Last updated: 24 juin 2026
French Punctuation for Academic Writing

French Punctuation for Academic Writing
Total Word Count: 1,800+ words
Punctuation in French is not the same as in English. Spacing rules, the use of semicolons, and the dreaded "guillemets" (French quotation marks) can trip up even advanced learners.
For TCF/TEF Writing, correct punctuation is a subtle but noticeable marker of linguistic competence.
Part 1: Spacing Rules (The Hidden Trap)
French punctuation often requires a non-breaking space before certain marks.
Part 2: The Semicolon (Le Point-Virgule)
The semicolon is more common in formal French than in English. It separates two independent but related clauses.
- "Le projet a été approuvé ; cependant, le budget reste limité."
When to use:
- To link two sentences that are too closely related to be separated by a period.
Part 3: The Colon (Les Deux-Points)
The colon introduces an explanation, a list, or a direct quote.
- Explanation: "Il a démissionné : il n'était plus motivé."
- List: "Voici les ingrédients : farine, sucre, beurre."
- Quote: "Il m'a dit : « Je reviendrai demain. »"
Part 4: Guillemets (« ... »)
French quotation marks are "chevrons" (« »), not English double quotes (" ").
Format: « [Space] Text [Space] »
- Correct: « Bonjour ! »
- Incorrect: "Bonjour !"
Nested Quotes: If you have a quote within a quote, use single English quotes inside.
Part 5: The Ellipsis (Les Points de Suspension)
The ellipsis (...) indicates an interruption, a pause, or omitted text.
- "Je pensais que... enfin, peu importe."
Rule: In French, the ellipsis is always three dots (not four, not two). No space before, one space after.
Part 6: The Dash (Le Tiret)
In French, the long dash (—) is used for dialogue instead of quotation marks.
- — Tu viens ?
- — Oui, j'arrive.
Rule: Each speaker gets a new line starting with a dash.
Aiming for ?
Part 7: Capitalization Rules
French capitalizes less than English.
- Days and Months: Not capitalized. lundi, janvier.
- Languages: Not capitalized when used as adjectives. La langue française.
Part 8: Numbers and Punctuation
- Decimals: French uses a comma (not a period). 3,14.
- Thousands: French uses a space (not a comma). 1 000 000.
- Symbol after the number with a space. 50 €.
Conclusion
Punctuation is the silent grammar. The examiner won't explicitly mark you down for a missing space before a question mark, but correct usage signals a polished command of written French. Review your essays for semicolon usage and guillemets before submitting.