🇫🇷 French

Body Parts in French

Knowing body parts in French is essential for medical situations, everyday conversation, and understanding the countless French idioms that reference the body. This guide covers all the key vocabulary with grammatical gender, plus the invaluable avoir mal à construction that lets you describe any pain or discomfort.

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Head and Face (La Tête et Le Visage)

The head and face vocabulary comes up constantly — in descriptions of people, medical conversations, and everyday expressions. Always learn the article with each word.

FrenchEnglish
Pronunciation
La têteHead
lah teht
Le visageFace
luh vee-ZAHZH
L'œil (pl: les yeux)Eye (pl: Eyes)
luh-yuh (leh zyuh)
Le nezNose
luh neh
La boucheMouth
lah boosh
L'oreilleEar
loh-RAY
La dentTooth
lah dohn
La langueTongue
lah lahnge
Les cheveuxHair (on head)
leh shuh-VUH
Le frontForehead
luh frohn
La joueCheek
lah zhoo
Le mentonChin
luh mohn-TOHN
La gorgeThroat
lah gorzh
Common Mistake

L'œil (eye) has one of the most irregular plurals in French: les yeux. This is not just a spelling change — it is an entirely different word. Un œil bleu (one blue eye) but des yeux bleus (blue eyes). Memorize both forms as a pair.

Upper Body (Le Haut du Corps)

Upper body vocabulary is critical for medical visits and describing physical activities. Note the mix of masculine and feminine nouns.

FrenchEnglish
Pronunciation
Le couNeck
luh koo
L'épauleShoulder
lay-POHL
La poitrineChest
lah pwah-TREEN
Le dosBack
luh doh
Le ventreStomach / Belly
luh vohn-truh
Le brasArm
luh brah
Le coudeElbow
luh kood
Le poignetWrist
luh pwah-NYEH
La mainHand
lah man
Le doigtFinger
luh dwah

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Lower Body (Le Bas du Corps)

Lower body vocabulary rounds out your knowledge and is particularly useful for sports, exercise, and describing injuries.

FrenchEnglish
Pronunciation
La jambeLeg
lah zhahmb
Le genouKnee
luh zhuh-NOO
La chevilleAnkle
lah shuh-VEE
Le piedFoot
luh pyeh
Le talonHeel
luh tah-LOHN
L'orteilToe
lohr-TAY

Avoir Mal À: Expressing Pain

The construction avoir mal à (to have pain in) is the most important medical phrase in French. The preposition à contracts with the definite article:

Pro Tip

Remember the contractions: à + le = au, à + les = aux. But à la and à l' do NOT contract. So it is j'ai mal au bras but j'ai mal à la jambe.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you say "my arm hurts" in French?

Use the expression avoir mal à: J'ai mal au bras (I have pain in the arm). The preposition à contracts with the article: à + le = au (masculine), à + la = à la (feminine), à + les = aux (plural). So "my eyes hurt" is j'ai mal aux yeux.

Are body parts masculine or feminine in French?

French body parts can be either gender and must be memorized individually. Some patterns help: words ending in -e are often feminine (la tête, la bouche, la jambe) but not always (le nez, le ventre). The article is essential — always learn body parts with their article as one unit.

Why does French use "le" and "la" instead of "my" with body parts?

Like Spanish and Italian, French uses the definite article (le, la, les) instead of possessive adjectives (mon, ma, mes) when the owner is clear from context. Je me lave les mains means "I wash my hands" — the reflexive me makes it clear they are your hands. Using mes mains here would sound unnatural.

What is the most useful medical phrase in French?

The most versatile medical phrase is J'ai mal à + [body part] (I have pain in...). This covers any pain or ache: J'ai mal à la tête (headache), J'ai mal au ventre (stomachache), J'ai mal à la gorge (sore throat). Learn this one pattern and you can describe most symptoms.

What are some common French idioms using body parts?

French has hundreds of body-part idioms: avoir le bras long (to have a long arm = to have influence), coûter les yeux de la tête (to cost the eyes of the head = to cost an arm and a leg), avoir la main verte (to have a green hand = to have a green thumb). Body parts are deeply woven into French expressions.