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WHAT do the different accent marks over an e mean

The different marks over e usually change how it’s pronounced, and in French they can also signal meaning or a historical spelling pattern.

Common French e-marks

  • é = acute accent. It’s usually pronounced like the “ay” sound in say or the first vowel in café.
  • è = grave accent. It’s usually pronounced more like the “eh” sound in bet.
  • ê = circumflex. It often sounds similar to è , and it can show that an older letter used to be in the word.
  • ë = diaeresis. It tells you the e is pronounced separately from the vowel next to it, instead of blending into one sound.

What they mean in practice

These marks help readers know how to say the word , especially in French where plain e can be silent, reduced, or pronounced in different ways. They can also distinguish different words that look similar in writing.

Quick examples

  • café → uses é.
  • crème → uses è.
  • forêt → uses ê.
  • Noël → uses ë so the vowels are read separately.

If you want, I can also give you a super short pronunciation cheat sheet for é / è / ê / ë.