Playgrounds are very popular in France. We call them βune aire de jeuxβ or βun parc pour enfantβ.
French people sometimes have swing sets in their gardens but they are usually much smaller than what Iβve seen in the US, so itβs quite common to take your young children to the playground.
1 β French Playground Vocabulary
Letβs study the French vocabulary for playgrounds .
- une aire de jeux β playground
- un parc (pour enfants) β playground
- une tyrolienne β zip line
- un tourniquet β turnstile
- un toboggan β slide
- une bascule (or familiar: un tape-cul) β see-saw
- une cage Γ poule / Γ Γ©cureuils β monkey bars
- un bac Γ sable β sand box
- une toile dβaraignΓ©e / une structure Γ grimper β the structure you see in the background of the video with ropes: kids climb on it.

A new approach to learning both traditional and modern French logically structured for English speakers.
2 β French Swing set Vocabulary
On a swing set (βun portiqueβ), youβll often find:
- Une balanΓ§oire β swing
- Une balancelle β face to face swing set
- Une balanΓ§oire pour bΓ©bΓ© β baby swing
- Une balanΓ§oire en disque β disc shaped swing
- Une balanΓ§oire nid dβoiseau β meshed swing
- Un pneu (vertical / horizontal) β swing made of tire (vertical / horizontal)
- Un trapΓ¨ze β trapeze
- Des anneaux β gymnastic rings
- Une corde β rope
- Une corde Γ noeuds β knotted climbing rope
- Une Γ©chelle en corde β rope ladder
- Un toboggan β slide
3 β French Playground Vocabulary Video
Watch Olivier, Leyla and I act like kids as we walk by our neighbourhood playground in Paimpol, France.
Using the options on the bottom right of the YouTube video, you may choose no subtitles, or French or English CC.
Enjoy!
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