Learn French Vocabulary — Build the Words That Actually Come Out
French is famously beautiful — and famously confusing. Silent letters, gendered nouns, 17 verb tenses. Most learners spend years studying French and still freeze when speaking. WordPlus attacks the root cause: insufficient vocabulary depth. Turn every French word you look up into an audio flashcard you'll remember.
The Problem
French pronunciation is notoriously inconsistent — words look completely different from how they sound. Building vocabulary feels like memorizing two systems at once.
How WordPlus Solves It
WordPlus uses text-to-speech (TTS) powered by ElevenLabs and Google Cloud to play every French word aloud. Study with audio so you hear the pronunciation every time you review.
French at a Glance
- Words to basic fluency
- ~1,500
- Native speakers
- 300 million
- Difficulty for English speakers
- Medium
- Major exams
- DELF A1–B2, DALF C1–C2, TEF, TCF
Why French Is Hard to Learn
French has silent letters, nasal vowels, and 17 tenses. Words like 'eau', 'eux', 'au', and 'o' all sound the same but mean different things. Context is everything.
Many silent letters, nasal sounds, complex verb conjugations.
Who Learns French?
- →Travel to France
- →Business in francophone Africa
- →Canadian immigration
- →Academic French
Where to Start: French Vocabulary Topics
- DELF B1 vocabulary
- French travel phrases
- Business French
- French irregular verbs
- French conversation phrases
Find 'DELF' or 'French business' sets in the WordPlus Market, curated by level and topic.
How WordPlus Helps You Learn French
Instant AI Translation
Translate any French word or phrase in seconds using GPT and Gemini. Every translation becomes a flashcard automatically.
Leitner Spaced Repetition
Words move through 5 jars based on how well you know them. Review daily for 10–15 minutes and watch your vocabulary compound.
5 Study Modes
Flashcards, Player (audio), Writing, Matching, Audio Test — each trains your vocabulary from a different angle.
Curated Market Sets
Browse hundreds of French vocabulary sets in the Market — organized by level, topic, and exam type.