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Savoir — Meaning, Pronunciation, and Examples in French

Savoir — Meaning, Pronunciation, and Examples in French

📘 Savoir meaning

Savoir is a common and essential irregular French verb meaning “to know” when referring to facts, information, or skills — unlike connaître, which is used for people and places. It expresses objective or learned knowledge and is widely used in everyday conversation. Facts: Je sais que le train arrive à 18h — I know the train arrives at 6pm; Information: Je sais où tu habites — I know where you live; Skills: Je sais cuisiner — I know how to cook. 🔊 Listen to examples.

Savoir – to know – French Word of the Day

🎧 Savoir pronunciation

The pronunciation of savoir is /sa.vwaʁ/, which sounds like sah-vwahr.

📝 Savoir examples

Je sais où tu habites, mais je n’ai jamais visité ton quartier.
I know where you live, but I’ve never visited your neighborhood.

Savez-vous conduire une voiture avec une boîte manuelle ?
Do you know how to drive a car with a manual transmission?

Je sais que tu ne travailles pas le week-end.
I know that you don’t work on weekends.

J’ai su hier soir que le concert avait été annulé à cause de la pluie.
I found out last night that the concert had been cancelled because of the rain.

👉 See also: Savoir conjugation chart »

💡 Savoir usages & common mistakes

  • Use savoir when it is followed by a question word, such as: qui (who), (where), comment (how), pourquoi (why), combien (how much / how many), or que (that).
  • If someone tells you something and you simply want to reply “Yes, I know,” use savoir:
    La France est un pays. Oui, je sais.
    Saying Oui, je connais ❌ would be incorrect.
  • If you have known (or haven’t known) something “all along,” use the imperfect of savoir:
    Oui, je savais. — Yes, I knew (it all along).
    Non, je ne savais pas. — No, I didn’t know.
  • For people, places, and areas of study, you must use connaître:
    Je connais Jean. / Je connais Paris. / Je connais la biologie.
  • The past participle of savoir is su. In the passé composé, j’ai su means “I found out” or “I learned (for the first time).”

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  • connaître — to know (a person, place, or be familiar with something)
  • À l’insu de — without someone knowing
  • le savoir-faire — the know-how / practical skill
  • faire savoir — to let someone know / to inform
  • je ne sais pas — I don’t know
  • le je-ne-sais-quoi — that special something / “i don’t know what”
  • Tu savais ? — Did you know?

👉 Savoir conjugation chart »
👉 Connaître meaning and examples »
👉 Connaître conjugation chart »
👉 Savoir vs. connaître »

🚀 Discover more on FrenchLearner

👉 Verb conjugations hub »
👉 French Word of the Day »
👉 French Vocabulary lists »

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David Issokson Founder & French Teacher at FrenchLearner.com
David Issokson is the founder of FrenchLearner.com, where he’s been helping students master French through vocabulary, grammar, and cultural lessons since 2012.

    David Issokson

    About the Author – David Issokson David Issokson is an online French teacher and the founder of FrenchLearner.com (established 2012). He has been teaching French online since 2014 and brings over 30 years of experience as a passionate French learner and fluent speaker. David creates clear, structured lessons supported by native audio recorded by Marie Assel Cambier, a professional voice artist and native French speaker. A graduate of McGill University in Montreal, he has taught hundreds of learners worldwide and publishes daily French lessons for more than 13,000 email subscribers. 📘 About David » 🌐 David’s personal site » 👍 Follow on Facebook »

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