The Minimalist French Verb List: 50 Verbs to Get By in Paris
You do not need 500 French verbs to survive a week in Paris. You need the right 50 — the ones that let you ask, order, move, pay, apologise, explain, and get unstuck when your brain goes blank.
If you’ve ever stood at a café counter knowing exactly what you want to say in English but not knowing whether French needs être, avoir, or something else, this list is for you. The minimalist French verb list below gives you maximum practical coverage with minimum overload.
Quick answer: if you’re a beginner or traveller, focus first on high-frequency, high-utility verbs like être, avoir, aller, vouloir, pouvoir, faire, prendre, and dire, then add travel verbs, problem-solving verbs, and polite survival verbs. Mastering 50 core verbs gets you surprisingly far in Paris.
Why 50 verbs are enough to start
A small verb core does more for your spoken French than a giant vocabulary list you cannot produce under pressure. In corpus-based frequency studies drawn from large French datasets such as Frantext and Lexique/CNRTL-based frequency work, a relatively small set of verbs accounts for a huge share of everyday usage. The exact ranking changes by corpus and genre, but the same names keep appearing near the top: être, avoir, faire, dire, aller, voir, savoir, pouvoir, vouloir, venir, prendre, and falloir.
That matters because travel French is repetitive. In Paris, you keep doing the same things:
- asking where something is
- saying what you want
- checking if you can pay by card
- explaining what happened
- understanding directions
- solving small problems
You do not need literary range. You need usable range.
A better strategy is to learn a stripped-back set of verbs deeply enough that you can actually produce them. That’s exactly why we built VerbPal around active production rather than passive recognition. Seeing vouloir and thinking “yes, I know that one” is not the same as producing je voudrais fast enough at a bakery counter. In our drills, we push you to type the form, not just recognise it, because that is what real travel French demands.
Pro Tip: Start with verbs that unlock many sentence patterns, not verbs that feel “interesting.” Utility beats novelty.
The 50 French verbs to get by in Paris
Here is the minimalist list. These are not the only useful verbs in French, but they give you the best practical return early on.
Core survival verbs
- être — to be
- avoir — to have
- aller — to go
- faire — to do/make
- vouloir — to want
- pouvoir — to be able to/can
- devoir — to have to/must
- savoir — to know how/to know
- connaître — to know/be familiar with
- dire — to say/tell
Movement and location verbs
- venir — to come
- partir — to leave
- arriver — to arrive
- entrer — to enter
- sortir — to go out/leave
- monter — to go up
- descendre — to go down
- tourner — to turn
- marcher — to walk/work
- trouver — to find
Eating, buying, and service verbs
- prendre — to take/have
- manger — to eat
- boire — to drink
- commander — to order
- payer — to pay
- acheter — to buy
- coûter — to cost
- servir — to serve
- apporter — to bring
- réserver — to reserve/book
Communication and understanding verbs
- parler — to speak
- demander — to ask
- répondre — to answer
- écouter — to listen
- entendre — to hear
- comprendre — to understand
- répéter — to repeat
- expliquer — to explain
- montrer — to show
- aider — to help
Problem-solving verbs
- chercher — to look for
- attendre — to wait
- perdre — to lose
- oublier — to forget
- changer — to change
- ouvrir — to open
- fermer — to close
- utiliser — to use
- falloir — to be necessary
- pleuvoir — to rain
Notice what is not here: lots of low-frequency “nice to know” verbs. This list is built for immediate function. It is also a manageable starting set for deliberate review inside VerbPal, where you can keep high-frequency verbs in rotation with SM-2 spaced repetition instead of letting them blur together in one long study session.
If you want a broader foundation after this list, our post on the 100 most common French verbs is the natural next step. But for travel and beginner momentum, 50 is enough to start speaking.
Pro Tip: Learn these verbs in chunks of 10, but use all 10 in your own sentences on day one.
The 12 verbs that carry the most weight
Not all 50 verbs matter equally. If you only learn 12 first, make them these:
- être
- avoir
- aller
- faire
- vouloir
- pouvoir
- devoir
- dire
- prendre
- venir
- savoir
- comprendre
These verbs do massive structural work. They let you build requests, describe states, talk about plans, ask permission, and solve misunderstandings.
What these verbs let you do in real life
- Je suis américain. (I am American.)
- J’ai une réservation. (I have a reservation.)
- Je vais au musée. (I’m going to the museum.)
- Je voudrais un café. (I would like a coffee.)
- Je peux payer par carte ? (Can I pay by card?)
- Je dois partir. (I have to leave.)
- Je ne comprends pas. (I don’t understand.)
- Pouvez-vous répéter ? (Can you repeat?)
A tiny conjugation table that pays off immediately: vouloir
If you are going to Paris, vouloir is one of the highest-value verbs you can learn because it softens requests and keeps you polite.
| Pronoun | Form | English |
|---|---|---|
| je | veux / voudrais | I want / I would like |
| tu | veux | you want |
| il/elle | veut | he/she wants |
| nous | voulons | we want |
| vous | voulez | you want |
| ils/elles | veulent | they want |
For travellers, the superstar form is:
- Je voudrais un sandwich, s’il vous plaît. (I would like a sandwich, please.)
If you want more support with this verb specifically, see our post on why vouloir is the most important verb for tourists. Inside VerbPal, this is exactly the kind of irregular-but-essential pattern we surface early, so you spend your effort on forms you will actually say rather than memorising a full table too soon.
Pro Tip: Prioritise first-person singular and polite vous forms before full-table mastery. That is what you will actually use in Paris.
Learn verbs by situation, not alphabetically
Alphabetical lists feel tidy, but they do not match real speech. Your brain retrieves better when verbs live inside situations.
Here is a more useful way to organise the minimalist French verb list.
At the café or restaurant
Use these most:
- vouloir
- prendre
- manger
- boire
- commander
- payer
- coûter
Useful lines:
- Je voudrais un croissant. (I would like a croissant.)
- Je vais prendre un thé. (I’ll have a tea.)
- Ça coûte combien ? (How much does it cost?)
- Je peux payer par carte ? (Can I pay by card?)
On the metro or in the street
Use these most:
- aller
- venir
- partir
- arriver
- tourner
- monter
- descendre
- trouver
Useful lines:
- Je vais à Montmartre. (I’m going to Montmartre.)
- Où faut-il descendre ? (Where do you have to get off?)
- Je cherche la station. (I’m looking for the station.)
- Je ne trouve pas la sortie. (I can’t find the exit.)
At the hotel or Airbnb
Use these most:
- avoir
- réserver
- ouvrir
- fermer
- changer
- aider
- expliquer
Useful lines:
- J’ai une réservation au nom de Smith. (I have a reservation under the name Smith.)
- La porte ne s’ouvre pas. (The door won’t open.)
- Pouvez-vous m’aider ? (Can you help me?)
- Je voudrais changer de chambre. (I would like to change rooms.)
When things go wrong
Use these most:
- perdre
- oublier
- attendre
- chercher
- comprendre
- répéter
- dire
Useful lines:
- J’ai perdu mon téléphone. (I lost my phone.)
- J’ai oublié mon code. (I forgot my code.)
- Pouvez-vous répéter ? (Can you repeat?)
- Je ne comprends pas ce que vous dites. (I don’t understand what you’re saying.)
This situation-based grouping is also how we recommend studying in VerbPal. A travel learner does better with a café cluster or metro cluster than with a random stack of unrelated infinitives. The goal is retrieval in context, not tidy notes.
Learn vouloir + prendre + payer together because they show up in the same café interaction.
Learn acheter, then boire, then tourner just because they happen to be near each other in a list.
Pro Tip: Build 5 mini-scenarios — café, metro, hotel, shopping, emergency — and assign 8 to 10 verbs to each.
Mnemonic: think of vouloir as your “velvet verb.” Both start with v, and both soften what comes next. If je veux feels too direct, switch to je voudrais to wrap the request in velvet. Good human. 🐶
The 10 highest-value travel phrases built from these verbs
A minimalist verb list only works if you turn it into phrases you can actually say. Start with these:
- Je voudrais… (I would like…)
- Je peux… ? (Can I…?)
- Où est… ? (Where is…?)
- Je vais… (I’m going…)
- J’ai… (I have…)
- Je n’ai pas… (I don’t have…)
- Je ne comprends pas. (I don’t understand.)
- Pouvez-vous répéter ? (Can you repeat?)
- Il faut… (It’s necessary / You need to…)
- Je cherche… (I’m looking for…)
These phrases cover a huge amount of beginner communication because they combine a small number of verbs with high-frequency nouns and locations.
Why phrase-first learning works
When you memorise vouloir = to want, you have knowledge. When you memorise Je voudrais un billet pour demain. (I would like a ticket for tomorrow.) you have a usable tool.
That is also why we built VerbPal around drills that force production. Our spaced repetition engine uses SM-2 scheduling to bring back verbs just before you are likely to forget them, but the key is that you must produce the form. That active recall layer is what turns “I’ve seen this before” into “I can say this now.” We cover far beyond this travel list too: all major French tenses, irregulars, reflexives, and the subjunctive, so the habits you build here still help when you move past survival French.
If you want to go deeper on that method, read our posts on how to build a 10-minute French verb drill routine and moving French verbs from passive study to active speaking.
Which is more natural in a bakery: Je veux un café or Je voudrais un café?
Pro Tip: Memorise verbs inside complete travel phrases, then swap one noun at a time: un café, un billet, une chambre, une table.
Put this list into your mouth: the right way to study it
Most learners sabotage a good minimalist list by studying it passively. They read it, highlight it, maybe copy it into a notebook, and then freeze when they need to speak.
Here is a better approach.
Step 1: Learn the infinitive and one “anchor form”
For each verb, learn:
- the infinitive
- the meaning
- one high-value form you will actually say
Examples:
- vouloir → je voudrais
- pouvoir → je peux / pouvez-vous
- aller → je vais
- avoir → j’ai
- comprendre → je comprends
Step 2: Add one real sentence
- Je voudrais une table pour deux. (I would like a table for two.)
- Pouvez-vous m’aider ? (Can you help me?)
- Je vais à la gare. (I’m going to the station.)
Step 3: Drill from English to French
Do not just read the French and nod. Look at:
- “I would like a coffee.”
- “Can you repeat?”
- “I’m looking for the Louvre.”
Then produce the French from memory.
This is the exact kind of retrieval practice we built into VerbPal. Instead of endless passive review, our drills make you recall forms under light pressure — which is much closer to what happens when a waiter is waiting for your answer. Lexi also pops up in the app with quick reminders when a pattern is worth noticing, which is useful when you keep mixing up a few core verbs.
Step 4: Space your reviews
The forgetting curve is real. If you learn 50 verbs in one weekend and never revisit them, most will fade fast. Spaced repetition fixes that by reviewing each item at the right interval.
In VerbPal, we use an SM-2 spaced repetition system so the verbs you are weak on come back sooner, and the ones you know well get pushed further out. That means your practice stays efficient instead of bloated.
If you use this 50-verb list as your Paris starter pack, do not stop at reading it. In VerbPal, you can drill the exact high-frequency verbs that matter most, practise producing forms actively, and let our spaced repetition engine bring them back before you forget them. That is how a short list becomes usable speech.
Try VerbPal free →Pro Tip: If you only have 10 minutes a day, spend 8 minutes producing French from English prompts and 2 minutes reading notes. Not the other way around.
The mistakes beginners make with minimalist verb lists
A minimalist list works brilliantly — if you avoid a few common traps.
Mistake 1: Learning only present-tense dictionary meanings
You may “know” vouloir but still fail to say je voudrais. You may know aller but not recognise on va. A verb is not just a translation pair.
Mistake 2: Ignoring pronunciation
French verbs often look more different on the page than they sound in speech. That is why learners get confused by silent endings and homophones. If this trips you up, our posts on why the -ent ending in French verbs is silent and il parle vs ils parlent pronunciation will save you a lot of frustration.
Mistake 3: Treating savoir and connaître as interchangeable
They are both “to know,” but they are not the same:
- Je sais où c’est. (I know where it is.)
- Je connais ce quartier. (I know this neighbourhood.)
For a full breakdown, see our guide to savoir vs connaître.
Mistake 4: Memorising tables without speaking
Conjugation tables have their place, and our French conjugation tables are useful as a reference. But reference is not the same as retrieval. You do not become fluent by staring at six forms in a grid. You become fluent by producing the right one when needed.
Mistake 5: Skipping high-utility irregular verbs because they look annoying
Yes, être, avoir, aller, faire, vouloir, and pouvoir are irregular. Learn them anyway. They are too common to postpone. In VerbPal, these are front-loaded for a reason: frequent irregulars create the biggest payoff fastest, especially when you practise them actively instead of admiring them in a list.
Pro Tip: When a verb is both irregular and frequent, move it to the front of the queue, not the back.
A 7-day plan to learn these 50 verbs before your trip
If your Paris trip is coming up soon, here is a realistic crash plan.
Day 1: Core control verbs
Learn:
- être
- avoir
- aller
- faire
- vouloir
- pouvoir
- devoir
Goal phrases:
- Je suis… (I am…)
- J’ai… (I have…)
- Je vais… (I’m going…)
- Je voudrais… (I would like…)
- Je peux… ? (Can I…?)
Day 2: Communication verbs
Learn:
- parler
- demander
- répondre
- comprendre
- répéter
- expliquer
- dire
Goal phrases:
- Je ne comprends pas. (I don’t understand.)
- Pouvez-vous répéter ? (Can you repeat?)
- Comment dit-on… ? (How do you say…?)
Day 3: Food and service verbs
Learn:
- prendre
- manger
- boire
- commander
- payer
- coûter
- réserver
Goal phrases:
- Je vais prendre… (I’ll have…)
- Ça coûte combien ? (How much does it cost?)
- J’ai une réservation. (I have a reservation.)
Day 4: Movement verbs
Learn:
- venir
- partir
- arriver
- entrer
- sortir
- monter
- descendre
Goal phrases:
- Je dois partir. (I have to leave.)
- Où faut-il descendre ? (Where do you have to get off?)
- Je suis arrivé(e). (I arrived.)
Day 5: Navigation and help
Learn:
- tourner
- marcher
- trouver
- chercher
- montrer
- aider
- attendre
Goal phrases:
- Je cherche… (I’m looking for…)
- Pouvez-vous me montrer… ? (Can you show me…?)
- Je vous attends ici. (I’m waiting for you here.)
Day 6: Problem-solving verbs
Learn:
- perdre
- oublier
- changer
- ouvrir
- fermer
- utiliser
- entendre
Goal phrases:
- J’ai perdu… (I lost…)
- Je peux utiliser… ? (Can I use…?)
- Je n’entends pas bien. (I can’t hear well.)
Day 7: Fill the gaps
Learn:
- connaître
- acheter
- servir
- apporter
- falloir
- pleuvoir
Goal phrases:
- Je connais un peu Paris. (I know Paris a little.)
- Il faut un ticket ? (Do you need a ticket?)
- Il pleut. (It’s raining.)
If you want a more systematic version of this kind of routine, our Learn French with VerbPal resources and app drills are built for exactly this sort of short, focused ramp-up. And if your trip is close, our 7-day free trial gives you enough time to rehearse these verbs properly on iOS or Android before you fly.
Pro Tip: End every study session by saying 5 full sentences out loud without looking. That final retrieval round is where progress sticks.
FAQ: minimalist French verbs for travellers
Are these really the only French verbs I need in Paris?
No — but they are enough to cover a large share of beginner interactions. Think of them as your highest-yield starter pack, not your final destination.
Should I learn full conjugation tables for all 50?
Not at first. Learn the infinitive, one or two anchor forms, and one complete phrase. Add more forms as you need them. Use full tables as reference, not as your main study method.
Which verb should I learn first for travel French?
Start with vouloir. It powers polite requests: Je voudrais… (I would like…) Then add pouvoir, avoir, aller, and comprendre.
What is the difference between knowing a verb and being able to use it?
Knowing a verb means you recognise it. Using a verb means you can produce the right form quickly in a real situation. That is why active recall matters so much.
Is a minimalist list enough for fluency?
No. But it is an excellent bridge to functional confidence. Once these 50 are solid, expanding becomes much easier because you already control the core sentence patterns of French.
This is the sweet spot where most learners get stuck: you know the verb list, but you still cannot pull the right form out quickly in a real conversation. We built VerbPal for exactly that gap, with active recall drills, travel-ready phrases, and spaced repetition that keeps your core verbs alive until they feel automatic.
If you can actively use these 50 verbs, you will not sound fluent — but you will be functional, polite, and far less likely to freeze. That is the real win for a first trip to Paris.
And once those 50 feel automatic, the next 50 come much faster.