Seize Chaises Tongue Twister

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“Seize Chaises” Tongue Twister

Seize chaises sèches dans seize chambres sèches.

Translation: Sixteen dry chairs in sixteen dry rooms.

Why Is It Hard?

The difficulty is the contrast between the S sound in seize (sixteen) and sèches (dry), and the CH sound in chaises (chairs) and chambres (rooms). French speakers must rapidly alternate between S and CH — sounds that require opposite tongue positions — while also navigating the silent E in sèches. At speed, the S and CH sounds blur into each other, producing garbled nonsense.

History

Seize Chaises is a classroom favourite across France and Francophone countries, regularly used to teach the distinction between the S and CH phonemes to both native speakers and learners of French. The phrase’s setting — rooms and chairs — is deliberately mundane and visualisable, which helps with memory and recall. It is one of several French tongue twisters built around the number sixteen, a word that itself contains two of the most commonly confused French sounds.

Tips for Saying It

  • Alternate S and CH consciously: say seize (S sound), chaises (CH sound), sèches (S sound) in isolation first.
  • Remember that the E in sèches is not silent despite the grave accent — it sounds like ‘seh’.
  • Pair it with other S/CH virelangues to build muscle memory for rapidly switching between these sounds.

More French Tongue Twisters

Discover more tongue twisters from around the world: