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30 Common French Phrases Every Beginner Should Know

By Miracle Team ·

You do not need perfect grammar to start speaking French — you need a handful of common French phrases that cover the moments beginners actually face: greeting people, ordering a coffee, asking for directions and politely admitting you didn’t catch a word. Here are the 30 phrases that give you the biggest head start, grouped by situation, each with a plain-English pronunciation hint.

Greetings & basics

1. Bonjour ! — Hello / Good morning (bon-ZHOOR) The single most important word in French. Say it when you enter any shop — skipping it reads as rude.

2. Bonsoir ! — Good evening (bon-SWAHR)

3. Salut ! — Hi / Bye (sah-LOO) — informal, for friends only.

4. S’il vous plaît — Please (seel voo PLEH)

5. Merci / Merci beaucoup — Thank you / Thank you very much (mair-SEE bo-KOO)

6. De rien — You’re welcome (duh ree-AN)

7. Oui / Non — Yes / No (wee / non)

8. Pardon / Excusez-moi — Sorry / Excuse me (par-DON / ex-koo-zay-MWAH)

Surviving a conversation

9. Je ne comprends pas. — I don’t understand. (zhuh nuh kom-PRON pah)

10. Vous pouvez répéter, s’il vous plaît ? — Could you repeat that, please?

11. Parlez-vous anglais ? — Do you speak English? (par-lay voo on-GLEH)

12. J’apprends le français. — I’m learning French. Say this and most French speakers will slow down and cheer you on.

13. Comment dit-on … en français ? — How do you say … in French? The best phrase for collecting new words in the wild.

14. Je m’appelle … — My name is …

15. Enchanté(e) — Nice to meet you (on-shon-TAY)

At a café or restaurant

16. Je voudrais un café, s’il vous plaît. — I’d like a coffee, please. Je voudrais… is the polite ordering pattern — swap in anything.

17. La carte, s’il vous plaît. — The menu, please.

18. L’addition, s’il vous plaît. — The bill, please.

19. C’est délicieux ! — It’s delicious!

20. Un verre d’eau, s’il vous plaît. — A glass of water, please.

Getting around

21. Où est … ? — Where is …? (oo eh) Combine with la gare (station), les toilettes (toilet) or l’hôtel.

22. Combien ça coûte ? — How much does it cost? (kom-bee-AN sah KOOT)

23. Je voudrais aller à … — I’d like to go to …

24. À gauche, à droite, tout droit — Left, right, straight ahead. Three phrases that decode any directions you’re given.

25. Je suis perdu(e). — I’m lost.

Numbers & everyday

26. Un, deux, trois… — One, two, three (an, duh, twah)

27. Aujourd’hui / demain — Today / tomorrow

28. Quelle heure est-il ? — What time is it?

Emergencies

29. Au secours ! — Help! (oh suh-KOOR)

30. J’ai besoin d’un médecin. — I need a doctor.

A 60-second pronunciation survival guide

French looks intimidating on paper, but a few rules unlock most of it:

  • Silent final consonants. Most final consonants are silent: Paris is “pa-REE”, petit is “puh-TEE”.
  • Nasal vowels. on, an, in are said through the nose with no hard “n” — bon ≈ “bon” with the n barely there.
  • R is in the throat. The French r is a soft gargle near the back of the mouth, not the English roll.
  • Even stress. French gives each syllable almost equal weight, with a tiny lift on the last one.
  • Liaisons. A normally silent final consonant links to the next word’s vowel: vous_avez → “voo-za-vay”.

Don’t aim for perfect — aim for understood. Copy native audio and mimic the melody, not just the letters. The full breakdown is in our guide to French pronunciation.

Tu or vous? A 20-second etiquette note

French has two words for “you”: formal vous and informal tu. As a visitor, default to vous with adults you don’t know — waiters, shop staff, strangers. Use tu with children, close friends and anyone who invites it (“On peut se tutoyer ?”). Nobody is offended by a polite vous, so it’s always the safe choice.

A simple 7-day plan to make these stick

  • Days 1–2: Greetings and basics (1–8). Say each aloud five times with audio.
  • Days 3–4: Conversation survival (9–15) — these rescue every awkward moment, so over-practice them.
  • Day 5: Café phrases (16–20). Rehearse a full order, from Bonjour to L’addition, s’il vous plaît.
  • Day 6: Directions and numbers (21–28).
  • Day 7: Emergencies (29–30), then self-test: read the English, recall the French.

Learn the patterns, not just the sentences: Je voudrais… unlocks hundreds of orders, Où est…? unlocks every place name you know. Five minutes a day beats one hour on Sunday — and pairing phrases with pictures makes them stick faster, as we explain in how to learn French vocabulary fast.

This is exactly what Learn French for Beginners is built for: every phrase comes with native-speaker audio, a slow-playback mode and mini games that quiz you until each pattern is automatic. It also trains le/la genders with every noun, so you build correct habits from day one.

Download Learn French for Beginners free on Google Play and master all 30 phrases this week.