Day 6 — Introducing Yourself

1. Topic Introduction

Introducing yourself in French means learning how to give basic personal information clearly and correctly.

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This includes:

  • saying your name
  • saying your age
  • saying where you are from
  • saying what language you speak
  • saying what you do

In French, introduction uses some very important verbs:

  • s’appeler = to be called
  • être = to be
  • avoir = to have
  • habiter = to live

These verbs are essential because they appear in everyday speech all the time.

Today, we focus on accurate modern French usage, exactly as native speakers learn it.


2. Main Structures and Rules

A. Saying Your Name — Je m’appelle…

Rule

French does not usually say:

❌ Je suis ALEX (for introducing your name in normal conversation)

The natural structure is:

Je m’appelle ALEX.

Because:

  • je = I
  • m’ = myself
  • appelle = call

Literal meaning:

I call myself ALEx

Structure

StructureMeaning
Je m’appelle + nameMy name is …

Examples

French SentenceMeaning
Je m’appelle Marie.My name is Marie.
Je m’appelle Paul.My name is Paul.

⚠️ Je suis + name can appear in some contexts, but Je m’appelle is the standard introduction form.


B. Saying Age — J’ai … ans

Rule

French uses avoir (to have) for age, not être (to be).

English: I am 24 years old.

French: J’ai 24 ans.

Literal meaning:

I have 24 years.

Structure

StructureMeaning
J’ai + number + ansI am … years old

Examples

French SentenceMeaning
J’ai vingt ans.I am twenty years old.
J’ai trente ans.I am thirty years old.

⚠️ Never say:

❌ Je suis 24 ans

That is incorrect.


C. Saying Where You Are From — Je suis de… / Je viens de…

Rule

Two common correct forms:

1. Je suis de…

Used simply in conversation.

2. Je viens de…

Very common and natural.

Examples

French SentenceMeaning
Je suis du Canada.I am from Canada.
Je viens de l’Inde.I come from India.

⚠️ Country article changes:

  • Canada → du Canada
  • Inde → de l’Inde

because article rules matter.


D. Saying Where You Live — J’habite…

Rule

Use habiter for residence.

Structure

StructureMeaning
J’habite + cityI live in…

Examples

French SentenceMeaning
J’habite à Toronto.I live in Toronto.
J’habite en France.I live in France.

⚠️ Use:

  • à for cities
  • en / au / aux for countries depending on gender (we study fully later)

E. Saying Language — Je parle…

Rule

Use parler.

Examples

French SentenceMeaning
Je parle français.I speak French.
Je parle anglais.I speak English.

⚠️ Language names in French usually have no article after parler.

Correct: ✅ Je parle français

Incorrect:❌ Je parle le français (unless specific context)


F. Saying Profession — Je suis…

Rule

With profession, French usually uses no article.

Correct: ✅ Je suis étudiante.
✅ Je suis professeur.

Incorrect:❌ Je suis une étudiante (in normal profession statement)

Examples

French SentenceMeaning
Je suis étudiante.I am a student.
Je suis professeur.I am a teacher.

⚠️ If feminine profession:

étudiante = female student


3. Vocabulary

French WordGenderMeaningPronunciation
le nommasculinenamenom
l’âgemasculineageahzh
la villefemininecityveel
le paysmasculinecountrypay-ee
la languefemininelanguagelong
l’étudiantmasculinestudentay-tu-dyan
l’étudiantefemininestudentay-tu-dyant
le professeurmasculineteacherpro-fe-sœr
la professionfeminineprofessionpro-fe-syon
le françaismasculineFrench languagefron-say

4. Mini Paragraph (Memorize)

Je m’appelle ALEX .
J’ai vingt-quatre ans.
Je viens de l’Inde.
J’habite au Canada.
Je parle anglais et un peu français.

Meaning:

My name is ALEX.
I am twenty-four years old.
I come from India.
I live in Canada.
I speak English and a little French.


5. Memory Practice

Read aloud:

Je m’appelle Marie.
J’ai vingt ans.
Je viens du Canada.
J’habite à Paris.
Je parle français.

Now longer:

Bonjour, je m’appelle Paul.
J’ai vingt-cinq ans.
Je viens de France.
J’habite à Montréal.


Important grammar note:

Today’s structures are exactly current standard French:

  • Je m’appelle → standard introduction
  • J’ai … ans → mandatory for age
  • Je viens de → natural origin expression
  • J’habite → residence
  • Je parle → language
  • Je suis + profession without article → standard profession rule

These rules stay important all the way to C1, because advanced French still depends on perfect basics.