Free French lessons 85 lessons · 14 scenes

Learn French

Learn French through real conversations

French has a reputation for being hard, but most of the difficulty is just the spelling — you'll see the same patterns repeat once you know them. These free lessons take you through real French situations with native speakers, covering the tu/vous formality split, the partitive (du pain, de la confiture), and the pronunciation patterns that make French unmistakably French. Order a croissant, try on clothes, plan a trip to the mountains — all with audio you can replay.

Yaya Magicat Shelladonna Muri Pishi
Native French audio with crisp liaisons
Tu/vous distinction explained in context
Partitive articles (du, de la) made clear
French food, café, and shop culture baked in
Pronunciation tips for tricky French sounds

All French lessons 85 lessons across 14 scenes

Bakery

6 lessons

Beach

6 lessons

Cafe

6 lessons

Clothes

9 lessons

Farm

4 lessons

Hospital

5 lessons

House

10 lessons

Office

4 lessons

School

7 lessons

Sports

5 lessons

Street

6 lessons

Supermarket

6 lessons

Townhall

5 lessons

Zoo

6 lessons

Common questions about learning French

Quick answers for new French learners.

When should I use tu vs vous?

Vous for strangers, elders, professionals, anyone you don't know well, and as the plural 'you all'. Tu is for friends, family, children, pets, and peers. When unsure, use vous and wait to be invited to tutoyer (use tu).

Why does French have so many silent letters?

French spelling is mostly historical — it shows where words came from rather than how they sound today. Once you learn the patterns (final consonants usually silent; certain letters cluster), reading becomes predictable.

What is the partitive du / de la?

It means 'some' for uncountable nouns. Je veux du pain = 'I want some bread'. Use du (masculine), de la (feminine), de l' (before vowels), des (plural). French uses it where English just omits the article.

Is French nasal pronunciation hard?

Less than it looks. There are four main nasal vowels (in 'bon', 'bain', 'banc', 'brun') and once you've heard them in context they stick. Listening practice helps more than reading drills.