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đĄ 1. Understand why you translate
If you're still translating in your head, that's normal.
It's not a mistake, and you're not doing anything wrong.
Tips are useful. A real method gets results.
Build a speaking habit with structure, flexibility, and real practice every week.
Start practicingIt's simply that your brain is doing⊠what it knows how to do.
You've always thought in your native language. It's your base system, your default mode. So whenever you try to express yourself, your brain first goes through your native language and then tries to find equivalents in French.
But the problem is⊠that doesn't always work.
Why? BecauseâŠ
â Languages arenât perfect copies of each other
An English, Spanish or German word doesn't always have an exact equivalent in French.
And even when it does, the usage is often different.
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A simple example:
En anglais, on dit âI'm excited.â
En français ? Non, on ne dit pas âJe suis excitĂ©â⊠đŹ (In French? No, you donât say âJe suis excitĂ©â⊠đŹ)
Instead, you'd say:
âJâai trop hĂąte.â (I can't wait.)
âJe suis super content.â (I'm really happy.)
âĂa va ĂȘtre gĂ©nial !â (It's going to be great!)
You see? Word-for-word translation can lead to misunderstandings or worse â serious mistakes.
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đ§ Your brain is trying to stick to what it knows⊠but it has to learn a new way
When you learn a language, your brain doesnât erase the old one. It adds a new layer.
But at first, this new layer is weak â so your brain clings to what it already knows: your native language.
So itâs as if you're trying to speak French⊠using an English dictionary inside your head.
The result? You search for words, make odd sentences, and get stuck.
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â The solution: accept to think⊠differently
đ First step: stop trying to translate âperfectly.â
Allow yourself to think in French, even if it's very simple at first.
Don't search for the perfect phrase in your languageâŠ
Search for the natural phrase in French.
And to do that, itâs just like learning to dance:
observe, imitate, repeat â and most importantly: stop trying to control everything.
In summary:
You translate because it feels safe.
But that reflex slows you down.
You need to reprogram your brain so it switches into âFrench modeâ by default.
Itâs possible â and the next steps will help you get there.
đŁïž 2. Practice shadowing (and do it often)
Do you really want to stop translating in your head?
Then shadowing is your best weapon.
What exactly is shadowing?
Itâs a simple but incredibly powerful technique:
đ You listen to a sentence in French and repeat it immediately out loud â no translating, no analyzing, no pausing.
Like a shadow đ¶ïž
You follow the speaker. You stick to them. You do what they do.
Itâs mimicry. You copy the words, the melody, the rhythm.
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đŻ Why does it work so well?
Because it bypasses your translation reflex.
You stop going through English (or your native language).
You process sounds, words, and structures only in French.
Your brain records everything as a natural unit.
Gradually, these units become automatic reflexes.
You hear them⊠you repeat them⊠and one day, youâll use them without even thinking.
Thatâs exactly how children learn their first language.
They donât translate. They imitate. And it works.
đ How to practice shadowing effectively?
You donât need an hour a day.
5 to 10 focused minutes every day is enough to make progress.
Here are a few simple tips to get started:
- đč Choose content thatâs short, authentic, and lively: a podcast, YouTube video, or a show with natural dialogue.
- đč Loop it. Take a sentence â listen â repeat aloud â start over.
- đč Donât try to understand everything. This isnât a grammar lesson â itâs ear and mouth training.
- đč Repeat with native intonation. Even if you feel silly, even if it feels like acting. Thatâs exactly how your mouth and ear will adapt.
đ§ Thatâs what thinking in French is:
Having ready-made structures in your mind that you can activate without effort â like pressing a button.
And for that, shadowing is your best training.
Is it repetitive? Yes.
But thatâs exactly how your brain becomes fluent in French.
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đ 3. Immerse yourself in French (even if you donât live in France)
Donât live in France? Donât have French speakers around?
No problem. Thatâs not an excuse anymore.
Today, you can immerse yourself in French without leaving your home.
Your phone, computer, and TV⊠theyâre all entryways to a 100% French-speaking world.
You donât need a plane ticket to Paris.
You can create your French bubble â right where you are.
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đ«§ Create your French bubble (and stay in it!)
The problem isnât motivation. Itâs the system.
Our learners follow a clear path that helps them stay consistent and actually improve.
Try it freeHere are some practical ideas to live âen françaisâ without leaving your city:
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đ± Set your phone and apps to French.
Yes â even if you have to look up a few words at first. Thatâs great: youâre learning in context. And youâll be surprised how quickly your brain adjusts.
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đ§ Listen to a podcast every morning.
Not necessarily at your desk:
While brushing your teeth, making coffee, going for a walkâŠ
The goal is to make French part of your daily atmosphere.
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đș Watch your favorite videos or shows⊠in French.
Even if you already know the story â thatâs even better. Your brain can focus on the words and sounds.
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đŁïž Talk to yourself â in French.
Yes, really.
Describe what you're doing:
"Je cherche mes clĂ©sâŠ" (I'm looking for my keys...)
"Jâai encore oubliĂ© le pain." (I forgot the bread again.)
"Bon, on se motive ou pas aujourdâhui ?" (So, are we getting motivated today or not?)
You might feel a little weird at firstâŠ
But trust me â itâs one of the best ways to activate your French.
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đ§ Hear French â even if you donât understand everything
Think you have to understand everything to make progress?
Wrong.
Think of a baby: they hear thousands of sentences before they say their first word.
And yet â they still learn.
đ Your ears need exposure to French. Even if you donât get every word. Even if some sentences fly over your head.
What matters is getting your brain used to the rhythm, melody, and sounds.
Youâll notice certain expressions coming back, patterns repeating themselves.
And one day, without even trying â youâll use them too.
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đ§ In summary: donât just be a student of French⊠be surrounded by French
Read in French.
Listen in French.
Think in French.
And most importantly: donât wait until youâre âreadyâ to immerse yourself.
Itâs by diving into French before you understand everything that youâll start thinking like a native speaker.
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âïž 4. Think in French⊠even when youâre alone
Yes, you can think in French.
And no, you donât have to be bilingual to start doing it.
Itâs a simple, discreet, free exercise that you can do anywhere: in the car, in the shower, walking down the street, or even⊠silently, in your own head.
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đ§ How does it work?
Itâs very simple: do what you normally do, but mentally describe it in French.
Je me lĂšve. (I get up.)
Je vais dans la cuisine. (I go to the kitchen.)
Je prépare un café. (I make a coffee.)
Il est oĂč mon sucre, dĂ©jĂ ? (Where's my sugar again?)
At first, youâll get stuck.
Youâll think to yourself:
âMais comment on dit ça ?!â (But how do you say that?!)
âJâai pas les mots.â (I donât have the words.)
âCâest trop dur.â (This is too hard.)
And thatâs actually great â because thatâs when your brain starts working.
Youâll notice whatâs missing.
Youâll create a real need for vocabulary.
And youâll go look for the right words â not in a textbook, but in your real life.
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đȘ Little by little, your brain rewires itself
The more you do this exercise, the more youâll notice something magical:
You stop trying to express your thoughts in your native language.
You go straight to French, even with simple sentences.
And thatâs when the transformation begins.
You replace translation with habit.
You build pathways in your brain â automatic connections.
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đŻ A few tips to go even further
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You can also speak out loud to yourself, as if narrating your day.
(Yes â even if you feel a bit crazy. Native French speakers do it too, promise đ)
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You can keep a short journal in French every evening. Even just 3 sentences.
It forces you to rephrase your day in your own words.
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You can ask yourself questions out loud, then try to answer them:
âQuâest-ce que je dois faire aujourdâhui ?â (What do I need to do today?)
âQuâest-ce que jâai envie de manger ?â (What do I feel like eating?)
The goal isnât perfection.
Itâs to activate French in your daily life, so it becomes a language you think in â not just one you study.
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đ§ 5. Learn phrases⊠not just words
You want to think in French?
Then stop learning isolated vocabulary lists.
Because knowing a word on its own isnât enough.
What really matters is knowing how itâs used.
In what context. With what tone. In which sentence structures.
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đ One word, many uses
Letâs take a simple example:
You learn the word âpenserâ â to think
Okay, itâs useful.
But look how its meaning changes depending on the context:
âJe pense que câest une bonne idĂ©e.â (I think itâs a good idea.)
âTu penses venir ce soir ?â (Are you planning to come tonight?)
âIl pense toujours Ă son ex.â (Heâs still thinking about his ex.)
âArrĂȘte de penser à ça !â (Stop thinking about that!)
âEt toi, tâen penses quoi ?â (And you â what do you think?)
See?
If you only know âpenser = to thinkâ, youâll be stuck as soon as the structure changes.
But if you learn full phrases, you build reusable mini-models in your brain.
Reflexes. Automatic patterns.
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đ§© How to do that in practice?
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âïž When you learn a new word, always write it down in a full sentence.
Or even better: learn the whole expression right away.
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đ§ Spot common expressions used by native speakers and repeat them with the same tone, the same rhythm.
(Just like in shadowing!)
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đ§ And most importantly: reuse these phrases â in your head, in writing, out loud.
Repetition is memory.
You want to stop translating in your head?
Then learn to speak using ready-made phrases â not puzzle pieces you have to put together every time.
Because thinking in French means thinking in blocks.
And you can start building those blocks today.
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