How do you Say “French” and “France”?

Author: Camille Chevalier-Karfis

How do you say French and France in French? When is there an upper case at French? When is it français or française and how do you say I study French?

How do you say “French” as in “the French language”?

The name of the language is LE françAIS – masculine, S silent, lower case F.

Usually, the “le” stays ; j’étudie le français, j’aime le français, j’apprends le français etc… but with the verb “parler” (to speak), we drop the “le”, we usually say “je parle français”, although the alternative (je parle le français) is not a mistake, but it’s much less used.

How do you say the Names of the French People ?

The name of the French people is “les Français”. S silent, capital F. This noun will change according to the gender of the people you are referring to:

  1. One Frenchman: un Français (ends in a ay sound, s silent).
  2. One Frenchwoman : une Française (ends in a ayz sound).
  3. Several Frenchwomen : des Françaises (ends in a ayz sound).
  4. Several Frenchmen (with or without Frenchwomen): des Français (ends in a ay sound, s silent).

How do you say Something or Someone is French ?

This time, it’s not going to be a noun, but an adjective. The F will be lower case, and the adjective will agree in number and gender with the noun it modifies. Learn all about French adjectives in this audio lesson.

  1. A French wine : un vin français ( “un vin” is masculine singular)
  2. A French car : une voiture française (“une voiture” is feminine singular)
  3. French wines : des vins français (masculine plural)
  4. French cars : des voitures françaises (feminine plural)

Now it can get a bit more complexe when the adjective “French” modifies “a man” or “a woman”. In English, you can say “a Frenchman”. It’s a noun. You can also say “a French man, a man who is French”. In this case, French is an adjective. Note that adjectives of nationality take an uppercase in English, they don’t in French.

  1. A Frenchman : un Français (upper case F, Français is a noun).
  2. A French man : un homme français (lower case f, français is an adjective).
Marianne, one of the symbols of France
Marianne, one of the symbols of France

How do you say the Name of the Country, France?

The name of the country is “la France”. Capital F

Now, according to the rules of prepositions of places, you would say:

  1. J’habite en France – I live in France (in + feminine country = en)
  2. Je viens de France – I come from France (from + feminine country = de, no la)

How do you say “I Study French”?

In French you cannot say “I take a French class”. Your class is not French itself, it’s an idiom in English. You class is “about” the French language.

  1. I take a French class = I take a class of French language =  = je  suis une classe DE FRANÇAIS (not je suis une classe française, you cannot translate literally, it won’t work in French).
    On a side note, people have been pointing out that it should be “je suis un cours de français”, the class being the people, the course the content. It may be a mistake, but it’s very common in French to say “une classe de français” for both people and content. So you may want to say: “je suis un cours de français”, “je fais partie d’une classe de français”, “j’adore ma classe/mon cours de français”, “je déteste ma prof de français”… it’s “de français”, never “français/française”, which is my point :-)
  2. I study French = j’étudie le français = the name of the language is “le français’.

You could also say:

  • I study the French language = j’étudie la langue française = “la langue” is feminine, “française” is the adjective “French” agreeing with “la langue”, hence feminine singular.

To remember all these rules, I suggest you copy the examples on flash cards, and learn the appropriate usage in context, rather than trying to remember the rule. And remember, as always, repetition is the key!

You may also like my lesson on Vive la France – French Patriotic Expressions and Symbols.

What about the French Election? Learn the French Election vocabulary and understand how we vote in France as you practice your French with this easy bilingual learn French in context story.

Author: Camille Chevalier-Karfis

Camille Chevalier-Karfis

Born and raised in Paris, I have been teaching today's French to adults for 25+ years in the US and France. Based on my students' goals and needs, I've created unique downloadable French audiobooks focussing on French like it's spoken today, for all levels. Come to Paimpol and enjoy an exclusive French immersion homestay with me in Brittany.

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