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1 – Bonjour et bienvenue!

Prononciation: 1.5 – Les accents

Accents


1. Accent aigu ( ´ )

The accent aigu is used to indicate the quality of the vowel sound represented by the letter e.

This is the [e] sound learned earlier in chapter 1: 1.3 – Le son [e] (R)

2. Accent grave ( ` )

The accent grave is also used to indicate the quality of the vowel sound represented by the letter e.

When used with letters other than e, the accent grave does not indicate a sound difference but serves to distinguish different words which have the same spelling but different meanings.

ou (or) où (where)
la date (the date) là (there)
il y a (there is/are) à l’heure (on time)

3. Accent circonflexe (^)

The accent circonflexe arose historically as a marker for vowels which were followed by another letter (usually s) in an earlier state of the language:

être (<estre) hôtel (<hostel) forêt (<forest) plaît (<plaist)

4. La cédille (ç)

La cédille accent is used only with the letter c to indicate the sound /s/ when it is followed by the letters a, o, or u:

The cedilla is not used with the letters e and i:

5. Le tréma (¨)

The tréma accent is used with vowels to indicate that they are pronounced separately from a preceding vowel:

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