Updated November 21, 2025 — Lesson written by French teacher Did Issokson for students who want to learn French online, with audio recorded by Marie Assel Cambier, a professional voice artist and native French speaker.
The French Word of the Day is je t’aime, meaning “I love you.” In this lesson you’ll learn the exact pronunciation with a clear native recording from Marie and see when to use it (and when not to!) so you don’t accidentally say the wrong thing in everyday conversation.
✅ Meaning✅ Pronunciation✅ Example sentences✅ Related Words & Expressions
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📘 Je t’aime meaningJe t’aime is the standard French expression meaning “I love you.” It’s used to express deep affection toward a romantic partner or very close family members. Variants include je vous aime (I love you formal or plural), je t’aime bien (I’m fond of you), and je t’adore (I adore you).
🎧 Je t’aime pronunciationThe pronunciation of je t’aime in French is /ʒə tɛm/ — roughly zhuh tem.
📝 Je t’aime example sentencesJe t’aime. Tu es l’amour de ma vie.I love you. You are the love of my life.
J’oue que je t’aime. Est-ce que tu m’aimes ?I admit that I love you. Do you love me?
Je t’aime tellement. Tu me rends fou.I love you so much. You drive me crazy.
Moi aussi, je t’aime.I love you too.
Want to learn more romantic French? ❤️👉 18 French Terms of Endearment To Call Your Lover »
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💡 Je t’aime — how the grammar worksTo really understand je t’aime, it helps to see what each little word is doing. French places small pronouns like te (you) before the verb, so je + t’ + aime translates literally to I you love.
FrenchMeaningRoleJeISubject pronount’ (short for te)youDirect object pronounaimeloveVerb (aimer, “to love / to like”)🇫🇷 Cultural note — how French speakers express “I love you”In English, people often say casual things like “love ya” or “luv u,” but French doesn’t really he an equivalent. Je t’aime is the way to say “I love you” between people who are very close. If you want something lighter, French speakers switch to je t’aime bien, which loosely translates to “I like you a lot” or “I think you’re great.”
✅ Je t’aime vs je t’adore vs je t’aime bienFrench has a few ways to say “I love you,” and it’s important to know the differences. Je t’aime is the strongest and most direct, used for romantic love and close family members. Other phrases like je t’adore or je t’aime bien sound similar but don’t carry the same meaning. This table shows which expression to choose depending on who with, so you don’t accidentally say the wrong thing.
ExpressionMeaningUse it withJe t’aimeI love youRomantic partner / close familyJe vous aimeI love you (plural or formal)Family / group / polite formJe t’adoreI adore you / I’m crazy about youFamily / informal affectionJe t’aime bienI like you (friendly)Friends / casualJe t’aime beaucoupI like you a lot (NOT romantic!)Friendly tone🔗 Related words and expressionsje t’adore — I adore youje t’aime bien — I like you (friendly, not romantic)je t’aime beaucoup — I like you a lot (not romantic!)je vous aime — I love you (formal or plural)tu me manques — I miss youmon amour — my lovema chérie / mon chéri — darling / sweetheart📚 Related lessons on FrenchLearner👉 Terms of endearment to call your lover👉 Aimer (to like, to love) conjugation tables👉 Aimer (to like, to love) – Word of the Day lesson👉 Je t’aime…moi non plus (song by Serge Gainsbourg & Jane Birkin)👉 Valentine’s Day in France
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Did Issokson Founder & French Teacher at FrenchLearner.com Did Issokson is the founder of FrenchLearner.com, where he’s been helping students master French through vocabulary, grammar, and cultural lessons since 2012. See Full Bio French language French grammar French vocabulary French verbs French expressions Learning French online French culture French songs and music