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L’œil, les yeux – Eye, eyes

L’œil, les yeux – Eye, eyes

Today we’ll have a look close look at the pronunciation of l’œil and les yeux (eye and eyes) in French. After watching a quick video and listening to our audio clips you should have a much firmer grasp of these two tricky words!

Un œil, les yeux

an eye, eyes

L'œil, les yeux = eye/eyes in French

Eye / eyes in French: l’œil, les yeux

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Word origin

The word œil (eye in the singular form) comes from oculus in Latin and yeux (eyes in the plural form) comes from the Latin oculos.

Example sentences

The first example sentence is a famous quote from the book Le Petit Prince (the Little Prince) by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. There are lots of translations online but I took the liberty to translate it my own way.

On ne voit bien qu’avec le coeur. L’essentiel est invisible pour les yeux.

You can really only see clearly with your heart. What really matters is invisible to the eyes.

To talk about eye color in French, use the expression avoir les yeux + color name. For brown, the French adjective marron is invariable and does not have a plural form.

Guillaume a les yeux bleus. Véronique a les yeux verts. Corinne a les yeux marron.

Guillaume has blue eyes. Véronique has hazel eyes. Corinne has brown eyes.

In French, the expression “mon œil !” (literally my eye!) means “yeah right!” or “I don’t believe you!”.

Tu as fait tout ça ? Mon œil !

You did all that? I don’t believe you!

L’œil and les yeux: eyes in French.

Related lessons

References

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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 12,000 email subscribers. 📘 About David » 🌐 David’s personal site » 👍 Follow on Facebook »

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