![]() |
|
| Share / Tweet / Pin Me! | |
Listen and repeat
Learn to understand and pronounce the French numbers 0 to 9. For detailed info, see my lesson on numbers and counting.
How to use these listening exercises
- The sound files are MP3s and you can either listen to them online or save them to your computer for later. If you don’t know how to do this or can’t hear anything, please read help with sound files.
- Click “listen.” You can either listen and repeat the numbers or else practice writing them in French, in English, or as digits.
- After listening to the sound file for the random exercises, click “reveal” to check what you heard.
- You can listen as many times as you like.
Lesson: French Numbers 0-9
0 – zéro
1 – un
2 – deux
3 – trois
4 – quatre
5 – cinq
6 – six
7 – sept
8 – huit
9 – neuf
Number Exercise 1
Random numbers to test your comprehension.
Click to see the list (in groups of five):
7 4 2 9 6
0 4 7 1 3
5 9 2 0 6
3 1 5 8
| Remerciements
Sound files courtesy |
Number Exercise 2
More random numbers to further test your comprehension.
Click to see the list:
9 4 0 2 8
3 1 6 5 7
4 0 8 2 9
1 3 5 7
French lesson plans
- Color by numbers (Worksheet, 3rd-5th grade)
- Count on me (Worksheet, 1st-5th grade)
- Counting numbers (Worksheet, 1st-3rd grade)
- French numbers printable (Worksheet, 4th-12th grade)
- Learn your numbers (Worksheet, 1st-2nd grade)
More French Numbers
| Lesson: Numbers and counting | ||
| French numbers à fond | ||
| Listening practice | ||
| 0 to 9 | Decimals | |
| 10 to 19 | Phone numbers | |
| 20 to 59 | Prices | |
| 60 to 99 | Times | |
| 100 to 999 | Weights/measures | |
| 1,000 and up | Years | |
French for beginners
Self-study checklist with lessons, quizzes, and comprehension exercises.
Share / Tweet / Pin Me!





The French lessons and comprehension exercises on this site are ranked according to the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR), which describes six levels of language proficiency.
When a word ending in a normally silent consonant is followed by a vowel or h muet, that consonant might be transferred onto the next word. This is called a liaison and it’s one of the aspects of French pronunciation that can make it difficult to determine where one word ends and the next begins.
Aller is one of the most common and important French verbs. It generally means “to go,” is key to the near future construction, and is also found in many expressions. This issue of Lawless French à fond takes an in-depth look at going everywhere with