Basic French Conversation
Basic French Conversation
Basic French Conversation
These few lines make the start of many French conversations. You should learn them!
How can you make your own easy French conversations? With friends, with shopkeepers, with strangers ?
Index:
1. Basic French conversation: Greetings and first questions
2. Basic French conversation with a shopkeeper: La Boulangerie
3. Basic French conversation: Leaving
Basic French Conversation: Everything You Need to Know
1. Basic French conversation: Greetings and first questions
Start your conversation with a greeting, like:
“Ça va” is both a question and an answer! Notice how you can use et toi ? (= and you? What about you?) to ask any question back. It can help a
conversation flow better!
Beyond these first basic questions, you can go with slighly more complex ones:
Vous partez pour les vacances ? = Are you going somewhere, for the holidays?
Tu fais quoi ce week-end ? = What are you doing this week end?
Well, to talk about your near future: use aller or le futur proche = aller + infinitif.
That tense is not as difficult as it seems, but it’s still beyond basic French, I’m afraid.
Basic French Conversation: Everything You Need to Know
When in doubt, just be positive: C’était super ! = It was great!
In many small shops, you need to talk to the attendant to buy what you want.
So on the one hand, you need to learn the basic conversation if you want to fit in.
a – Greetings is politeness 101. When entering any shop where there’s an attendant, we always say Bonjour. Or Bonsoir if it’s the evening.
b – Order with “je voudrais.” In a small shop where you need to talk to the shopkeeper, like une boulangerie (= a bakery) or une pâtisserie (= a
pastry shop), you can order with:
“Je voudrais…” = I would like…
That can also give you time to choose what delicious thing to pick!
c – Ce sera tout ?
Non, je vais aussi prendre [un croissant.] = No, I’ll also have a croissant (or anything else that you want.)
Oui merci. / Oui merci ce sera tout. = Yes, thank you, that will be all.
Don’t forget to say goodbye, or you’ll seem cold for no reason. (And don’t forget to pay! That’s… that’s the law.)
Basic French Conversation: Everything You Need to Know
3. Basic French Conversation: Leaving
Au revoir ! is the basic sentence when leaving someone or when leaving a conversation. You might need to excuse yourself first with something
like Je dois y aller. (= I have to go), if need be.
Au revoir is fine for most situations. But if you want, you can learn better sentences. Like:
À tout de suite ! = See you in a minute.
À tout à l’heure ! / À plus tard ! = See you later in the same day. (Never when it’s for a different day!)
À bientôt ! = See you soon (especially when it’s not the same day.)
À plus ! = “See ya” (it’s an informal goodbye, for friends. It’s cute and fun.)
“À toute !” = See you later (short for “à tout à l’heure.”)
(Funnily enough, le salut also means “Salvation.” I spent my childhood thinking that L’Armée du Salut, the Salvation Army, were a bunch of soldiers
greeting each other all the time.)
À tout de suite.
I’ll see you in the next video!
Allez, salut !
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