Salut les Champions ! Aujourd’hui, nous apprenons deux règles super utiles en français : la liaison et l’élision. Ces deux points vont vraiment vous aider à bien parler et écrire le français. C’est parti !
आज हामी फ्रेंचको उच्चारण र लेखनका महत्वपूर्ण नियमहरू – La Liaison र L’Élision सिक्नेछौं।
यी दुई कुरा तपाईंलाई अधिक प्राकृतिक रूपमा फ्रेंच बोल्ने अनुमति दिन्छ।
Let’s dive in!
🎥 Watch the Video | भिडियो हेर्नुहोस्:
What You’ll Learn Today | आज के सिक्नुहुनेछ?
In today’s Day 7 video , we covered:
- La Liaison : How to link sounds at the end of one word to the beginning of the next
- L’Élision : When to drop a vowel sound to make speech smoother
- Why these rules are important in both spoken and written French
- Real-life examples showing how and when to apply them
These rules help your French sound more fluent and native-like , especially when you’re having conversations or listening to native speakers.
🔊 Part 1: La Liaison (Sound Linking) | ध्वनि जोडाई
La liaison means joining the final consonant of one word with the beginning vowel of the next word.
📌 Example:
Les amis → pronounced “lezami”
(नेपालीमा: “लेजामी”, not “ले अमी”)
Even though the “s” in les is silent normally, in this case, it connects with the next word because of liaison .
✅ When Do We Use Liaison?
- After articles like les, des, un
- After numbers like six, dix
- After verbs like ils ont, tu as
- In common phrases like bonjour monsieur , comment allez-vous?
💡 Important: Not all liaisons are used all the time — some are obligatory , some are optional , and some are never used .
💥 Part 2: L’Élision (Vowel Dropping) | स्वर छोट्याउनु
L’élision happens when a word ends in a vowel sound and the next word starts with a vowel — so we cut off the last vowel to make it easier to say.
📌 Example:
le ami → becomes l’ami
la amie → becomes l’amie
Some common cases:
- le → l’ before a vowel: l’enfant, l’homme
- la → l’ : l’idée, l’eau
- de → d’ : d’amour, d’été
- que → qu’ : qu’est-ce que, qu’un chat
💡 Tip: The apostrophe (’ ) shows that a letter has been removed — usually an e , a , or o .
That’s it for Day 7 ! You now have a solid understanding of la liaison and l’élision , two very powerful tools that will help you sound more natural in French .
Tomorrow , we’ll learn about two more essential verbs: aller (to go) and venir (to come) — which are super useful for talking about where you’re going or where something/someone is from.
भोलि हामी aller र venir क्रियापद सिक्नेछौं।
Also, don’t forget to review Day 6 , where we learned how to use être and avoir in everyday expressions — and memorized the subject pronouns in order!
✅ Daily Practice Tip:
Try reading aloud sentences using liaison and élision. For example:
Je suis étudiant(e), j’ai dix-huit ans et je vais à l’école.
(म विद्यार्थी हुँ, म अठार वर्षको छु र म विद्यालय जान्छु।)
Pay attention to how the words flow together!
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