How to sound French when speaking English

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024

Комментарии • 173

  • @trianglethief
    @trianglethief Год назад +68

    "The 'th' sound, this is totally unnecessary for a language." I laughed like a tea kettle.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +8

      Great that you picked up on that!

    • @trianglethief
      @trianglethief Год назад +5

      @@DaveHuxtableLanguages I suspect I will be binge-watching your videos for the rest of this afternoon and spamming my friends with links. You have amazing comedic timing - I've been subscribed for a little while now because you're very informative and interesting but you absolutely caught me with your latest video and now I'm having an absolute blast laughing like a drain that contains a cackling witch. Please keep it up - edutainment at its best, I am utterly delighted.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +4

      @@trianglethief Wow. Praise indeed. Thank you so much!

  • @tenthz
    @tenthz Год назад +80

    You should teach all the american actors who try to do a french/english accent and end up sounding british! Your videos are so informative!

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +8

      Glad you like them.

    •  10 месяцев назад +1

      Comme le capitaine Jean-Luc Picard. Un français qui sonne comme un étudiant de Shakespeare.

  • @holdtight3558
    @holdtight3558 Год назад +100

    Dave, your videos are brilliant. You are so genuine and likeable, with an incredibly interesting skill.
    And the production value of your videos is brilliant - I look forward to seeing you gain the success and recognition you deserve.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +7

      That’s such a nice comment. Thank you!

    • @Kaede-Sasaki
      @Kaede-Sasaki 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@DaveHuxtableLanguages
      Please do japanese next 😊

  • @joelthefilmmaker
    @joelthefilmmaker 10 месяцев назад +28

    I love when you gave a comparison in an English accent followed by a slightly passive aggressive "non" 😂

  • @Sybil_Detard
    @Sybil_Detard Год назад +15

    The resting French mouth . . . this answers a lot of questions about how I have been looking at English speaking people on RUclips and before they speak, thinking "That person is English," or, "that person is Australian," or "that person is Canadian." This "prescience" has been confounding me, but I suppose it makes sense, as I have significant hearing loss and watch people's mouths a lot when they speak. Oh, and thanks for the closed captioning.

  • @louisrobertbrown
    @louisrobertbrown Год назад +30

    Great video- informative, accurate and entertaining!
    My mother is French but speaks English very well & has done for most of her life. However, she still pronounces 'develop' in the french way when speaking English- i think it's distinctive to me because of the stress rather than the vowel sounds. Also, when she is listening and acknowledging another speaker, she will say 'oui, oui, hhwoui' with the last 'oui' being inhaled- she has also imported that into her English with 'yep, yep, hyep'.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +10

      Thanks for sharing that. I was going to include something about pronouncing French words in English with their original pronunciation, but ended up editing it out.

    • @bruceperkins4601
      @bruceperkins4601 Год назад +1

      Yes. Listening to able French speakers of English I've noticed that error in 'develop', but also in 'idea', which reduces to 2 syllables. Very understandable!.@@DaveHuxtableLanguages

  • @nicholascooper843
    @nicholascooper843 Год назад +18

    Great video. Not that you claimed otherwise, but it's worth noting that this is specific to the "français de france". For instance, french Canadians realize th as t or d, have diphthongs in their french, and often pronouce their vowels in a more lax manner. Another interesting feature is that when speaking English they'll often not pronouce the h at the beginning of a word and will add an h to words that start with a vowel. E.g. "The owl is happy" becomes "The howl is appy".

    •  10 месяцев назад +6

      Heveryone is looking for appiness.

    • @that_flnger
      @that_flnger 10 месяцев назад +3

      ​@do you ave apiness?

  • @timmartindale75
    @timmartindale75 Год назад +23

    Your tip for people learning French to try this is a good one. When I was learning French I always got more approval from my teacher when I was (secretly) pretending to be Pepe Le Pew.

  • @StillAliveAndKicking_
    @StillAliveAndKicking_ Год назад +5

    Do you have a reum?
    A reum?
    What?
    You said do I have a reum.
    I know what I said.
    Peter Sellers was a master of the silly French accent.

  • @lobstervortex
    @lobstervortex Год назад +18

    Your videos are amazing! You are really talented, both in the linguistics and videomaking. I love it!

  • @GoranQu
    @GoranQu Год назад +13

    You are genius for phonetics and linguistics, and you also manage to be hilariously funny while explaining it.
    I love your videos! 😂

  • @madrigal1956
    @madrigal1956 Год назад +4

    Excellent! (As a Frenchman I chose a "bilingual" word...)

  • @IceCenders
    @IceCenders Год назад +2

    BTW in your French vowels chart (2:48), you forgot the pair of vowels /ø/ (e.g. "peut") and /œ/ (e.g. "cœur").
    Also I'm not quite convinced by your 'no diphthong' rule. French people have no issues with stuff like /ɛj/ (as in e.g. abeille), so really I think most French people would say /bɛjk mi ø kɛjk/. No idea TBH of the difference between /ɛj/ and a "real" diphthong, but either way we'd definitely add a short 'i' or a approximant /j/ after the /ɛ/.
    At 4:48, your IPA transcription uses /χ/, which is the voiceless equivalent to /ʁ/ (as you explain subsequently), and would be the normal way to pronounce that sentence, but you use an Edith Piaf-like exaggerated 'r' which is very voiced. TBH I don't really know whether anyone distinguishes IPA-wise the normal and sedate modern French 'r' from the exaggerated trilled 'r' that most English speaker tend to think is still widely in use.
    I'm very very impressed however that you're the first person who seems to have noticed like me that the long English /i:/ and /u:/ aren't actually quite identical to elongated French /i/ and /u/ sounds, the French vowels being noticeably, for lack of a better word, a lot 'starker', and as you said, a lot more extremely situated in the mouth (I think they're just more closed, so much so that as you said trailing /i/ sounds turn into fricatives, which is also the case for trailing /u/ sounds that can sometimes become /uɸ/, or even /e/ that can become /eç/, where /ç/ is the German soft ch further back in the mouth than the /ç/ sound of 'oui' /wiç/ which is closer to I'd say Spanish /ʃ/ but sadly it seems the IPA doesn't make the distinction either).

  • @igotes
    @igotes Год назад +9

    Merci! C'est interessant et amusant. I work with a French woman with a very strong accent, it took me a while to understand her but I quite enjoy it now. She often throws in an "alors" or "par example".

    • @geoff1201
      @geoff1201 2 месяца назад

      Does she roll her Rs?

  • @alankwood
    @alankwood Год назад +8

    Dave , This is ,for me one of the funniest videos on u tube.!!!.
    Your French accent is perfect and The examples you used..... I canta waita fora your Italiano one !!
    Keep up the good work ..

  • @allycarmichael9692
    @allycarmichael9692 Месяц назад +1

    Hey, just subscribed. Loved your French accent. I am an american actress, and this really helped me get a role I thought I knew I wouldn't.
    Do you have more videos like this but with other accents?

  • @oblinky
    @oblinky Год назад +6

    This is great stuff, as a French I completely relate. I tried to say 'tea' with the tongue further back, I've been impressed how more "English" it sounds ahah

  • @mirandelf
    @mirandelf Год назад +8

    This is fantastic. I’ve been struggling with French accented English and this is so helpful!

  • @IceCenders
    @IceCenders Год назад +2

    French native here, pretty outstanding French accent!
    Maybe your 'o' and 'u' sounds could improve (when you speak, not when you recite the vowels from the chart), like when you say 'totally' or 'you' or 'position'. Your /o/'s are either too open (as in ɔ, when it should be /o/) or more often they sound like /ø/ or rather sth in the neighborhood of a schwa (something central and barely rounded), and your /u/'s are too open as well, and not rounded enough, they sound too much like /ʊ/ and not enough like the very closed, very 'stark' French /u/. And I'm wondering if your /ø/ aren't too open as well, too schwa-like, although it might depend on the French accent considered, I don't know. Still, one of the best French impressions I've ever heard! :)
    Just found your channel, as a language lover and aficionado of phonetics and accents, it's a real find!

  • @beforedrrdpr
    @beforedrrdpr 2 месяца назад +1

    Neat, I loved it. Could you ever make a video like this for British accent, or have you already?

  • @mathiashedelius1219
    @mathiashedelius1219 Год назад +1

    You should have 1,800,000 followers at least instead of 18,000. Cheers!

  • @Enikay13
    @Enikay13 4 месяца назад +1

    Me as a native French speaker trying to speak with French accent because I got used to an English accent which is horrible when I speak and the French accent is more sexy

  • @kramnam4716
    @kramnam4716 Год назад +3

    As a teacher here in UK, if you speak like zis in France they will understand you if they learnt English at school because zis is how zey would have ‘erd engleesh from zeir teachers! 😊Merci Inspecteur!

  • @jonswinfield9336
    @jonswinfield9336 Год назад +2

    It’s really interesting isn’t it
    I spent the preschool years living in French speaking countries yet I can’t speak French
    Interestingly I find this way of speaking English easy to do
    I’ve also been on holiday a couple of times to France and within a week I have remembered what many words are and what they mean
    Is this unusual?
    I also notice that dialects can alter when people visit the place of their birth
    It becomes stronger
    My wife is from the north west of England and I was born in Hackney ( london)

  • @kanini43
    @kanini43 Год назад +4

    Dear Dave, your videos are great, fascinating, brilliant. You are so likeable with your incredibly interesting skill and skull. 😍 Skål❣️🥂

  • @Squirrelmind66
    @Squirrelmind66 Год назад +2

    This reminds me of something a character says in Yann Martel’s novel Life of Pi, when he meets a French person: “you sound as if language is a block of wood, and your tongue is a saw”

  • @benedettobruno1669
    @benedettobruno1669 Год назад +1

    😆😆😆
    Me: a Sicilian watching a British man pretending to be a French giving advice on how to sound French when speaking English.
    This video cracked me up.
    😆😆😆

  • @appoNo1
    @appoNo1 Год назад +5

    Can’t believe this channel isn’t huge yet! Keep it up man 👏

  • @munkiesyeah
    @munkiesyeah 10 месяцев назад +3

    Bloody love it! Love the humour too! Thanks 😊 😊

  • @clemolette
    @clemolette Год назад +3

    I can't even tell if you're french or not (from a Fench) ! Your french accent is perfect ahah

  • @ThemanlymanStan
    @ThemanlymanStan 10 месяцев назад +4

    Resting positions of languages made me consider why I intuitively know that someone is deaf within seconds of meeting them before they even had a chance to sign to me. Deaf people probably tend not to have these resting positions, especially if they were born deaf. I always felt there was a 'deaf face', but it honestly makes more sense in light of there being resting positions of languages. Ive grown up around deaf people since my mom was born deaf.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  10 месяцев назад +2

      That’s a really interesting point. I wonder if knowing about mouth positions would help those deaf people who want to speak more clearly.

    • @ThemanlymanStan
      @ThemanlymanStan 10 месяцев назад +1

      @DaveHuxtableLanguages That's an interesting point. In the past of the USA, it was used in a way but in an extreme way that honestly hurt deaf people. Oralism was taught to deaf children, but it forbade using any forms of sign language. This made it messed up. It suppressed the natural tendency of deaf children to develop sign language. They were forced to use a spoken language. It hurt their mental development and, most likely, their self-esteem, too.
      Teaching a sign language and then a spoken language afterward, I think, would help deaf people a lot. Learning sign language first helps significantly in mental development and communication as well as mental health and community. Learning a spoken language, even though they can not hear it and only see it through lip reading, would help in communicating with hearing people of the same overall language. It just needs to be addressed in a respectful way considering the past. For example, in the US, in the past deaf children were taught to speak English and were punished for using any sign language.
      We should teach sign language as early as possible and afterward a spoken language as a 2nd language. To do anything else could hurt deaf people, which would be messed up.

  • @rursus8354
    @rursus8354 Год назад +2

    This is exactly what I've always wanted to learn! Sank iou, sank iou, sank iou!

  • @selladore4911
    @selladore4911 4 месяца назад +1

    both funny and informative, thanks for the IPA

  • @PETERSNYDERMAN-uw4vk
    @PETERSNYDERMAN-uw4vk 2 месяца назад +1

    how would you say the word “wizard” with a french accent? thanks for the great content.

  • @frankzj
    @frankzj Год назад +5

    I've heard that another important part of the French accent is to always place the stress on the last syllable of words.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +10

      We’ll not really. In French, the stress goes on the last full syllable of a phrase rather than on each word.

    • @oceantree5000
      @oceantree5000 Год назад

      ⁠@@DaveHuxtableLanguagesWell, not really… depends on what in the phrase/ sentence which the speaker wishes to stress. Within words, all syllables receive equal stress… adjusted for accent, swallowed syllables, etc. 😂
      Super entertaining video, but as I’ve often found, the accuracy diminishes a bit once we’ve left the home island… Understandable, of course. 😊

  • @k.umquat8604
    @k.umquat8604 Год назад +2

    I love how you say "Frhens, R-rhomahnz, Cutrheemenn!"

  • @paulozhang1340
    @paulozhang1340 5 месяцев назад +1

    Marvelous!
    Can you do more French accent videos?

  • @JeanLoupRSmith
    @JeanLoupRSmith Год назад +3

    Very impressive. I would argue though - and that very much depends on the individual - that some, maybe most, people wouldn't pronounce words that end in -tion the way you're pronouncing it [-syõ] but more like [-shö:n] (excuse the bad phonetic transcript but hopefully you know what I mean).
    Then again, most French accents are like sandpaper to my ears (especially my own) so you may well be right

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +1

      You may indeed be right. I thing I was switching between someone trying an English pronunciation of those words, and one of those people who pronounces all French loan words in English à la française as if the Brits have been saying them wrong for the last 1000 years.

  • @roidragecow
    @roidragecow Год назад +2

    Hello! I am a newcomer to your channel, recommended a several year old video on the English accents. I always loved accents but watching videos about them I get confused about the phonetic symbols. Are there any tricks to understand them or it is just pure memorization? Can't wait for the next one!

  • @planeurs
    @planeurs Год назад +3

    😂😂😂 Dave, I'm at the stage where I'm wondering where you re getting the ideas from!

  • @element7795
    @element7795 4 месяца назад +1

    This is such a wonderful video. I came across it when trying to explain to someone whose native language is Mandarin that they were not pronouncing "e" in "fled" correctly but I couldn't explain very well except that they were making it too short.

    • @element7795
      @element7795 4 месяца назад

      Yeah, American so my 'fled" is a bit on the long side.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  4 месяца назад

      Love it. Glad this was useful.

  • @nevie8158
    @nevie8158 Год назад +3

    You're very underrated! I love your channel

  • @patrickmurtagh9379
    @patrickmurtagh9379 Год назад +1

    Not quite sure what the point of this site is. Wouldnt it be best to put the effort into learning French!

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +3

      The point is to be fun and informative. As for people learning French, as I said at the end, isolating just the pronunciation without worrying about the vocab and grammar can be a useful exercise for getting a good accent.

  • @jim9689
    @jim9689 Год назад +4

    This was awesome! Can you also make a "How to sound German when speaking English" video?

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +2

      I think I might well do that!

    • @jim9689
      @jim9689 Год назад

      @@DaveHuxtableLanguages That would be great! I recommend watching "Young Frankenstein", Teri Garr is superb with her German accent (her grandparents were Austrian).

  • @manouplinck
    @manouplinck Год назад +1

    0:17 but thats a Gerbil..

  • @carolhernandez7505
    @carolhernandez7505 Год назад +1

    Since you live in California, have you thought of coaching actors for roles with accents? You’d be great!!!

  • @Pro4Stars
    @Pro4Stars Год назад +1

    Hilarious.
    A Pink Panther sequel - coming soon to a theater (mobile) near You!?
    /A Swenglish speaking person

  • @allycarmichael9692
    @allycarmichael9692 Месяц назад

    Im really trying to get this theater part in my community, nothing big, but I was hoping you might have an Israeli accent video? Otherwise I think I'm just going to try doing the part with a French accent. You think that would pass?

  • @philipchek
    @philipchek 17 дней назад

    Voilà une approche très amusante, et qui sait efficace. Et aussi merci d'avoir tenté d'expliquer aux anglophones que le "r" français ne roule pas du tout, au contraire du "r" russe ou des vieux accents écossais ou irlandais. :)

  • @allycarmichael9692
    @allycarmichael9692 Месяц назад

    I hope you are still getting notifications for this video because I really need the help of someone like you.
    I would even pay for private lessons.

  • @depp8714
    @depp8714 Год назад +1

    Awesome, and pretty accurate.
    I suppose same principles but closing the mouse (mouth) a bit you can get a Québécois' English accent like what I hear everyday in Montreal, eh?

  • @LongTailCat3
    @LongTailCat3 3 месяца назад

    01:30 Note: In Québec, we actually do this instead.

  • @krugerfuchs
    @krugerfuchs Месяц назад +1

    Omg you're so good at accents

  • @TiagoMorbusSa
    @TiagoMorbusSa Год назад +2

    The knowledge, the skill, the wit! What a terrific video!!! 👏

  • @alexrafe2590
    @alexrafe2590 Год назад +1

    This was a very enjoyable video. But as I watched it I realised that among French people, their schooling in English seems to be taking a more pragmatic approach. By this I mean French schools appear to be intent upon teaching them to be able to replicate English sounds well. When I go to France now and listen to many young people speak English they don’t try to fall back on ze for the. They’ve mastered the th sound both hard and soft and use it fairly comfortably. This is true of their mastery of many English diphthongs and other sounds. And some French people when they speak English, do it so well that while I hear a light accent, I can’t place where its from, and find it difficult to determine whether they’re French or not.

  • @joshuanesbit
    @joshuanesbit 2 месяца назад

    And you can see the slight similarities with German

  • @philipchek
    @philipchek 17 дней назад

    Le "th" est totalement inutile dans un langage : celle-là j'ai adoré :)))

  • @jwcrummett
    @jwcrummett 4 месяца назад

    So, uhh, any other RPGers here trying to work on their character's voice? 😅

  • @RuayTorng
    @RuayTorng Год назад +1

    Wonderful! I wish this video was available in 1972 when I learned French.

  • @ulaurszulenka24
    @ulaurszulenka24 5 месяцев назад

    I hope this is a joke. Everyone laughs at people with such an accent and they are never taken seriously 😂

  • @Liofa73
    @Liofa73 Год назад +1

    I wonder how the English sound when speaking French.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +1

      That might feature in a future video!

    • @ayrtonpavot3096
      @ayrtonpavot3096 Год назад

      @@DaveHuxtableLanguages please do it, this video was great (comoign from a frenchman), and I'd love to this the opposite situation

  • @bop321
    @bop321 2 месяца назад

    Whos here because of channing's gambit

  • @Kropotkin2000
    @Kropotkin2000 10 месяцев назад

    Personally, I watch Peter Sellers in the Pink Panther films and try to imitate him.

  • @xxff6452
    @xxff6452 15 дней назад

    🤣🤣🤣🤣really exist this kind of tutorial

  • @daniellehamilton9155
    @daniellehamilton9155 10 месяцев назад

    Can you please do the same video but for Spanish?

  • @eliseereclus3475
    @eliseereclus3475 3 месяца назад

    Not bad. (Says this Frenchman). Especially his actual French words. Perfect !

  • @cargumdeu
    @cargumdeu Год назад +1

    I dont know if you revisit these pages to view new comments but here's one for you. Everyone's making videos about Sadiq Khan's anti-misogyny ad, featuring the word 'maaate'. It does get one ruminating on the myriad ways we have - and Australians have too - with this word, in all its regional dialects and any one of many intentions, from magnanimous warmth to barely contained violence. I was hoping you'd find the subject interesting enough to work up a new vid....regards anyway

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад

      That’s an interesting one. Thanks for the suggestion. I try to keep up with comments but recently I’ve been a bit swamped - a good problem to have.

  • @piafounetMarcoPesenti
    @piafounetMarcoPesenti 10 месяцев назад

    Being John Malkovich helps.

  • @jakubSwaps
    @jakubSwaps 5 месяцев назад

    Brilliant work as always. Something quite noticeable you missed, though, is that unlike in English, the French stress the last syllable of a word. They very often do this when speaking English as well. I feel like that was the one missing puzzle piece here. Love these videos!

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  5 месяцев назад +1

      Actually, French has very weak stress and it usually only falls on the last full syllable of the last word in a phrase or sentence.

  • @myouatt5987
    @myouatt5987 Год назад +1

    A corker, Dave, nice one! Can't say much more really - an interesting perspective ... 'run, rabbit, run' was brilliant btw! Cheers!

  • @alexkucherov5711
    @alexkucherov5711 2 месяца назад

    Absolutely amazing

  • @christopherbentley7289
    @christopherbentley7289 Год назад

    Wah do ah feeel as eef ah ahm watcheeng an episode of ''Allo 'Allo"?

  • @vairpalefroi
    @vairpalefroi 4 месяца назад

    The more frogs you eat the more you sound french.

  • @suzannejoyk
    @suzannejoyk 10 месяцев назад

    Lol I’m learning French so interesting

  • @rodrigorodrigueslab
    @rodrigorodrigueslab Месяц назад

    Quem aí reparou que apareceram notas de Reais? rsrs...

  • @oiausdlkasuldhflaksjdhoiausydo
    @oiausdlkasuldhflaksjdhoiausydo Год назад +1

    Lovely!!! Do Spain’s Spanish next!

  • @jamesdavies3316
    @jamesdavies3316 Год назад +2

    I wondered what had happened to Ronnie Barker....

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +1

      So now you know. Elvis and Lady Di say hi.

    • @jamesdavies3316
      @jamesdavies3316 Год назад

      @@DaveHuxtableLanguages Dave, it was a back handed compliment, i love your delivery and content.

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +2

      @@jamesdavies3316 I took it as a huge compliment. The man was a genius.

  • @Realgrande
    @Realgrande 5 месяцев назад

    I learned 2 French words in the 1980's and everyone thought I was French. First I ate Frogs, Snails, dishes served with tons of butter and said " Depeche Mode". They said "Ooo la la you Fwench", I replied "Wee, Me Fwench". " Bone Jour, Bone Appetite, Bone Soup".

  • @FransceneJK98
    @FransceneJK98 5 месяцев назад

    So basically make the instagram duck lips and like you’re about to kiss and talk. 😂

  • @benjibatch
    @benjibatch Год назад +1

    I don’t know if this was supposed to be funny but it was hilarious for me 😂😂😂

  • @nicolerosen7957
    @nicolerosen7957 Год назад +3

    Top!

  • @jeromejean-charles6163
    @jeromejean-charles6163 Год назад

    Gorgeous self reference about dentals: "The tip of the tongue on the teeth" . Pour votre gouverne un "virenez" ( puisque l'on dit un virelangue) : A nice "nasal twister" for English speakers learning French : "Un bon gingembre" contains all the French nasal sounds ( note that UN and IN are NOT the same sound even if today most French speakers make no distinction).

  • @scarletblossom
    @scarletblossom 15 дней назад

    tis a gerbil 😭 0:21

  • @polyglotpress
    @polyglotpress Год назад

    Ma maman parlait comme ça. Je ne m'en apercevais que quand il y avait des anglophones parmi nous. J'ai bien remarqué que le « u. » donne les anglophones le plus grand mal à prononcer. Il me semble que dans le graphique cartésien de la vidéo (6 : 26) il manque ce « u. » Peut-être il était question des symboles phonétiques dont je ne connais pas encore la signification ?

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  Год назад +1

      Le symbole en question serait le /y/. Je ne l’ai pas inclus ici parce qu’il n’y a pas de correspondance avec les son de l’anglais. Il me semble que les français se servent du /u/ , écrit dans l’orthographe française, pour prononcer le /u:/ de l’anglais.

  • @hannofranz7973
    @hannofranz7973 6 месяцев назад

    Ass a Görman I beck you to brushh up on my Görman eccent when speaking English. Cann you give me some atvise?

  • @davidamadore
    @davidamadore 4 месяца назад

    One thing I would add to these tips is that the French /l/ is unvelarized, whereas the English /l/ often is velarized (details depending on the accent: velarized /l/ is typically described as “dark” while unvelarized is known as “clear”). If you want to imitate a French person saying the English word “well”, the most crucial thing is to make sure your /l/ is clear.

  • @Evan0614
    @Evan0614 Год назад

    Incredible guide for anyone wanting to re-dub the voice acting for Disco Elysium ;)

  • @ZWD2011
    @ZWD2011 Год назад

    Frenglish. The sound of being arrogant whilst being arrogant. Priceless.

  • @maryleenhagger8145
    @maryleenhagger8145 Год назад

    I have lived in French speaking countries as a native English speaker. I hope that this can help my accent with those dreaded French words that begin with "r"!

  • @rudyberkvens-be
    @rudyberkvens-be 6 дней назад

    Ilàrioos!

  • @anthonyakakabota9452
    @anthonyakakabota9452 Месяц назад

    Were you born with both accents?

  • @renes9966
    @renes9966 Год назад

    This is brilliant, would love to see your “how to do an XYZ accent” becoming a series!

  • @yabiji342
    @yabiji342 10 месяцев назад

    Hi Dave, do you teach the British accent for French native speakers?

  • @azzadazza3082
    @azzadazza3082 8 месяцев назад

    Can you please do Malta

    • @DaveHuxtableLanguages
      @DaveHuxtableLanguages  8 месяцев назад

      Hopefully one day I'll get to spend enough time in Malta to do it justice, but for now I don't think I'd recognise a Maltese accent, let alone be able to imitate one.

  • @LJL0619
    @LJL0619 Год назад

    Vraiment, à la prochaine. Excellent, bravo!

  • @zachary123212
    @zachary123212 Год назад

    Any tricks regarding sentence prosody?

  • @appoNo1
    @appoNo1 Год назад

    Wenger vibes haha

  • @TrelvisGresley
    @TrelvisGresley Год назад

    The piece on vowels is particularly interesting. From my experience of working with a lot of excellent English speaking light French accent French colleagues in the UK, the word that always seems to give the most trouble for them to pronounce is “Month”. The o becomes very nasal with an e added.

    • @resourceress7
      @resourceress7 10 месяцев назад

      Good point. French has several nasal vowels that English doawn't have.

  • @dialecticcoma
    @dialecticcoma Год назад +1

    great channel mate

  • @JackHeywood
    @JackHeywood Год назад +1

    very funny! ❤