1.7. Accents you’ll start to see

🪶 Before you start

You don’t need to memorize everything here.

Accents may look new, but they follow simple patterns.

Just notice how they affect pronunciation.

🔴 1. What are accents?

In French, some letters have small marks called accents.

They can:
• change how a letter sounds
• or just help distinguish words

Most accents appear on the letter “e”.

🔴 2. The most important ones

Focus only on high-frequency, high-impact accents.

É (accent aigu)

é → “ay”

café
été

💡 Clear and sharp sound (like “say” without the “s”)

È / Ê (accent grave / accent circonflexe)

è → “eh”
ê → “eh”

père
fête

💡 More open sound than “é”

👉 You can treat è and ê the same for now

E (no accent)

le
petite

💡 Often softer or less clear

👉 This is why accents help — they make pronunciation clearer

🔴 3. Other accents (less about sound)

Keep this light and reassuring.

À

à

💡 Same sound as “a”

Used to distinguish meaning

Ç (cédille)

ça
garçon

💡 Makes C sound like “s”

Î / Ô (circumflex)

île
hôtel

💡 Usually does NOT change pronunciation much

👉 You’ll just get used to seeing it

🔴 4. A small observation

Accents often make pronunciation more predictable.

They are not random — they help guide you.

🎯 Quick check

You see: café

How is “é” pronounced?

- “eh”
- “ay” ✅
- silent

🪶 Closing

You don’t need to remember all accents right now.

Just start noticing them when you read French.

They will quickly become familiar.