PrepMyFrench
PrepMyFrench
Stop guessing at rules. Every module is structured around what the TEF and TCF actually test — so you learn what moves your score.
The complete timeline of French — from présent to plus-que-parfait
From Présent to Subjonctif — master the full timeline of French. Every tense mapped to when and why you use it.
Conquer irregular verbs and mood shifts. The conjugations that appear most on TEF and TCF exams.
Understand masculin vs féminin and pluralisation rules. The foundation every other grammar rule builds on.
Subjonctif, conditionnel, impératif — the moods that separate B1 from B2
Subjonctif, conditionnel, impératif, gérondif. Master the moods that make the difference between B1 and B2.
La voix passive and reflexive verb forms. Structures that appear in TCF writing tasks and trip up most candidates.
Pronouns, adjectives, articles, adverbs — the building blocks of every sentence
Simplify your sentences using y, en, and relative pronouns (qui, que, dont, où). Master placement before the verb.
Agreement, placement, and comparative forms. Add precision to your writing — the difference between a B1 and B2 essay.
Master le, la, les and partitive articles (du, de la, des). The rules that catch every learner off guard.
Form adverbs with -ment, master placement rules, and learn comparative forms. Make your sentences more precise.
Understand masculin vs féminin and pluralisation rules. The foundation every other grammar rule builds on.
Connect ideas with coordinating and subordinating conjunctions. Build complex sentences that impress examiners.
Navigate space and time with à, de, en, chez. Master the most error-prone part of French for non-native speakers.
Master word order, negation, and inversion. Analyze sentence structure to write like a native — not like a translation.
60-day structured guides — A1 through B1
Small-group Zoom classes with instructor Guillaume · 3 sessions/week
Save up to $100 with combo packages (A1+A2, A2+B1, or all three)
See combos →Take our comprehensive grammar diagnostic. Find your exact weak points and get a structured learning path — powered by PrepMyFrench.
START FREE DIAGNOSTICTenses, verbs, parts of speech, sentence structure — taught the way exam candidates need it, paired with the exercises that catch the specific mistakes you make. Built for self-study, used alongside the AI-graded writing and speaking tools.
Look up any French verb in any tense — regular, irregular, pronominal.
CEFR-graded vocabulary decks with spaced repetition and exam-relevant word lists.
AI-graded Expression Écrite tasks with detailed grammar feedback.
Free 10-minute test to see where you actually stand before you start prepping.
Start with the tenses module — present, passé composé, imparfait, futur simple. These four cover ~80% of the verb forms you need at B1/CLB 7. Then add the pronoun module (le, la, les, lui, leur, en, y) and the question-form module. After that, the subjonctif and the conditionnel/imparfait pair for hypotheticals. Skip the deeper literary tenses (passé simple, passé antérieur) unless you are aiming for C1+.
Each module ends with practice exercises that are scored the same way the exam scores you — multiple-choice, sentence completion, transformation. The Expression Écrite (writing) module uses the same rubric the AI evaluator uses on the real-exam practice tests, so the feedback you get on grammar exercises is directly comparable to the feedback you get on practice writing tasks.
A subset of foundational lessons is free (subject pronouns, present tense of être/avoir, basic articles, simple question forms). Full access to the tense library, irregular verb tables, and CEFR-aligned exercise sets is part of paid plans. See /pricing for the breakdown.
The grammar itself is standard international French — what TEF Canada and TCF Canada test on. Where Canadian usage differs from European usage (e.g. courriel vs. e-mail, fin de semaine vs. week-end) we flag it in the vocabulary notes. The grammar rules don't differ.
Yes. The grammar modules stand on their own — many users go through them to brush up before traveling, to support their Express Entry application, or simply because they want their French to be more accurate. The exam-prep angle is one use case among several.