Online Learning vs Classroom: Which Fits You
Comparing different learning styles and formats. We’ll break down what works for different people and help you choose your path.
Read MoreLearn the 500 most useful words first. We’ll show you which ones matter most and how to remember them without boring flashcards.
Here’s the thing — you don’t need to memorize 10,000 French words to have real conversations. Research shows that 500 words cover about 65% of everyday French speech. That means you’re already capable of understanding the majority of what you’ll actually hear.
The trick isn’t learning more words faster. It’s learning the RIGHT words in the RIGHT way. We’ve identified which 500 words will give you the biggest impact, and we’re going to show you how to lock them into your brain without the tedium of traditional flashcard apps.
These aren’t complicated. They’re just proven methods that stick.
Don’t learn words alone. Learn them in short phrases. “Je suis occupé” (I’m busy) sticks way better than just memorizing “occupé.” Your brain naturally connects words to situations, so use that.
See a word on Monday, again Wednesday, then Friday. This is how your memory actually works. Cramming all 500 words in one weekend? You’ll forget most of them by next month.
Your mouth and ears need to connect to the word, not just your eyes. Say each phrase 3-4 times when you first learn it. Yes, you’ll feel weird. Your pronunciation will improve anyway.
We’ve organized the 500 most useful words into five groups. You don’t need to learn all five groups at once. Start with Daily Life, add Conversations after two weeks, then layer in the rest.
You don’t need to spend hours every day. Consistency beats intensity. Here’s what actually gets results:
Learn 10 new words in context. Write them down. Say each phrase 4 times. (15 minutes)
Review those 10 words. Learn 10 new ones. (20 minutes)
Review all 20. Learn 10 more. You’re building momentum. (25 minutes)
Full review of the week’s 30 words. No new words today. Just reinforcement. (20 minutes)
Your brain remembers stories and connections way better than lists.
Link new words to a story you create. Learning “la gare” (the train station)? Imagine yourself buying a ticket at Paris’s most chaotic station. Weird connections stick.
French has natural rhythm. “Merci” (thank you) sounds like “mercy” — imagine being shown mercy. “Chat” (cat) — “chat” sounds like what a cat does. Create these sound bridges.
Say the word while doing an action. Learning “courir” (to run)? Actually run in place while saying it. Your body remembers what your eyes don’t.
Put sticky notes on objects around your home. “Porte” on the door, “fenêtre” on the window. You’ll see these words 20 times a day without trying.
You don’t need expensive software. These simple tools have helped thousands of learners:
This isn’t about perfection. It’s about consistency. Here’s what realistic progress looks like:
Daily life vocabulary. You’ll start recognizing words in French songs and understand basic questions. This feels slow, but you’re building the base.
You can now ask questions and respond. You won’t be fluent, but you can hold short exchanges. This is where it gets fun — you’re actually using it.
Add travel, feelings, work vocabulary. By week 12, you’ve got 300+ words solid. You can navigate real situations. You’re officially no longer a complete beginner.
Building a vocabulary foundation isn’t about memorizing a dictionary. It’s about being smart about which 500 words matter most, then using proven methods to lock them in. You’re looking at 15-25 minutes per day for real progress.
The learners who succeed aren’t the ones with perfect systems. They’re the ones who show up consistently. They write down words. They say them out loud. They use them in context. That’s it.
Start with Daily Life words this week. Commit to 10 new words. Use the spaced repetition rhythm we outlined. In four weeks, you’ll be shocked at how much French you understand.
This guide provides educational information about vocabulary learning strategies and is intended to help you develop effective study habits. Everyone learns differently — what works for one person might need adjustment for another. Language learning requires consistent effort over time, and results vary based on individual commitment and practice frequency. This content is informational and not a substitute for formal French instruction or professional language coaching if you need personalized guidance.