@@raminahmadyar2664that's so normal cuz this is not our native language but lemme tell you something If your naive language is Arabic it is so much easier to learn English than someone else whose native language is English and wants to learn arabic
My french teacher gave me advice that really helped - she said say 'ha', keep saying it but then push with your throat more and you get the french r sound. Then keep practising till it just comes to you!
Yes, in arab language and in french language there are 2 same R, there are hard R and soft R (gh) and in arab language and in many french regional dialects there are rolled R.
@@ventmistral2156 The ɣ sound is more like the g sound in some languages, not Arabic غ "ʁ" The sound “غ” in Arabic comes out from the bottom of the throat like خ "kh"
Hahaha! When I was in high school, I used to practice the “spittle in the back of the mouth” in between classes so I could eventually pronounce my French Rs properly. My friends thought I was weird. I totally didn’t care. 😂🎉
hi I'm french learning English, I recommend you to choose teenage books with a story that you can appreciate, and reading the reviews to know if it's isn't too hard for a no native, there are also bilingual collections with one page in French and the other page in your native language
Try finding a book that you’ve already read (preferably multiple times) and enjoy the story of, and then find it in French. The third Harry Potter book is my favorite and I know the story quite well so I’m reading that in French. But it could be any book
when i listen to french songs and casual native conversing, i dont really hear them going hard on the "r" sound, i noticed just a little brittle on your throat is fine, especially when reading in a normal pace
@@prettygoldfish953I have a Maroccan friend living in France for more than 20 years and he never manages to say "puits". He also doesn't pronounce the r like a French does, it looks like a Belgian r.
@@gide5489 this surprises me a bit for the R because in Arabic it's sound like the letter غ (but maybe he speaks a Moroccan dialect which doesnt have this letter)
@@prettygoldfish953 No all people coming from North Africa are identified in France because of this sound that is not pronounced like the French R. I would say that they pronounce it like in Belgium. In France the sound is softer. An other counter example was the famous singer Édith Piaf who was French but she had a tremendous accent with this "ghain" sound instead of the French r.
@@gide5489 okay I see, this way of pronouncing is still understandable for french people so this is not a big deal but it's still frustrating for everyone not to be able to pronounce the right sounds in foreign languages
Some Arab ppl think it's easy to pronounce, well maybe because we actually have a similar letter, but i still think french ppl have a way of pronouncing that letter that i can't do it actually because it's very hard , If u listen to the song "Clandestina" you will know what I'm talking about, the french R is very hard and unique actually
I like the pronunciation of "r" and "y" and it's easy cuz my language accent has a similar pronunciation. Just that my accent for r is air, and y is egrek.
We need a video explaining the development of the French R. Why is it the only Latin based language that doesn’t roll with it? Did the Gauls guttural their Rs?
@@simonsryd1well, I learn something new each day. no other Latin base languages does gutturals… I’m guessing guttural Rs must be a Germanic feature rather than Latin? It’s interesting nonetheless.
@KA-hr3cn yes it's germanic, but that doesn't stop me (and a bunch more) to pronounce the letter r in a certain way. There are a lot of different dialects in Sweden 😀
For me it's not the pronouncing that's hard, it's the knowing how to pronounce it. Because like 'r' is pronounced differently depending on where it is in the word 🥲
Im just learning , but its pretty straight forward that its strong when its the first letter and light when in the middle and near silent at the end of words that are not verbs as verbs that end are silent
As a French, nerd about French language, you have a very good ear. You are finally the first foreigner I "see"to have noticed it! Yes there are several r in french. :)
@@joshboy88420Great ear too. This is exactly what you are describing. For the second type of r this is not about being in the middle, it is about being followed by a silent vowel or not. If it is, the r turns into the exact same sound as the Spanish j or the Arabic kh or the German ch (in words such as Ach) because it is too hard for us to keep this guttural r after a silent vowel so by assimilation the r turns also into this silent version of the r.
In Spain, we pronounce our J very similar to the French R. You just change it a bit which is why it's so easy for me learning French to pronounce the R :)
It depends on the position of the r within the word. The r in the beginning of words like rivière or Rue has nothing to do con la jota. But in the words Afrique, Trois or France, yes it is una jota. And we have another r at the end of words which has nothing to with con la jota either like in words bière, frère, terre etc.
@@MAZEN_5060 Then the 4 % are sufficient in 99 % of the case to identify people with a ghain in their language when they try to pronounce the French r. They don't manage to do it.
Im half like 30% arabic and im 70% french and its so easy for me and thats thats why i learn french its the alphabet france is beautiful to learn and its beautiful country too
@@Apartment.213_ It is different enough to identify in France somebody coming from North Africa in 99 % of the cases. In phonetics also the two sounds are identify with two different symbols. If you speak Spanish there is about the same type of gap between the kha and the jota. They are not exactly pronouced the same way (in Spain, because in South America the prononciations can be very different).
As a ukrainian i could say that this “r” is easier to understand for slavic people, cause we have sound “h” or «г» in cyrillic. It’s not the same, but pretty similar
It's like the sound of the letter "ח" in Hebrew, and if I'm not mistaken there is a letter with the same sound in Arabic as well (sorry for my bad English)
As an arabic All the letters are easy in this world
When you already know Arabic you can roll your Rs and make غ sounds no problem 😂😂
Except the letter "P"
is it this one ? خ
And you Arabs English pronunciation is 😵💫😂
@@raminahmadyar2664that's so normal cuz this is not our native language but lemme tell you something
If your naive language is Arabic it is so much easier to learn English than someone else whose native language is English and wants to learn arabic
"not air, aigggggggg"
Aikh**
🤣
bonjougggggggg
As an Arab , I don’t really have a problem pronouncing it , because we have that sound in Arabic 💆🏻♀️
Which arabic letter is similar to "R" in french?
@@maseehamahomed3209
the letter غ in arabic has the same pronunciation of the letter r in french
Samee, even though i dont know arabic, i get how to pronounce things in arabic
@@minaamgad6887isnt it more like a خ?
@@twitchclippz8133
the letter خ in Arabic is like the letter
J in Spanish but the letter غ is like the letter R in French
My french teacher gave me advice that really helped - she said say 'ha', keep saying it but then push with your throat more and you get the french r sound. Then keep practising till it just comes to you!
Thanks, that’s helpful
LITERALLY THE ONLY THING THAT WORKED OML TYSM
@@rec8127 you're welcome!! I'm so glad it worked 😊
Oh my god thank you!!!!!
It is normal that I get this kind of growling sound?
"It'S NOt SpANisH" "YoU DoN't RoLL YoUr EHRRRRRR" 😮😮
😂😂😂😂 I am a spanish speaker!! Me mató!!
That "pathetic" though~
God French is awesome!
I want too learn French because I LIKE FRANCE🗼 VERY MUCH
Practiced French "R" for a week, then I had a sore throat. I'm better at it now though.😊
😂 it's definitely hard unless you've just had a zip of water. I thought my throat was getting a bit dry too after practicing for a while 😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂
I used to think I could learn French someday. Then I found this channel.
People That Speak Arabic "Easy"
Not realy the same but alternative sound for arabic spreakers GH or ɣ in phonetic
We recognize Arabic people in French because they don't pronouce it as a French r
Yes, in arab language and in french language there are 2 same R, there are hard R and soft R (gh) and in arab language and in many french regional dialects there are rolled R.
* many french regional dialects
@@ventmistral2156 The ɣ sound is more like the g sound in some languages, not Arabic غ "ʁ"
The sound “غ” in Arabic comes out from the bottom of the throat like خ "kh"
OMG! am in love with 2 guys and their work, it is magnificent
😂✅u make learning French easy and fun
Dutch people: Wat? We hebben even two different letters with the exact same sound
The hardest? Bro that's the only thing I can pronounce in French! 😅
Hahaha! When I was in high school, I used to practice the “spittle in the back of the mouth” in between classes so I could eventually pronounce my French Rs properly. My friends thought I was weird. I totally didn’t care. 😂🎉
As someone who know arabic i found it very easy to learn french
I can understand the pain...
Can you please suggest us Good books to be fluent in this language.
Please.
hi I'm french learning English, I recommend you to choose teenage books with a story that you can appreciate, and reading the reviews to know if it's isn't too hard for a no native, there are also bilingual collections with one page in French and the other page in your native language
Try finding a book that you’ve already read (preferably multiple times) and enjoy the story of, and then find it in French.
The third Harry Potter book is my favorite and I know the story quite well so I’m reading that in French.
But it could be any book
Brazilian people be like: 🍷too easy
@@ursusursidae3527 dude... im brazilian, we do have a very similar "r" sound in words like "rato" or "reino"
@@ursusursidae3527 besides, I never said it was the same, but its an easy thing for us to learn
@@ursusursidae3527wdym false, if he can pronounce, it must have been easier for him 😂
Love your videos guys!
I almost choke by trying to pronounce the r in french
Omgggg 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 I’m dying
De rien had me😂
When he said:it's not spanish😂😂😂
This is why I'm struggling with French
You guys are so nice
Love u ♥️🧡more videos plz🥰
It's why I stopped learning French 😂
Same 😂 I got tired of choking myself and started learning Spanish
Lolz 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I thought r was just silent 😂
You shouldn’t stop learning a language because of this, it’s like being scared of pitch accents in other languages 😂
when i listen to french songs and casual native conversing, i dont really hear them going hard on the "r" sound, i noticed just a little brittle on your throat is fine, especially when reading in a normal pace
As a Kazakh person R isn’t problem. We also have this sound.
You guys crack me up😂😂
I speak french and I can't roll my r's because I'm tongue tied so I can't really do the r either 😅
bcs of this, i subscribe u 😁
This is so real, I can't stop laughing man when I pronounce these words 😂😂😂😂😂😂
This is the absolute best!! LOL "R" is the hardest!
Nice work love from india buddy ❤❤
Showing this to my tutor.
“You dont roll your Rrrr”😢😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
As a Persian person 😎
I can pronounce English and French so easily😂
Idk how Persian work but in Arabic I know there is not the letter [u] but there is [ou] ُ so isn't the word "salut" complicated for you to pronounce?
@@prettygoldfish953I have a Maroccan friend living in France for more than 20 years and he never manages to say "puits". He also doesn't pronounce the r like a French does, it looks like a Belgian r.
@@gide5489 this surprises me a bit for the R because in Arabic it's sound like the letter غ (but maybe he speaks a Moroccan dialect which doesnt have this letter)
@@prettygoldfish953 No all people coming from North Africa are identified in France because of this sound that is not pronounced like the French R. I would say that they pronounce it like in Belgium. In France the sound is softer. An other counter example was the famous singer Édith Piaf who was French but she had a tremendous accent with this "ghain" sound instead of the French r.
@@gide5489 okay I see, this way of pronouncing is still understandable for french people so this is not a big deal but it's still frustrating for everyone not to be able to pronounce the right sounds in foreign languages
THAT GUY CHOCKING 😂
Bro pronouns it like a Bugatti's engine 😭
“You need to feel a 🍷vibration 🍷”
Some Arab ppl think it's easy to pronounce, well maybe because we actually have a similar letter, but i still think french ppl have a way of pronouncing that letter that i can't do it actually because it's very hard , If u listen to the song "Clandestina" you will know what I'm talking about, the french R is very hard and unique actually
Is a American and Turkish I see this as an absolute win
As a German I think this is pretty easy to pronounce other than the English r
I like the pronunciation of "r" and "y" and it's easy cuz my language accent has a similar pronunciation. Just that my accent for r is air, and y is egrek.
Best out there
I CANT DO THIS !! 😭😭😭
it's mostly like sound of wind on a bad stormy day
C’est parfait 😂😂
That's me every time I pronounce R (without the vibration on my palate)
As a Spanish speaker, it’s very hard to not roll them! I can relate to this 🤣
And my problem, as a french, (I don't know it's the same for everyone) is to pronounce R in english or spanish 😂
How can you be able to pronounce this hard one😢im jealous lol!
Me as a Vietnamese whose language have both the exact r in french and english:
I have no such weaknesses😈
@@headmastercat1137 I AM JEALYOUSSSSSS😭😭😭😭wishes
We need a video explaining the development of the French R. Why is it the only Latin based language that doesn’t roll with it? Did the Gauls guttural their Rs?
It's not the only! The local dialect in southern Sweden say r in the correct (French) way, and the rest of Sweden is mocking us for that!
I'm guessing around 400.000 people out of our 10 mil population!
@@simonsryd1well, I learn something new each day. no other Latin base languages does gutturals… I’m guessing guttural Rs must be a Germanic feature rather than Latin?
It’s interesting nonetheless.
@@simonsryd1isn't swedish a Germanic language? I don't think it's romance.
@KA-hr3cn yes it's germanic, but that doesn't stop me (and a bunch more) to pronounce the letter r in a certain way. There are a lot of different dialects in Sweden 😀
French has a hidden letter “phlegm” that’s put after every “r”
My country:Errrrrr
My friend:Elllllllll
France:Egkgkgkgkgkghhhhh
Like hes choking😂😂😂😂
Helpful 😂
My poor throat is crying every time I try to speak french 😂😂😂
Omg this is hilarious 😂
so funny.....🤣
Ahahah... Have the same struggle in how to pronounce the letter R. In a classic french tongue. Not just to choke by doing so.😂
I have to drink so much freaking water just to be able to speak French
For me it's not the pronouncing that's hard, it's the knowing how to pronounce it. Because like 'r' is pronounced differently depending on where it is in the word 🥲
Im just learning , but its pretty straight forward that its strong when its the first letter and light when in the middle and near silent at the end of words that are not verbs as verbs that end are silent
As a French, nerd about French language, you have a very good ear. You are finally the first foreigner I "see"to have noticed it! Yes there are several r in french. :)
@@joshboy88420Great ear too. This is exactly what you are describing. For the second type of r this is not about being in the middle, it is about being followed by a silent vowel or not. If it is, the r turns into the exact same sound as the Spanish j or the Arabic kh or the German ch (in words such as Ach) because it is too hard for us to keep this guttural r after a silent vowel so by assimilation the r turns also into this silent version of the r.
@@XOXO-eo5vu Thank you 😊 That is actually a big compliment. I've gotten much better at my pronunciation lately
Me who is fluent in Hindi, Urdu, Gujarati and Arabic saying this sound everyday: *amateurs*
Pronounce it like youre hacking up a hairball
Oh! I'm saying it correctly then! 🎉
As an Egyptian we have no problem
As a Türk who learns french i can say its so easy.
As a Brazillian, it was relatively easy to get used to the French "r"
Como Brasileiro isso é fácil, temos esse som na língua portuguesa.
As a Dane this is easy
In Spain, we pronounce our J very similar to the French R. You just change it a bit which is why it's so easy for me learning French to pronounce the R :)
It depends on the position of the r within the word. The r in the beginning of words like rivière or Rue has nothing to do con la jota. But in the words Afrique, Trois or France, yes it is una jota. And we have another r at the end of words which has nothing to with con la jota either like in words bière, frère, terre etc.
Good god😂😂😂😂😂
In Louisiana, I hear they roll their r's
adios por como hablo ingles estoy traduciendo esta risa 😂
AM I THE ONLY ONE THAT THINKS HE LOOKS LIKE CHARLIE PUTH🤯
وصلتنا خلاص 😂😂
As a Thailand dude....
I didn't expect i can pronounce it 💀
Pro tip, try gargling without water. The sound is similar to that.
The guy’s r is very strong and guttural. Most people myself included pronounce it much more softly,
Hahah funny learning
so true 😂😂😂
Thank you I got it now! Whoopwhoop
Thanks god ...we have that sound in our native language it called "غ" so it's easy on me 😂❤
Close but not the same
@@gide5489 96%
@@MAZEN_5060 Then the 4 % are sufficient in 99 % of the case to identify people with a ghain in their language when they try to pronounce the French r. They don't manage to do it.
@@gide5489 i managed it 😭😭😭😭
@@MAZEN_5060 Produce an audio on the web and we will check.
I have accepted that I will never perfect my pronounciation of "that letter". I sound like my cat coughing up a furball.
As an arabic this is too easy
Not so easy apparentlty, in 99 % of the cases you do not pronounce the ra as a French does.
"Not air, errrg"
As an Indian who learns arabic, japanese and now french.. its easy
I love French❤😂
Mort de rire 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Its accutate tho... I couldnt understand how to pronounce something and i didnt figure it out until i sae the spit leave the guys mouth 😂
I couldn't say "orange" in French for the longest time. Then, the other day I did it, spontaneously. 😮
Keep practicing. It's worth it. 😊
Wait till you see "Y" 😭
Im half like 30% arabic and im 70% french and its so easy for me and thats thats why i learn french its the alphabet france is beautiful to learn and its beautiful country too
It is not the same sound in French and in Arabic
@@gide5489 alphabets are different but the sound "r" in French is close to "غ" we say " gh" in French not "R"
@@Apartment.213_ It is different enough to identify in France somebody coming from North Africa in 99 % of the cases. In phonetics also the two sounds are identify with two different symbols.
If you speak Spanish there is about the same type of gap between the kha and the jota. They are not exactly pronouced the same way (in Spain, because in South America the prononciations can be very different).
@@gide5489 no way I'm not in Africa or north africa sorry for misunderstanding also.
I find the French R easy. I find it impossible to trill my Rs as in Spanish lol.
I'm studying French for almost 1 day 😅 and I listened that this pronounce "R" is so different of English or Portuguese (my native language).
Who else was cracking up through the entire video? 😂
Reminds me of trying to properly pronounce ㄹ
As a ukrainian i could say that this “r” is easier to understand for slavic people, cause we have sound “h” or «г» in cyrillic. It’s not the same, but pretty similar
Patachik😂😂
As a portuguese speaker, that's easy
The spanish is me can't help to roll that R.😅
It's like the sound of the letter "ח" in Hebrew, and if I'm not mistaken there is a letter with the same sound in Arabic as well (sorry for my bad English)