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🎨 AI Language Learning Infographic 🎯 infographic 📅 2026-05-28

Mixed Up Alphabet Chart French Phrases Pronunciation Poster

Clean watercolor-style educational poster featuring a French phrases pronunciation chart with neatly aligned rows, English translations, and easy phonetic guides. This mixed up alphabet chart aesthetic uses soft pastel branding, minimal abstract letterforms, and clear pronunciation callouts for a Duolingo-friendly learning vibe.

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Educational pastel infographic showing a French phrases pronunciation chart with English translations, phonetic hints, and accent callouts.
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Resolution1024 × 1024 px
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Ratio1024x1024
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File size181 KB
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StyleAI Language Learning Infographic
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Use caseinfographic
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Generated2026-05-28
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LanguageEnglish (EN)
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SEO targetmixed up alphabet chart
Full generation prompt Click to expand
Language learning infographic titled "Common French Phrases Pronunciation Chart". PRONUNCIATION CHART archetype. Clean educational poster, Duolingo-friendly, watercolor study sheet style, soft pastel palette, tasteful minimal imagery, no cultural stereotyping. Render a sharp central pronunciation chart with neatly aligned rows and columns for advanced French phrases. Each entry must show: French phrase + English translation + concise phonetic hint in English-friendly IPA-style or readable approximation. Use linguistically accurate spelling and diacritics in French and in all English labels. Include advanced/common-use phrases such as: « Cela va sans dire » — “That goes without saying” — phonetic hint, « N’importe quoi » — “Nonsense / Whatever” — phonetic hint, « Du coup » — “As a result / So” — phonetic hint, « En fait » — “Actually” — phonetic hint, « Ça m’est égal » — “I don’t mind / It’s all the same to me” — phonetic hint, « Il faut que » — “It is necessary that” — phonetic hint, « Tant pis » — “Too bad / Never mind” — phonetic hint, « Tant mieux » — “So much the better” — phonetic hint, « Je vous en prie » — “You’re welcome / Please” — phonetic hint, « On se tient au courant » — “Let’s keep each other informed” — phonetic hint, « Revenons à nos moutons » — “Let’s get back to the topic” — phonetic hint, « Bon courage » — “Good luck / Stay strong” — phonetic hint. Add small pronunciation callouts for nasal vowels, liaison, silent final consonants, and the French “r”, all labeled in English. Subtle background composition may visually suggest a mixed-up alphabet chart through abstract scattered letterforms only, with no readable extra text. All text MUST be written in English (array). Every heading, label, caption, legend and metric name in the image must be in English — not English. Spell each English word correctly using English characters and diacritics. Numbers stay as digits, no watermarks Linguistically accurate spelling and diacritics in BOTH the taught language and the label language. No cultural stereotyping. Tasteful imagery.