Personally vetted instructors

Méridional French tutors, lessons & classes

Adieu ! Used in southern France as both hello and goodbye, from the Occitan greeting that survived into modern Méridional speech.

Personally vetted Méridional French tutors. Lessons in the broader southern-French register that covers Toulouse, Montpellier, Bordeaux, the wider Languedoc, and the Occitan-substrate French shared across the South.

5.0 · 500+ reviews · Free 30-min trial · Match in 24 hrs
Méridional French tutor and adult student in conversation in a sunlit Toulouse courtyard — Strommen
20 yrs
EST. 2006
In-Person Online
250+Tutors
18+Years in LA
150+Film & TV Credits
50+Languages

Your instructors

Méridional French tutors for private lessons & classes

Strommen has been teaching French since 2006. Méridional French has been a steady quiet specialty: heritage learners with family across the Midi-Pyrénées and Languedoc, aerospace and biomedical professionals relocating to Toulouse or Montpellier, wine-trade students placing into Bordeaux, and rugby-curious learners who want to follow the southern clubs in their own register. Every tutor below was met and vetted by us in person or via thorough video interview. No marketplace. No automated profile-creation. Real teachers with real regional backgrounds across the wider South.

Filter by location, age, or price. Then book a 30-minute free trial.

Below are the Strommen tutors who specialize in Méridional French. Photos, ratings, and rates are real. Click any card to read their bio and book a free 30-minute trial.

Reset Filters.
  • Price Per Lesson

  • Offers Free Trial

  • Near Me

    • View on Map
  • Check Availability

  • In Person?

  • Student Age

Search Results: 0 Tutors

L'accent du Midi — culture & dialect

5 Méridional markers shared across Toulouse, Bordeaux, and the South

Five markers that travel across the whole southern zone, from Toulouse through Bordeaux to the Languedoc and the Pyrenees. None of them are slang; they are the everyday Méridional layer that sits on top of standard French. Screenshot the infographic, then book a tutor to learn the rest.

  1. 01

    Adieu

    In the South, used as both hello and goodbye, surviving from Occitan where the word carried this dual meaning. Common in Toulouse, the Languedoc, and across the wider Midi-Pyrénées; rare in this dual use in Paris, where adieu means goodbye only. Hear it daily on a Toulouse terrace or in a Carcassonne café.

    e.g. Adieu Joan, ça fait plaisir de te voir !

  2. 02

    Ben...

    The constant southern discourse filler, used to open or hedge a sentence in a way that's more frequent and load-bearing in Méridional speech than in northern French. Pairs naturally with the chantante intonation. Parisians use ben too, but southerners lean on it harder and with a longer vowel.

    e.g. Ben oui, ben on verra demain, ben.

  3. 03

    Putain (the southern intensifier)

    Used across the South as an everyday exclamation rather than the harder insult it can carry elsewhere. The southern pronunciation stretches the vowel into something like pu-TAAAY. Pairs naturally with cong in the Toulouse area for the famous putain cong expression. Reads as casual emphasis, not offense, in southern context.

    e.g. Putain, il fait chaud aujourd'hui !

  4. 04

    Tron de Diéu

    Old Occitan exclamation literally meaning thunder of God, still heard from older speakers across the Midi-Pyrénées and Languedoc. Used as a vivid filler or exclamation of surprise. Younger speakers know it as a marker of older-generation southern speech; using it yourself signals deeper regional knowledge.

    e.g. Tron de Diéu, mais quel match !

  5. 05

    Pitchoun

    Affectionate southern word for a small child, from Occitan. Shared across Provence, Languedoc, the Midi-Pyrénées, and the southwest. The wider southern equivalent of Marseille's minot, used by parents, grandparents, and shopkeepers across the South.

    e.g. Allez les pitchouns, on rentre à la maison.

About Méridional French

The chantante French of the South

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to Méridional French

The chantante melody, vowel openness, and the southern final E

Lessons drill the three phonological markers that travel across the whole Méridional zone. The rising and falling sing-song intonation that locals call chantante. The open, frontal vowels that resist American rounding and Paris-trained reduction. The pronounced final E that turns petite into a three-syllable word in southern mouths. Audio comes from native southern tutors plus France Bleu regional radio and southern film sources curated to your subregional target. Pronunciation foundations are in our general pronunciation guide; the southern layer sits on top.

The Occitan-substrate lexicon shared across the South

Adieu as both hello and goodbye. Pitchoun for a small child. Putain as a southern intensifier. Ben as a constant discourse filler. Tron de Diéu, cagade, empègue, espanté, plus the southern food and wine vocabulary that defines daily life across Toulouse, Bordeaux, Montpellier, and the wider Languedoc. We teach recognition first so you stop missing what's being said in real southern conversation, and production second so you can use the lexicon naturally.

Subregional calibration: Toulouse vs Bordeaux vs Montpellier vs Pau

The Méridional zone covers real diversity. Toulousain French is the most chantante and most Languedocien-Occitan in lexicon. Bordelais French is softer and more southwestern, with traces of Gascon Occitan. Montpelliérain sits at the boundary between Provençal and Languedocien. Béarnais and Pyrenean French carry mountain-Occitan features. Catalan-influenced Perpignanais adds a Catalan lexical layer. Lessons identify which subregion your goal actually needs and calibrate accordingly rather than teaching a generic southern register that satisfies no specific use case.

Cultural codes of the South: rugby, terrace life, market culture

Southern France runs on a slower social rhythm than Paris. Lunch is longer. Conversations are louder. Terrace life is central. Saturday market culture is social as well as transactional. Rugby (Toulouse, Castres, Bordeaux-Bègles, Toulon) carries the regional identity in a way football carries Marseille. Lessons cover the social fabric directly for students whose work or family ties involve real time in the South. The southern handling of bonjour, merci, and shop etiquette also differs from Paris in small ways that learners benefit from naming explicitly. Our blog post on things to avoid in France covers the Paris-rooted version of these social rules; the southern adaptations are part of the lesson.

FAQ

About Méridional French lessons & classes

How is Méridional French different from Parisian French and from Marseille French specifically?

Méridional French is the broad family of southern-French regional accents and lexicons covering Toulouse, Montpellier, Bordeaux, Pau, Perpignan, and the wider South. Marseille French is one specific member of that family, focused on Provence and the Mediterranean coast. Parisian French is the northern standard. Méridional and Parisian are fully mutually intelligible; they differ in accent (the chantante melody, the open vowels, the pronounced final E), lexicon (the shared Occitan substrate), and social rhythm. Marseille is the most internationally recognized subregion of Méridional because of Pagnol, OM, and the rap scene, but the southern register lives across a much wider geography. If your goal is specifically Marseille, see our Marseille French page. If your interest is the wider South, this is the right page.

What's the difference between Méridional French and Occitan?

They are two distinct things. Méridional French is the standard French language as spoken across the South: same grammar as Parisian French, with regional accent and lexicon. Occitan is a separate Romance language family that includes Languedocien, Gascon, Provençal, and several other dialects, spoken across the historic Occitan territory before French replaced it as the dominant language across the twentieth century. Occitan is currently being revitalized through education and cultural programming in some areas, but it is a different language, not a dialect of French. The vocabulary we teach on this page (adieu, pitchoun, tron de Diéu) comes from Occitan but is now plain southern French, used by speakers who do not necessarily speak Occitan itself. If your goal is the older Occitan language, that's a separate study; if your goal is to communicate naturally across the South in French today, this page is right.

I'm moving to Toulouse for an aerospace job. Should I start here or with Parisian French?

Both, in sequence. If you're starting from zero with a year or more of runway, we'd build Parisian-French foundations first and layer the Toulousain markers (chantante melody, the pronounced final E, the Languedocien-Occitan lexicon, the local terms specific to Toulouse aerospace and Airbus workplace French) starting around month two. The Parisian base gives you broader media access and richer materials. If you already have Parisian French at B1 or higher, we'd skip to the Toulousain-variant layer, which lands in a few weeks of focused work. Tell your tutor your timeline at the trial and they'll plan accordingly. Several of our Méridional tutors have specific Toulouse aerospace workplace experience.

Are your tutors actually from the South?

Some are. The roster includes native southern tutors based in Toulouse, Bordeaux, Montpellier, Pau, Perpignan, and across the wider Languedoc, France-based teachers who have lived across multiple southern subregions and can move between them, and LA-based bilinguals with linguistics or Occitan cultural backgrounds. Each tutor's bio specifies the subregion they're from and what they've taught. If you need a specific subregional native (Toulousain rather than Bordelais, or vice versa), filter the cards or tell us at booking and we'll match accordingly.

Can lessons calibrate to a specific southern city rather than a generic southern register?

Yes, and we recommend it. The Méridional zone is internally diverse, and a generic southern register satisfies no specific use case fully. Toulouse, Bordeaux, Montpellier, and Pau all sound different in ways that locals notice immediately. Tell your tutor at the trial which city or family of cities your goal actually involves (work assignment, family roots, planned move), and the curriculum gets calibrated to that subregion specifically. Heritage learners with relatives from a specific Languedoc village often get the most precise fit by matching with a tutor from the same département.

Can you coach Méridional French for actors preparing southern-set roles?

Yes. Several of our southern tutors do dialect-coaching work for film, TV, and theater. The roster overlaps with our general French dialect coach page; if your goal is a specific role with a shoot date, the dialect-coach framing usually fits better and the coach will calibrate the work to your script, your character's region and class, and your production calendar.

Can lessons be online or only in person?

Both. Most of our Méridional French tutors teach online via Zoom or Jitsi, available globally, which is the natural fit for working with a native southern tutor based in Toulouse, Bordeaux, or the wider South. Several of our tutors also teach in person around Los Angeles for students who prefer face-to-face lessons. The booking widget on each tutor's profile shows available formats and locations.

How long does it take to sound naturally southern rather than Parisian-with-southern-words?

Honest answer: depends on starting point and how much listening you do between lessons. The lexicon (adieu, pitchoun, ben, putain, tron de Diéu) lands within the first month of focused work. The vowel openness and the final-E pattern take a few months to retrain because they require breaking American articulatory habits. The chantante melody is the slowest layer because it's an intonation habit rather than a discrete sound, and most learners take six months to internalize it through consistent regional radio, podcast, and tutor exposure. Students with musical ears who shadow real southern voices daily move faster. Students who treat lessons as their only French input move slower.

Ready for Méridional French lessons or classes?

Book a free 30-minute trial with one of our personally vetted tutors. Private lessons or small-group classes — your choice.