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Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Learn Proper French Pronunciation With Liaisons
Learn Proper French Pronunciation With Liaisons          Part of the reason that French pronunciation and aural comprehension are so difficult is due to liaisons. Aà  liaisonà  is a phenomenon whereby a normallyà  silent consonantà  at the end of a word is pronounced at the beginning of the word that follows it.          Examples of Liaisons      The sound files below show words such asà  vousà  (you), which have a silent s at the end, unless they are paired with a word likeà  avezà  (have). When this occurs, the s is pronounced at the beginning of the following word, creating a liaison in French.         In each instance, the words on the left contain a silent letter at the end; the words on the right show how the usually silent letter at the end of the word is pronounced at the beginning of the following word, creating a liaison. The word or words are followed by a transliteration to help you pronounce the terms and phrases as you hear them.                     French Word With a Final Silent Consonant  Liaison      vous [vu]  vous avez [vu za vay]      ont [o(n)]  ont-ils [o(n) teel]      un [uh(n)]  un homme [uh(n) nuhm]      les [lay]  les amis [lay za mee]                Pronunciation Key      Use this pronunciation key as a guide to help you get the most out of the previous sound files.         a  à  fathere à  bedee à  meetu à  fool(n) à  nasal n         In addition, consonants inà  liaisonsà  sometimes change the pronunciation. For example, an s is pronounced like a z when it is used in a liaison.          Liaison Rules      The basic requirement of aà  liaisonà  is a word that ends in a normally silent consonant followed by a word that begins with a vowel orà  mute h. This does not mean, however, that all possible liaisons are necessarily pronounced. In fact, the pronunciation (or not) of liaisons is subject to very specific rules, and liaisons are divided into three categories:         Required liaisons (Liaisons obligatoires)Forbidden liaisons (Liaisons interdites)Optional liaisons (Liaisons facultatives)         If you are a beginner, study just the requiredà  liaisonsà  and forbidden liaisons, as these are the essential. If youre more advanced, study all three sections. It may be boring, but your pronunciation and ability to communicate at different levels of formality will improve dramatically.         Liaison vs.à  Enchantment     There is a related phenomenon in French calledà  enchaà ®nementà  (linking). The difference between enchaà ®nement andà  liaisonsà  is this:à  Liaisonsà  occur when the final consonant is normally silent but is pronounced due to the vowel that follows it (vousà  vs.à  vous avez), whereasà  enchaà ®nementà  occurs when the final consonant is pronounced whether or not a vowel follows it, such asà  pourà  vs.à  pour elle, which translates as for vs. for her.         Note thatà  enchaà ®nementà  is simply a phonetic issue, while the pronunciation ofà  liaisonsà  is based on linguistic and stylistic factors. Additionally, scan the pronunciation chart below to see how various letters are generally pronounced in French liaisons.                     Letter  Sound      D  [t]      F  [v]      G  [g]      N  [n]      P  [p]      R  [r]      S  [z]      T  [t]      X  [z]      Z  [z]    
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