4/5 rating based on 50 reviews. Read all reviews for Learn French with 7 jours sur la planète for iPhone.
Learn French with 7 jours sur la planète is paid iOS app published by TV5MONDE
Crossword31568
Very good app. Good vocabulary exercises, good use of different learning modalities.
awkale
Well worth the money. You will learn a lot of advanced words and grammar. Learning from real newscasts teaches you a lot.
Alx2000
Très bonne pour écouter le français comme les françaises parlent. Nouvelles intéressant et beaucoup de vocabulaire pour apprendre.. Je vous le recommande.. Buy it, good value and great way to hear spoken French by French people. It will expand your vocabulary.
PeterDobey
This is precisely what I was looking for to start my morning, it is a combination of watching French programming like France 24 with a language learning app. I really hope the programmers continue to work on it, and that it stays well funded, with increasingly more integrative, intuition based ways of learning french and increased quality news coverage. Thank you! However, after the first day I realize just how badly it needs more news. It needs to have Atleast one new article a day to be truly useful
Celtic whirlwind
The topics are interesting. I need to improve my ability to understand spoken French. The vocabulary excises are good reinforcement.
Saule1999
A terrific app to keep working on developing French language skills for a more advanced learner.
RachelBeau
News stories are interesting and so great to have video and transcript.
Loumac1970
I have been using this app for a while, and while I appreciate the choice of clips and the insights given into diverse current events, I find that that learning apparatus is not particularly useful. The vocabulary chosen for inclusion in the list consists of words almost all of which have a very obvious English cognate. I understand that the app is intended for a multilingual international audience, and that knowledge of English cannot be assumed . However the reality is that millions of people worldwide have enough knowledge of English to be able to know, for example, what "le film" or "l'artiste" mean. Almost uniformly, these kinds of too-easy words are chosen for the lists and "vocab building" games, while idiomatic expressions and puns, e.g. the double meaning of "aiguiller" in the recent piece on tattoos, are left without commentary. As such, I will not be using the app in my French classroom, but I do view the clips for my own interest.