ! Qui est-ce ?

🕵️ Le jeu du « Qui est-ce ? »
Regarde bien l’image et trouve le personnage mystère !
Devinette n°1 :
« C’est une femmea woman. Elle a les cheveux longslong hair et blondsblond. Elle porte des lunetteswears glasses et elle est contentehappy. Qui est-ce ? »🔍 Mission détective : 3 portraits
Lis les indices et trouve les coupables !
1. Le mystère du chapeau :
« C’est un hommea man. Il a la peau matetanned/dark skin. Il porte un chapeauis wearing a hat marron et il a une barbebeard. »2. La rousse élégante :
« C’est une femmea woman. Elle a les cheveux rouxred hair. Elle est sérieuseserious et elle ne porte pas de lunettesno glasses. »3. L’étudiant :
« C’est un jeune hommea young man. Il a les cheveux brunsbrown hair et courtsshort. Il porte des lunettes de vuereading glasses. »🎉 CONGRATULATIONS! 🎉
You just finished lesson 1!
You have acquired essential skills in French:
- ✅ Understanding and describing a café.
- ✅ Using colors and articles.
- ✅ Conjugating MANGER and BOIRE in the present tense.
- ✅ Mastering ÊTRE and AVOIR (including the traps!).
- ✅ Describing people and yourself.
Keep up the great work! Lesson 2 is waiting for you for new linguistic adventures!
Online French Courses – All Levels
Learn with native and experienced teachers.
Since 2013, Polyglottes.org has supported thousands of learners across every continent. Our personalized courses adapt to your real needs for guaranteed progress, whatever your current level.
Response guaranteed within 24 to 48 hours.
❓ FAQ : Learning French for Beginners
Everything you need to know about your French learning journey from A0 to B1
🎯 Do I need any previous knowledge to start this French learning program?
No! You don’t need any previous knowledge of French to start. This program is designed for complete beginners (A0) and takes you step-by-step through the language.
💡 You don’t even need to be « particularly bright »—you just need to be consistent! The method starts with sentences from day one instead of overwhelming grammar rules.
🗺️ What levels will this program cover?
This structured learning path takes you from A0 (complete beginner) to B1 (independent speaker):
- Step A0-A1: Survival skills, basic needs, and daily life vocabulary
- Step A2: Building sentences and expressing opinions
- Step B1: Total independence and fluid conversations
The ultimate goal: Be able to read news and find your way about in France without any trouble!
💡 What is the « Sentence-First Approach »?
The Sentence-First Approach means you use the language immediately from day one. Instead of spending weeks on grammar rules, you start with real sentences and grammar is introduced naturally as you encounter it.
- Use the language immediately – no grammar overload first
- Grammar is introduced naturally in context
- Study exercises and detailed notes together
- Regular revision after every 5 lessons
🔤 What are cognates and why should I learn them first?
Cognates (or transparent words) are words that look virtually identical in English and French because they share the same Latin or Norman roots.
Learning cognates first gives you instant vocabulary recognition for hundreds of words like: animal, hotel, restaurant, taxi, fruit, chocolate, music, photo, cinema, science.
⚡ Pro tip: You already know these words! This makes you « already more than a beginner » before you even start formal lessons.
⚖️ What’s the difference between « le », « la », and « les »?
In French, every noun has a gender (masculine or feminine):
Le train, Le restaurant
La gare, La salade
Les trains, Les gares
💡 L’ is used before vowels or silent H: L’hôtel, L’animal, L’ami
📚 How do I conjugate regular -ER verbs in French?
Most French verbs end in -ER. To conjugate them, remove the -ER and add these endings:
| Je mange | I eat |
| Tu manges | You eat |
| Il/Elle mange | He/She eats |
| Nous mangeons | We eat |
| Vous mangez | You eat (formal/plural) |
| Ils/Elles mangent | They eat |
Other common -ER verbs: parler (to speak), marcher (to walk), travailler (to work)
🚺 Should I use « Mademoiselle » or « Madame »?
In modern France, always use « Madame » for all adult women, regardless of marital status.
Since 2012, « Mademoiselle » has been officially removed from all French administrative forms. While older textbooks still use it for unmarried women, it’s now considered more professional and respectful to use « Madame » for all adult women.
« Mademoiselle » is now mostly reserved for young girls or very specific informal contexts.
⏱️ How often should I revise my lessons?
The program recommends regular revision after every 5 lessons to build a strong foundation.
- Consistency beats intensity: 15 minutes daily is better than 2 hours weekly
- Review cognates, articles, and basic sentence structures regularly
- Practice verb conjugations through repetition
- Use the Dual Method: Study exercises and check detailed notes together
📝 What are the 30 essential French keywords I should learn first?
These are the building blocks of everyday French sentences:
💡 Combine these with cognates to create hundreds of phrases instantly!
🚀 Where do I continue learning after completing Lesson 1?
Great progress! Ready for the next steps in your French journey?
📚 Lesson 2 & Advanced Content Coming Soon!
We’re developing comprehensive follow-up lessons covering:
• Advanced verb conjugations & irregular verbs
• Past, present, and future tenses
• Conversational French & idioms
• A2 and B1 level progression
✅ Be the first to access Lesson 2 • No spam, quality learning only
Continue practicing with:
📘 The interactive quizzes and exercises on this page
🎯 Daily vocabulary review of cognates and essential keywords
🗣️ Speaking practice with native speakers or language partners
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