Watch a close-up video filmed by 2 cameras on 2 different angles. You will see the exact movements of the lips, the tongue & face of a French teacher pronouncing the numbers in real-time.
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Watch a close-up video filmed by 2 cameras on 2 different angles. You will see the exact movements of the lips, the tongue & face of a French teacher pronouncing the numbers in real-time.
Tags: france, lessons, numbers
This entry was posted on Saturday, February 13th, 2010 and is filed under French Lessons. You can follow any responses to this entry through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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#1 by Athediscotv on April 10th, 2010
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uhh!
dew
twa-
got/cat
sock
seas
set
you eat
nuff
these
#2 by samjoepie on April 10th, 2010
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Très bien merci.
#3 by DontBeAfraidToCare on April 10th, 2010
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Romanian is also another language derived from Latin, however with a Slavic influence.
#4 by greenadrianorio on April 11th, 2010
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Merci.
#5 by xogirlz123 on April 11th, 2010
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Thanks! this was very helpful!
#6 by sahajad on April 11th, 2010
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@viper474
Thank you for the info. Yes, in most aspects these 3 languages sound similar.
#7 by viper474 on April 11th, 2010
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@sahajad
French is a Latinate language. Other Latinate languages are Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese. They are also known as Romance languages. They are known as Romance languages, because they came from the language that was spoken in Rome — Latin. At least that’s what my World Literature teacher taught us… xD
#8 by greenadrianorio on April 11th, 2010
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Merci.
#9 by CatchAndLearn on April 11th, 2010
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French course Premium here: watch?v=-2ye6_foC80
#10 by Doughnut189 on April 11th, 2010
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Very helpfull video!
Although, does it include French puncuation?
#11 by yju135 on April 11th, 2010
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@leojboby: you only pronounce the ‘t’ when the following word starts with a vowel or the letter ‘h’. This is known as liaison.
but when the word stands alone, the ‘t’ is silent, as in .. vingt
#12 by xxbassxxMakar on April 11th, 2010
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Yep. No problem.
#13 by sahajad on April 11th, 2010
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@xxbassxxMakar
Thank you. Now, that was helpful !
#14 by xxbassxxMakar on April 11th, 2010
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yes, it’s all derived from latin. Though in French, you usually don’t her the last letter of the word for a lot of things. like vous and nous, which is you and we in English, will sound like vou and nou
#15 by dafr3ak on April 11th, 2010
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I can say it but I can’t really remember it.
#16 by sahajad on April 11th, 2010
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@xxbassxxMakar
So is French connected to all these 3 languages ?
#17 by XCateyxCatastrophicX on April 11th, 2010
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Merci~!
#18 by dafxfiskren on April 11th, 2010
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Merci!
#19 by beanergurl123 on April 11th, 2010
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@cowse123
dont worry ure not alone…
#20 by 09232377788 on April 11th, 2010
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thanks you!!!!^_^
#21 by WingedToaster on April 11th, 2010
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vingt – (van)
#22 by leojboby on April 11th, 2010
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do you really pronounce the t in vingt? i thought u could only hear it in vingt et un
#23 by rainbowsweetz on April 11th, 2010
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thankss dude
#24 by cowse123 on April 11th, 2010
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idk how the fuck im suppose to learn all this…
#25 by xxbassxxMakar on April 11th, 2010
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It’s all based off of latin. Why do you think kids in Europe can learn like 4 and 5 languages? Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, etc. all easy to learn if u already speak one of them. Ex. Espada means sword in Spanish, in Italian its spada. easy stuff.