Common Pronunciation Errors for French Learners Of English

Watch the French President, Emmanual Macron make a speech in English and learn about some of the most common errors made by French people when they speak English.

Consonant ‘h’

French speakers often have difficulty pronouncing the English consonant /h/ at the beginning of words because the /h/ sound is generally silent in French. As a result, when they speak English, they tend to omit it or replace it with a vowel sound. This can lead to mispronunciations that might confuse listeners.

For example:

  • “hello” may sound like “ello”
  • “house” may sound like “ouse”
  • “happy” may sound like “appy”

This happens because French does not have an aspirated /h/ sound like English does. Although some French words are spelled with h at the beginning (e.g., hôtel, homme), the letter is silent in pronunciation. Over time, French speakers develop a habit of ignoring the /h/ sound altogether, making it difficult for them to pronounce it when speaking English.

Common Challenges for French Speakers:

  1. Dropping the /h/ – Saying “e is” instead of “he is”.
  2. Adding an extra /h/ – Sometimes, to compensate, French speakers mistakenly add /h/ where it doesn’t belong, e.g., saying “hair” instead of “air”.
  3. Struggling with aspiration – In English, /h/ requires a slight breathy sound, which is unnatural for French speakers.

How to Improve Pronunciation:

  • Practice minimal pairs (words that differ only by the presence of /h/):
    • hat vs. at
    • heat vs. eat
    • hop vs. op
  • Focus on airflow – Place a hand in front of the mouth and feel the breath when pronouncing /h/.
  • Listen and repeat – Shadow native English speakers to develop muscle memory for the /h/ sound.

French learners of English often struggle with the schwa sound /ə/ and rhythm because of key differences between the two languages’ phonetic and prosodic systems.

The Schwa Sound and the Rhythm and Stress in English

1. The Schwa Sound /ə/

The schwa is the most common vowel sound in English, appearing in unstressed syllables (e.g., sofa, banana, problem). However, French learners have difficulty with it for several reasons:

  • French vowels are more distinct and fully pronounced, even in unstressed syllables. In contrast, English reduces many unstressed vowels to schwa.
  • French does not have a true schwa sound like English. While some unstressed vowels in French are weak (e.g., le, je), they are still more clearly pronounced than English schwa.
  • French speakers tend to over-pronounce vowels in English words, making them sound unnatural. Instead of reducing “sofa” to /ˈsəʊ.fə/, they might say /ˈsɔ.fa/ with a strong second syllable.

2. Rhythm and Stress Patterns

English is a stress-timed language, meaning some syllables are stressed and others are reduced, creating a natural rhythm. French, on the other hand, is a syllable-timed language, where each syllable has a more even length and emphasis. This difference causes several problems for French learners:

  • They pronounce all syllables with equal weight, making their English sound unnatural and choppy.
  • They struggle with word stress (e.g., ‘PHOtoGRAPH vs. pho’TOgraPHIC), leading to misunderstandings.
  • They have difficulty with sentence rhythm because they don’t naturally reduce unstressed syllables as native English speakers do.

Examples of Common Mistakes

Word Native English Pronunciation French Learner Pronunciation
banana /bəˈnænə/ (weak-strong-weak) /ba.na.na/ (even syllables)
chocolate /ˈtʃɒk.lət/ (2 syllables) /ʃɔ.kɔ.lat/ (3 syllables)
comfortable /ˈkʌm.fə.tə.bəl/ (3 syllables) /kɔ̃.for.ta.bl/ (4 syllables)

How to Improve:

  1. Practice weak vs. strong syllables – Use clapping or tapping exercises to feel the rhythm.
  2. Listen to native speakers and mimic their speech – Shadowing practice can help internalize stress patterns.
  3. Use schwa reduction exercises – Repeat words with schwa and focus on relaxing unstressed syllables.

The schwa sound and the Rhythm and Stress Patterns

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