If you’ve been learning French for a while and you still keep repeating the same mistakes again and again… this blog is for you.
I’m not talking about beginners’ errors. I’m talking about those stubborn, irritating mistakes that refuse to leave even when you know the rule.
That’s exactly what we call fossilized mistakes.
What are fossilized mistakes (and why they’re dangerous)
Fossilized mistakes are errors that have become permanent in your language.
You’ve repeated them so many times that your brain now treats them as “correct”.
Examples I see all the time in my students:
- Saying “je suis d’accord avec ça” in every situation (even when it sounds unnatural)
- Mixing passé composé and imparfait randomly
- Mispronouncing nasal sounds like on / an / in
- Saying “j’exercice” instead of “je fais de l’exercice”
- Translating directly from English: “Demander une question” → “to ask a question” instead of “Poser une question” mindset in French structures
And the worst part?
Even after correction, you repeat them again.
That’s fossilization.
Why fossilization happens (this is where most learners get it wrong)
Let’s be honest: it’s not because French is “hard”.
It’s because of how you’ve been learning it.
Here’s what usually causes fossilized mistakes:
1. You prioritized fluency/speed over accuracy
You were told: “Just speak, don’t worry about mistakes.”
That may work in the beginning.
But if you never correct those mistakes → they become permanent.
2. No consistent correction system
You get corrected once in class…
Then forget it…
Then repeat it 50 times outside.
Your brain learns repetition, not correction.
3. Translation-based thinking
If you think especially in English and then translate…
You will:
- Use wrong structures
- Repeat the same patterns
- Never sound natural
4. Passive learning (huge problem)
Watching videos, scrolling reels, reading posts…
But:
- Not applying
- Not practicing actively
- Not correcting yourself
This creates false confidence.
HOW TO TACKLE THIS
Step 1: Accept this truth first
You cannot fix fossilized mistakes casually.
You need:
- Awareness
- System
- Repetition (correct repetition, not random speaking)
Otherwise nothing changes.
Step 2: Identify your personal error patterns
Not “I make mistakes in French”.
That’s too vague.
You need to go very specific.
Start tracking like this:
Speaking errors:
- Gender mistakes (le/la confusion)
- Verb tense confusion
- Prepositions (à / de / en / pour)
- Pronunciation issues (nasal, R sound)
Writing errors:
- Agreement errors (adjectives, past participle)
- Sentence structure
- Spelling accents
- Word order
Write them down in categories.
If you don’t know your mistakes, you cannot fix them.
Step 3: Create your “Mistake Notebook” (non-negotiable)
Every serious student I’ve seen improve fast does this.
Not optional.
Divide it into sections:
- Grammar mistakes
- Vocabulary mistakes
- Pronunciation errors
- Sentence corrections
And don’t just write:
❌ Je suis intéressé pour apprendre français
✔️ Je suis intéressé à apprendre le français
Also write WHY it was wrong.
Because without understanding → you repeat it again.
Step 4: Fix one error at a time (not everything together)
Big mistake students make: Trying to fix everything at once.
Doesn’t work.
Pick ONE mistake pattern per week.
Example:
Week 1: à vs de
Week 2: past tense usage
Week 3: nasal pronunciation
Then:
- Practice only that
- Overfocus on it in speaking
- Self-correct aggressively
This is how real improvement happens.
Step 5: Active correction during speaking (this can be uncomfortable but powerful)
Most students ignore their mistakes while speaking.
You shouldn’t.
Train yourself to:
- Stop mid-sentence
- Correct yourself
- Restart properly
Example:
❌ Je fais une décision…
✔️ Je prends une décision.
Yes, it breaks fluency temporarily. But it builds accuracy permanently.
Step 6: Record yourself (this will expose everything)
You think you’re speaking well.
Then you hear yourself…
Reality check.
Do this:
- Pick a topic (DELF / DALF / TEF Canada / TCF Canada style)
- Speak for 2–3 minutes
- Record it
- Note your mistakes
You’ll start seeing patterns immediately.
Step 7: Shadowing for pronunciation correction
If your pronunciation errors are fossilized, normal practice won’t fix them.
You need imitation training.
Process:
- Take a native audio
- Listen carefully
- Repeat with same rhythm + intonation
- Record yourself
- Compare
Focus especially on:
- Nasal sounds (on / an / in)
- French R
- Liaison
This directly impacts your DELF/ DALF/ TEF Canada/ TCF Canada speaking scores.
Step 8: Stop translating. Start thinking in French.
I know you’ve heard this before.
But most people don’t actually do it.
Start small:
- Think daily routines in French
- Describe what you see
- Build sentences directly
Because translation = fossilization.
Step 9: Targeted writing correction (not random essays)
Writing random essays won’t help if you repeat the same mistakes.
Instead:
- Write short texts (100–150 words)
- Get them corrected
- Rewrite the corrected version
This rewriting step is where improvement happens.
Step 10: Build “error-free templates” for exams
If you’re preparing for:
- DELF A1/A2/B1/B2
- DALF C1
- TEF Canada
- TCF Canada
You need reliable structures.
Example:
- Giving opinion
- Agreeing/disagreeing
- Structuring arguments
Practice these until they are:
– 100% correct
– Automatic
This reduces mistakes during exams.
How this improves your exam scores
Let’s be practical. Fixing fossilized mistakes directly impacts:
Speaking scores
- Better accuracy
- Clear pronunciation
- More natural structures
Writing scores
- Fewer grammar errors
- Better coherence
- Stronger impression on examiner
Overall level jump
This is what takes you from:
B1 → B2
B2 → C1
Not more vocabulary. Not more apps. Just Correction.
What NOT to do (seriously avoid this)
- Don’t rely only on apps
- Don’t just “consume content”
- Don’t ignore corrections
- Don’t say “I’ll fix it later”
Later = never.
Final reality check for you
If you’ve been stuck at the same level for months…
It’s not because you need more lessons. It’s because your mistakes have become habits.
And habits don’t change with theory.
They change with:
- Awareness
- Repetition
- Discipline
If you’re serious about fixing this
Then stop looking for shortcuts and start correcting yourself properly.
Because once you eliminate fossilized mistakes…
Your fluency improves. Your confidence improves. Your exam scores improve.
About LingoRelic Language Academy
If you want structured, correction-focused French training (not random classes), then at LingoRelic Language Academy, we focus heavily on identifying and eliminating fossilized mistakes so that students don’t just “learn French”, they actually improve and get results in exams like DELF, DALF, TEF Canada, and TCF Canada. You know where to reach us.



















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