Not sure how to learn French grammar (without going crazy)?

Or just looking for tips to accelerate your French grammar learning?

You’ve come to the right place.

Today I’ll present six tips I wish I’d heard when I first started learning French grammar. I’ll include some French grammar resources that will be helpful right away and way beyond the beginner stages.

Once you know these handy French grammar rules and tools, you’ll have a strong foundation to keep working towards French fluency.





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Sort Out the Mess: 5 Places to Learn French Grammar Online

Tips and tricks are half the battle when trying to learn French grammar. The bigger task is untangling the threads of French sentence structure and agreements, and that requires two things: clarity and practice.

For you to understand and internalize French grammar, you must have a clear understanding of it. Does that mean you need to memorize French grammar rules out of a textbook? Of course not!

It means that you should aim for learning materials that prioritize simplicity. In other words, don’t get bogged down with lengthy and complicated grammar explanations. In fact, you can quickly and easily learn French grammar for free.

For best results, aim for a 20-80 model. In other words, 20% of your time with the French grammar resource should focus on understanding the explanation of the grammar point, and 80% of it should focus on practicing the grammar topic at hand.

The following five online resources incorporate this model to learn French grammar online!

Tex’s French Grammar is a great resource to learn French grammar basics. Originally developed by the University of Texas at Austin to assist students who are learning French, this resource tackles many common grammar topics and is taught by the cute armadillos Tex and Tammy themselves!

This resource is actually a comprehensive online grammar guide, and it includes tutorials on topics such as noun gender, verb tenses, pronouns, prepositions and negation.

Each grammar lesson has a concise explanation of the topic with an example dialogue featuring Tex, Tammy and their friends. Next, every lesson includes fill-in-the-blanks exercises for practice. The “check answers” feature is also available to make sure learners have done the exercises correctly.

Best of all, the lessons can be downloaded into a single PDF for personal use.

Podcast Français Facile is technically a podcast, but its written grammar tutorials (as well as graded dialogues and readings) make it a fantastically well-rounded resource. Keep in mind, however, that this website is completely in French, so absolute beginners may need to put in a little work to navigate it.

Podcast Français Facile lists over 100 grammar lessons. These lessons are sorted alphabetically, and using the Grammaire (grammar) drop-down menu at the top of the page, they can also be sorted by difficulty from A1 to B2 according to DELF level.

Each lesson focuses on a specific grammar topic, such as prepositions, direct and indirect objects, auxiliaries être (to be) and avoir (to have) and the subjunctive tense.

Lesson explanations are short and direct, and the corresponding exercises are multiple-choice and fill-in-the-blank. There are even accompanying YouTube videos for some lessons.

Le FLE pour les curieux isn’t only a resource for curious French learners but for serious French learners too.

The grammar lessons found here can be sorted by DELF level (A1-B1) or by over-arching topic. Topics include conjugaison (verb conjugation), grammaire (grammar) or orthographe (spelling). This resource is also all in French, but it uses more advanced language, so it’s ideal for intermediate learners.

Each lesson focuses on a specific grammar topic, such as talking about a but (goal), cause et conséquence (cause and consequence) and the formation of plural nouns and adjectives.

The lesson explanations are a little longer than previous resources, but they’re easy to follow. The corresponding exercises are multiple-choice and fill-in-the-blank.

This next resource is a video created by the popular YouTube channel Learn French with Vincent.

In 145 short minutes, this video covers the most common topics in French grammar, such as numbers, question words and basic verb conjugations. In other words, you can learn French grammar basics in a little less than 2.5 hours!

The exercises included in this video are mostly centered around repeating after Vincent, but this resource is still extremely valuable because Vincent gives helpful pronunciation tips throughout, including notes on liaison (silent letters that become pronounced when preceding a vowel).

Furthermore, Learn French with Vincent has many videos for learning French grammar, as well as a website for you to check out.

In France, the diplôme national du brevet (National Diploma) is an examination that all students have to take at the end of year nine. Students spend a lot of time studying for it, including brushing up on subjects like history, geography, mathematics and, of course, French.

This video, from superBrevet by digiSchool, is entirely in French, and it’s aimed at students studying for the French portion of the diploma. As such, it’s perfect for advanced French learners who want a crash course in higher-end grammar.

The teacher in the video talks about advanced topics in French grammar and conjugation, such as the passé simple (the simple past) and concordance des temps (temporal agreement). On-screen, fill-in-the-blank exercises follow the explanations.

In addition to this one, there are multiple other videos related to studying advanced French grammar for the brevet.

How to Learn French Grammar (the Sane Way): 6 Tips I Wish I’d Known Earlier

1. He or She? We Must Agree! Don’t Forget About Gender Agreement

This is one of the tricky parts of learning French grammar, because the idea doesn’t really exist in English. When you name a table, a chair or a house in English, you don’t need to worry about its gender. However, in French, every noun has a grammatical gender.

The difficulty is that a noun’s gender doesn’t simply matter to that noun alone. In fact, the gender of a noun will change the ending of the words referring to it–this is called “agreement.”

For example, any adjective modifying a feminine noun must also be spelled in its feminine form. The article before that noun would also have to be feminine.

Une femme intelligente (An intelligent woman)

Un homme intelligent (An intelligent man)

So, when learning French vocabulary, it’s super important that you learn not just the word, but its gender too, so that you can actually use it correctly in sentences!

There are many tricks for learning French noun genders, so try a few to find out what works best for you. If you tend to be a list learner, a handy trick is to memorize the patterns of endings that are typically one gender or the other.

For example, the nouns with these endings are typically feminine:

a vowel then a consonant then “e,” like: -ine, -ise, -alle, -elle, -esse, -ette, -euse, -ance and -ence

-tion, -sion, -son

-ure, -ude, -ade

-ée, -té, -ière

And masculine nouns mostly end with:

-ste and -tre

-u, -ou, -oir

-me, -ment, -isme

-ble and -cle

-eau and -eur

-age and -ege

Consonants: -b, -c, -d, -f, -k, -l, -m, -n, -p, -r, -s, -t, -x

Remember that there are always exceptions that you’ll have to learn specifically, but this pattern is a useful rule of thumb.

Another good way to learn the gender of new words is to learn sentences that suggest the gender to you, or by linking words of the same gender and learning them together, such as l‘homme aime son vélo vert (the man loves his green bike) or la femme aime la forêt et ses belles fleurs (the woman loves the forest and its beautiful flowers).

In a similar vein, when learning thematic vocabulary lists, break up words into one list of masculine words and one list of feminine words. For example, when learning foods, you might have le pain (bread) and le fromage (cheese) in one list and la pomme (apple) and la carotte (carrot) in another.

Try to create mental images of these things that you can recall later: for bread and cheese, conjure up an image of dipping bread in cheese fondue; for apples and carrots, you might imagine a snack platter. As with the above strategy, this exercise gets you actively thinking about gender and making connections between the words you’re learning.

If you catch yourself wondering if fromage is masculine or feminine later on, you just have to remember which mental image you associated the word with!

2. Learn a Little… English? Oui!

Most of us can speak and read English without actually knowing the names or the grammatical forms behind it. We just know what sounds right and what doesn’t. But when you’re learning a new language, you have to learn to build the grammar from scratch.

Before you learn French grammar, make sure you cover some English grammar so you can relate all the terms and concepts you’re learning about in French to the ones you already know in English. This will make remembering them a whole lot easier, and will also help you understand them, since you can compare them to familiar English examples.

Another benefit is that when you notice yourself using a certain form in your everyday speech, you’ll be reminded of how to form it in French.

A great resource for this is the book “English Grammar for Students of French,” however you can use any English grammar book that you already have, or even just do an online review to brush up.

At the very least, make sure you know each part of speech (noun, verb, adjective, etc.), different tenses of verbs, types of clauses, prepositions and particles. Many of the French terms are similar to the English, making them easy to learn—for example, a verb is un verbe—not too hard to remember!

It’s also worth learning the French names of grammatical terms. This will make reading the French grammar books much easier, because they like to be tricky and use French while teaching it to you.

Doing this will also help you navigate your textbooks and grammar references, as they mostly use the French terms. So, once you know them in English and French, and have a vague idea what they mean, you can look up the specifics and refresh how to form them.

3. Get a French Dictionary That Includes Grammar Info

A basic tool for learning French is, of course, a good dictionary. Most dictionaries typically have a grammar section at the back—make sure whatever dictionary you buy has this section. If it’s a big dictionary, it’d better have a decent grammar section—50+ pages devoted to grammar.

This is so you have everything you need in the one place. What’s the use of being able to look up a vocabulary word if you can’t use it in a coherent sentence?

Pocket dictionaries also have grammar sections to help you on-the-go. Keep one of these on you, and when you have a quiet moment, try creating some French sentences, using the vocabulary and grammar guides to help. It’s amazing how tiny these dictionaries can be, so you’ll barely notice you’re carrying it around until you whip it out for some French composition.

A good dictionary is worth its weight in gold (well, maybe not quite, those things are super heavy) because if you’re going to study groups or classes, you’ll want a single book that gives you all you need, so you don’t have to lug around your growing French library.

There are also many dictionaries online that can help you learn French grammar rules, but make sure you use one with an established name like the Centre National de Ressources Textuelles et Lexicales or anything from the Académie française.

Another trustworthy resource is Lexilogos.com, which provides links to dictionaries for many languages. The page dedicated to French provides links to online bilingual dictionaries, as well as French-English dictionaries, thesauruses, idioms, slang and more! As always, don’t trust everything you read on the internet.

The more grammar and textbooks you have at hand, the better equipped you’ll be to get a handle on French grammar. You can collect these from secondhand bookstores or charity shops, so you don’t have to fork out for the recommended textbooks that are currently being used in schools or universities. These are often just newer versions of the same thing, and once people stop studying French, many of those books end up in secondhand shops.

The benefit of getting a range of books is that you’ll find some are written more to your taste, or perhaps one covers some topics better than others. The best ones will have good cartoons! It’s also good to read several explanations of a tricky topic—be it the mood of a verb or how participles work—as you might find that it takes a few goes to sink in, or until you find an explanation that makes sense to you.

Hearing it phrased differently also helps with your own comprehension, because rather than memorizing an explanation you don’t really understand, it encourages you to think about it from different angles.

4. Hear French Grammar in Real Contexts

It’s not enough to just read and memorize French grammar rules.

To truly learn French grammar, it’s also important that you see and hear a lot of content that demonstrates the rules you’re learning.

A great tool for this is FluentU, which teaches you French grammar and vocabulary through authentic French videos.

FluentU takes real-world videos—like music videos, movie trailers, news and inspiring talks—and turns them into personalized language learning lessons.

Other sites use scripted content. FluentU uses a natural approach that helps you ease into the French language and culture over time. You’ll learn French as it’s actually spoken by real people.

FluentU has a wide variety of great content, like funny commercials and web series, as you can see here:

FluentU brings native videos within reach with interactive subtitles.

You can tap on any word to look it up instantly. Every definition has examples that have been written to help you understand how the word is used.

For example, if you tap on the word "suit," you'll see this:

Practice and reinforce all the vocabulary you've learned in a given video with FluentU's adaptive quizzes. Swipe left or right to see more examples for the word you’re learning and play the mini-games found in the dynamic flashcards, like "fill in the blank."

As you study, FluentU tracks the vocabulary that you’re learning and uses this information to give you a 100% personalized experience.

You'll receive video recommendations that suit your interests and current level of progress.

Start using FluentU on the website with your computer or tablet or, better yet, download the FluentU app from the iTunes or Google Play stores.

5. Use Ne… pas for Negation

This is one element of French grammar you can easily learn then put to plenty of use.

It’s very easy to create negative sentences in French, and it instantly doubles what you can say in your new language.

So, you can say J’aime le chocolat (I like chocolate). But if, for some strange reason, you want to say “I don’t like chocolate,” all you have to do is put ne before the verb and pas after. In other words, just use the structure ne + [verb] + pas and you’re there.

If your verb starts with a vowel, just use n’ instead of ne.

Je n’aime pas le chocolat.

Here’s another example:

Je parle anglais. (I speak English.) → Je ne parle pas anglais. (I don’t speak English.)

Another cool thing is that you can easily swap “pas” with other words to express different types of negation.

You’ll often hear French speakers use jamais (never), for example:

Je ne parle jamais anglais. (I never speak English.)

If you can lie in a new language, you’re doing well!

6. Focus on the Present (Tense) Now

With verbs, it can be overwhelming how many different tenses there are to learn—present, past, past perfect, future, future perfect, past and present participles… and yes, the list goes on. But when you’re starting out, don’t worry about all these. You can get a long way with the present tense, and once you get comfortable using it to form sentences, as well as having the vocabulary to do so, learning how to put it in the past or future tense won’t be so daunting.

Besides, most compound tenses just involve recycling tenses you already know!

We have a full guide to the present tense in French right here.

If you’ve been wondering how to learn French grammar, we hope these tips and tricks will make it all easier for you. You’ll soon find that it’s not always easy to learn French grammar, but it doesn’t have to be a pain, either. Just start on the right foot, with the right resources like the ones we recommended above, and you’ll be on your way to glorious grammatical mastery!





Download: This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you can take anywhere. Click here to get a copy. (Download)