Showing posts with label months. Show all posts
Showing posts with label months. Show all posts

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Quelle est la date?

To ask, “What is the date today?” say:
Quelle est la date aujourd’hui?

To answer, we say:
Aujourd’hui, c’est le jour numéro mois.
eg.: Aujourd’hui c’est le lundi 6 février.
Today is Monday, February 6.

Another possibility:
Aujourd’hui, c’est jour, le numéro mois.
eg.: Aujourd’hui c’est mercredi, le 14 mars.
Today is Wednesday, March 14.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Les Mois de l’année

Can you put the months of the year in order? Notice how the months in French are very similar to the months in English.

février
avril
août
octobre
septembre
mai
novembre
janvier
juin
juillet
décembre
mars

Listen to the French Months of the Year Podcast.

Visit Nallenart for French curriculum for your school or homeschool.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Months of the Year

The French months of the year are very similar to the English months. Notice that the last four months are almost exactly like English.

We get the names of our months from the Roman calendar. Originally the first month was March, mars in French, named after Mars, the Roman god of war, who was important in such an imperialistic culture. The theory was that if you are planning to take over the world, you need to keep the war-god happy. September was then the seventh month, like the French number sept from the Latin septem for seven, October was then the eighth month, from the Latin octo for eight, November was then the ninth month, like the French number neuf from the Latin novem for nine, and December was then the tenth month, like the French number dix from the Latin decem for ten.

Learn the French months of the year:

janvier (zhahn**-VYAY) - January
février (fay-vree-YAY) - February
mars (MARS*) - March
avril (av-RIL) - April
mai (MAY) - May
juin (ZWUHn**) - June
juillet (zhwee-YEH**) - July
août (OO) - August
septembre (sep-TAHn-bruh) - September
octobre (ahk-TAH-bruh) - October
novembre (noh-VAHn-bruh) - November
décembre (day-SAHn-bruh) - December

* - pronounce this s like "s" not "z."
** - zh is pronounced like "s" in usual or "g" in beige

(Please note that the guides to pronunciation only give a rough idea of what things really sound like in French. Listen to the podcast to hear the correct pronunciation.)

Visit our sponsor Nallenart for French curriculum and teaching aids.
http://www.nallenart.on.ca/