

The word faire is also used for many seasonal activities in which you can participate. Generally, you would say “Il fait” to introduce an observation about the weather, such as “Il fait beau” (“It’s nice out”) or “Il fait moche” (“The weather is bad”). If you’d like to ask about the weather, you can say “Quel temps fait-il ?” To ask about seasonal preferences, you can say “Quelle saison préférez-vous ?” The word faire is used quite a bit in expressions involving the weather. I definitely do not need anything dehydrating on my face during the winter season. Speaking about the weather is always a useful topic, whether (nice conjunction here – get it?) it is to determine which clothing to wear, or to avoid brawls, fist fights, or a glass of champagne thrown in one’s face at holiday gatherings because of some remark about politics, someone’s bossy personality, or how much money a donor gave to a hospital wing. There are corresponding weather patterns for each season, with the winter being cold and even snowy in parts of France, spring being less cold, but chilly and damp, summer being hot and sunny, and autumn being mild and very colorful, with leaves turning brilliant warm hues before their eventual shedding. Otherwise, we use the preposition au before printemps, the preposition more often associated with masculine words. Seasons are masculine, but since three out of four begin with vowel sounds, you will often see them preceded by the preposition en. The French use the word automne, which has the same origins, as well as hiver, printemps, and été to designate the three other seasons. In France, there are four seasons: winter, spring, summer, and fall, or autumn, as it is sometimes called, after the Latin autumnus. For some of us, winter means hibernation – and for others, especially those who love to go hiking in the mountains – it means that there is little worry of running into bears while seeing beautiful majestic cliffs and canyons. Listen to the le climat: le temps dans les Alpes mp3 and try the cloze (fill-in-the-blank) exercise from French Listening Resources.Now that we’re heading straight into winter, at least in the northern hemisphere, it might be nice to talk about seasons in French, to remind us that there are four of them and that the longer and longer nights will soon change course and become shorter and shorter – even as the weather gets colder. Il caille /il kaj/ or ça caille /sa kaj/ is slang for it's freezing. Plø de koʀd/ is a common expression meaning it's pouring. Need even more French? Try the French courses at Udemyįrench Weather Expressions / Le temps qu'il fait I've recommended some French books at Amazon, and Interlinear books are great for learning French by reading literal translations in English. For audiobooks and lessons of modern French, try French Today.

NEW! The companion e-book, Informal and Spoken French, is also now available! Buy the two French e-books together at a discounted price!įor more French learning through authentic videos, I recommend Yabla French and FluentU.

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This e-book also comes with 200+ mp3s (more than FIVE HOURS) recorded by three native speakers and FREE lifetime updates. French Weather Expressions Talking about the weather in French, with pronunciationīuy French Language Tutorial as an e-book! French Language Tutorial includes more than 200 pages of grammar and vocabulary topics, sample sentences, informal ways of speaking, cultural information about France, and an overview of French pronunciation.
