What Are the 5 French Accents?

French Accent Marks

Key Takeaways

  • 5 Main Accents: French uses five marks: ç, é, â/ê/î/ô/û, à/è/ù, and ë/ï/ü.
  • Pronunciation: Accents like the accent aigu (é) and accent grave (è) significantly alter vowel sounds.
  • Meaning: Some marks, such as the accent grave, distinguish between different words (e.g., à vs a).
  • Consonants: The cédille (ç) is the only accent used on a consonant to soften the "c" sound.

What Are the 5 French Accents?

In French, there are five essential accent marks: the cédille (ç), the accent aigu (é), the accent circonflexe (â, ê, î, ô, û), the accent grave (à, è, ù), and the accent tréma (ë, ï, ü). While one mark is used for a consonant, the other four are applied to vowels to indicate specific pronunciation changes or to differentiate between words that are spelled similarly.

Overview of the French Accent Marks

NameCharactersPrimary Function
CédilleçSoftens the "c" sound to an "s"
Accent AiguéCreates an "ay" sound; only on the letter "e"
Accent Graveà, è, ùChanges pronunciation of "e" or distinguishes word meanings
Accent Circonflexeâ, ê, î, ô, ûOften indicates a historical "s" that was removed
Accent Trémaë, ï, üForces two adjacent vowels to be pronounced separately

1. How Does the Cédille (ç) Change Pronunciation?

The cédille is only used on the letter "C." It changes a hard "c" sound (like "k") into a soft "c" sound (like "s"). It is never used before the vowels "e" or "i," as these two vowels always produce a soft "s" sound (glace, ici).

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le caleçon
the underwear
les garçons
the boys
le jeu du garçon
the boy's game
reçu
receipt
Ça dure...
It lasts... / It takes...

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2. What Is the Use of the Accent Aigu (é)?

The accent aigu is only used on the letter "e." It creates a specific sound often compared to the English "ay."

le canapé
the sofa
le café
the coffee
soufflé
breathed

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3. Why Do French Words Have an Accent Circonflexe (â, ê, î, ô, û)?

The accent circonflexe indicates that, historically, an "s" used to follow that vowel. For example, the modern word écouter was previously spelled escouter.

le vieux château
the old castle
une fête
a party / gathering / feast
le dîner
the evening meal
l'hôtel
the hotel
bien sûr
of course

4. When Do You Use the Accent Grave (à, è, ù)?

With a and u, the accent grave is used to differentiate some words that would otherwise look identical:

  • à "to" versus a "has"
  • "where" versus ou "or"
where
Voilà !
There you go!

5. What Is the Purpose of the Accent Tréma (ë, ï, ü)?

The accent tréma indicates that the vowel is to be pronounced separately from the one immediately before it. This prevents the two vowels from merging into a single sound.

Noël
Christmas
l'aïeul
the ancestor

How Do é and è Differ in Sound?

While many accents have historical roles, the é and the è are the most common marks that change pronunciation.

  • é is pronounced like "ay"
  • è is pronounced like "eh"
é
(pronunciation = ay)
été
summer
è
(pronunciation = eh)
mère
mother

Quick Tips for Writing French Accents

  • Capital Letters: Accents should be used on capital letters (e.g., À plus tard).
  • Spelling: If the correct French accent is not used, it is considered a spelling mistake.
  • Consistency: The more you listen to native speakers, the easier it becomes to recognize these subtle sound changes.

That's probably enough pronunciation practice for now! Remember the more you listen, the more you'll be able to recognize words as they're spoken.

I would strongly recommend that you check out this lesson on the French alphabet next!

À bientôt !

Written by Marie-Claire Riviere, French Language Expert at Rocket Languages

Last updated: April 8, 2026

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