French Word Differences
Pairs and groups of French words that English speakers mix up the most. Each note holds the rule, examples in context, common mistakes, and a small test at the end.
- False Friends
Bibliothèque vs Librairie: Library or Bookstore?
Librairie is a bookstore. Bibliothèque is a library or bookcase. Learn the classic French false friend with examples, mistakes, and a memory trick.
- Word Pairs
Entendre vs Écouter: Hear or Listen?
Entendre means to hear; écouter means to listen or pay attention. Learn the difference, common mistakes, and examples in French.
- Word Pairs
Savoir vs Connaître: When to Use Each French Verb
Savoir is for facts and skills; connaître is for familiarity with people, places, and things. Learn je sais vs je connais with examples.
- False Friends
Visiter vs Rendre Visite: The False Friend Explained
In French, you visite a city but you rends visite à a friend. Learn the false-friend trap with examples and the rule that fixes it.
- Word Pairs
Amener vs Emmener: What's the Difference?
Amener leads a person to a place; emmener takes a person along when leaving. The direction rule for people in French, with clear examples and a memory trick.
- Word Pairs
Apporter vs Emporter: How to Use Them Correctly
Apporter carries a thing to a place; emporter takes a thing along when leaving. The direction rule for objects, with French examples and a simple test.
- Word Pairs
Apporter, Emporter, Amener, Emmener: How to Choose
Apporter brings a thing here. Emporter takes a thing away. Amener brings a person here. Emmener takes a person away. The pattern, with examples and a table.
- Register
Travail, Emploi, Boulot: Three Ways to Say Work in French
Travail is neutral, emploi is formal, and boulot is everyday spoken French. Learn which French word for work to use, with examples and register notes.
- Register
Maison, Demeure, Baraque: Three Ways to Say House in French
Maison is the neutral word for house. Demeure is formal and literary. Baraque is familiar spoken French. Examples and register guidance.
- Spelling
Censé vs Sensé: Which One Should You Use?
Censé means supposed to; sensé means sensible, full of reason. The difference, French examples in context, and a simple replacement test.
- Spelling
Voire vs Voir: How Not to Confuse Them
Voir is the verb to see; voire is an adverb meaning even or indeed. The difference, French examples, and a quick test to stop hesitating in writing.
- Spelling
Tache vs Tâche: Accent, Meaning, and Examples
Tache without an accent is a stain; tâche with a circumflex is a task. The accent changes the word. French examples, related verbs, and an easy anchor.
- Spelling
Davantage vs D'avantage: The Simple Difference
Davantage as one word means more; d'avantage is de plus the noun avantage. A simple test, French examples, and the mistakes to avoid in writing.
- Word Pairs
Éminent vs Imminent: Two Similar Words, Two Meanings
Éminent means distinguished, of high rank; imminent means about to happen. Two near-twins, French examples, and a memory trick to stop mixing them.
- Word Pairs
French Words That Look Similar but Mean Different Things
Attendre vs s'attendre à, encore vs toujours, savoir vs connaître: French pairs that look close in English but are used differently, with clear examples.
- Word Pairs
French Words That Are Easy to Confuse
Homophones, near-twins, accents, related verbs: a clear guide to the French words learners mix up the most, with examples and links to each case.
- Method
Why French Learners Confuse Similar Words
Homophones, near-twins, accents, false friends, autopilot: the real reasons learners mix up French words, and how to fix each cause for good.
Two other hubs widen the picture.
See French Vocabulary for single words with multiple meanings and the method articles, and French Register for formal, neutral, familiar, and slang French.