Quiz-Tree

Shopping (match)

Shopping in French is one of those skills that pays off right away, whether you're browsing a market stall or trying to find out if something is on sale.

1. In the Store

Five essential French words for navigating a store are covered in this quiz: the store itself, the checkout counter, the fitting room, the shelves, and the shopping cart. Match each French word to its English translation to build core retail vocabulary for beginners learning French.Worth knowing: caisse is the word for checkout or cash register in French stores, but it also means box or cash box in other contexts. And while chariot is the standard term for shopping cart, you will also hear caddie in everyday French speech, borrowed from a brand name that became a common noun.
5 questions
average score: 83% (all users)

2. Money & Payment

This quiz matches five key French shopping and payment terms to their English translations, covering price, discount, cash, credit card, and receipt. Perfect for anyone building everyday French vocabulary for shopping trips in France.A useful note: espèces is the standard French word for cash, though you may also hear liquide in informal conversation. Both mean the same thing, but espèces is the more formal and widely understood term across France.
5 questions
average score: 100% (all users)

3. Clothing

At the clothing store, knowing the right words makes all the difference. This quiz covers five French clothing vocabulary items and matches each French word to its English translation: learn the terms for clothes, jacket, jeans, hat, and shirt with this beginner-friendly French vocabulary exercise.One word to remember: chemise refers to a collared, button-up shirt, traditionally a dress shirt. For a casual T-shirt, French speakers say t-shirt instead, so chemise is best reserved for more structured tops rather than everyday casual wear.
5 questions
average score: 86% (all users)

4. Shopping Verbs 🔒

Knowing the verbs makes shopping in France much easier. This quiz pairs five essential French shopping verbs with their English meanings: match the French infinitive to what it means in English, covering buying, paying, looking for, returning, and trying on. A must-know list for anyone learning French for real-life situations.One verb worth remembering: essayer means both to try on clothing and to try or attempt something in a broader sense. The fitting room in French is called a cabine d'essayage, literally a trying-on cabin, which comes directly from this same verb.
5 questions
average score: 67% (all users)

5. Bags & Accessories 🔒

From the price tag to the brand name, this quiz covers five French retail vocabulary words that come up in every shopping experience. Match each French term to its English translation to learn the words for bag, size, label, brand, and promotion: core vocabulary for learning French shopping language.One word with a broader reach: taille means clothing size in a shop, but it also means height or waist depending on context. When a sales assistant in France asks for your taille, they want your clothing size, not your height.
5 questions
average score: 79% (all users)

6. More Shopping 🔒

From the neighbourhood market to the shopping centre, this quiz introduces five French words for the wider retail world. Match each French term to its English translation to learn the vocabulary for market, shopping centre, shop window, sales, and guarantee: essential French for everyday life in France.A note on soldes: in France, this word refers specifically to the official end-of-season sale periods regulated by law, which take place twice a year. For a one-off item reduction, French speakers use réduction or remise instead, so the two are not interchangeable.
5 questions
average score: 100% (all users)

This set covers dozens of essential French shopping words, from clothing items like un jean, une veste, and un chapeau to practical terms like le prix, une réduction, le sac de courses, and la carte de crédit. These are the words you'll reach for when you're in a store, checking a price tag, asking about a discount, or deciding whether to pay in cash or by card.

The quizzes are built around matching words and sentences, so you practice both reading and listening with every word used in context. Each session takes about five minutes, and you can repeat any quiz as many times as you want, whenever it suits you.

By the end, you'll be able to hear, understand, and use every word with confidence. From spotting a sale sign to asking for the price to picking up your shopping bag on the way out, you'll have exactly the vocabulary you need.