Silent letters and liaisons: French
French often looks denser on the page than it sounds in speech. Silent letters and liaison patterns shape rhythm, grammar cues, and comprehension, so training both together is essential.
Link spelling, sound flow, and grammar
Many final consonants are silent in pause position, but some reappear as liaison before a vowel-starting word. If you rely only on spelling, listening accuracy drops fast.
Train with short audio lines and full sentence context. That helps you decide when a letter stays silent, when liaison is expected, and when liaison is incorrect.
High-value cues to notice early
Prioritize these cues because they appear constantly in everyday French:
Final consonants are often silent before pauses and consonants. Determiners and pronouns frequently trigger liaison before vowels. h muet allows liaison and elision, while h aspire blocks them.
Plural markers are usually silent but can surface in liaison. Some liaison contexts are optional by register, while others are forbidden.
Patterns worth drilling every week
Lean on repeatable pattern families instead of isolated exceptions:
- Determiner plus vowel-initial noun liaison patterns.
- Subject pronoun plus auxiliary liaison patterns.
- Adjective plus noun liaison in common plural phrases.
- No-liaison zones, such as after et.
- Formal optional liaisons that are less frequent in casual speech.
Silent-letter and liaison patterns in context
Start with these examples as templates, then collect your own lines from clips.
| Context | Pattern | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Plural determiner before vowel | les + vowel noun gives z liaison | les amis -> lez ami |
| Pronoun plus auxiliary | nous + avons gives z liaison | nous avons termine |
| Adjective plus noun | plural adjective + vowel noun liaison | de petits enfants |
| Forbidden liaison | no liaison after et | et elle (not ez-elle) |
| Silent ending in normal flow | final consonant remains silent | ils parlent vite (final -ent is silent) |
Common mistakes and quick fixes
- Pronouncing every written final consonant in connected speech.
- Adding liaison in forbidden contexts.
- Ignoring h aspire and overusing elision or liaison.
- Studying rule lists without repeated audio comparison.
15-minute liaison routine
- Watch one short French clip and collect six lines with silent endings.
- Add three lines where liaison is clearly present.
- Shadow all nine lines, marking where sound appears or disappears.
- Record four lines and compare with original rhythm and linking.
Silent letters and liaisons FAQ
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Should I pronounce final letters when speaking French?
Usually no, unless the pattern requires pronunciation through liaison or the word has a pronounced final consonant by default.
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Is liaison required every time before a vowel?
No. Some liaisons are mandatory, some optional by register, and some forbidden. Pattern training is more reliable than guessing.
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What is the fastest way to improve listening in this area?
Use paired audio loops that contrast silent-final forms with liaison forms in the same grammatical pattern.
Train French linking and silence with real input
Use Jibber Jabber to replay short French lines, save high-value liaison patterns, and build sharper listening for connected speech.
Connect this topic with French structure
Pair this page with pronunciation, listening, and past-tense contrast so sound flow and grammar interpretation improve together.