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Prueba de Mecanografía en Francés (Français) de 30 Segundos

Practica tu velocidad de escritura en Francés (Français) con esta prueba cronometrada de 30 segundos. Vocabulario nativo real, resultados instantáneos.

Otras Pruebas en Francés

30-Second French (Français) Typing Test

The 30-Second French (Français) typing test captures near-peak speed with minimal fatigue effect. At 30 seconds, moderate — 20–40 words providing some exposure to a language's less common characters — a 15-second French test may include only common unaccented words — the full accent challenge only manifests statistically over 1+ minutes of text It is a practical length for quick practice sessions when a full 1-minute benchmark is not needed.

What 30-Second Reveals — and Misses — About French Typing

30-second WPM is typically 8–15% higher than the same typist's 1-minute score. For French specifically, moderate — 20–40 words providing some exposure to a language's less common characters — meaning é, è, ê, à, ù, û, ô, â, î, ï, ë, ü, ç, and œ, which appear in 8–12% of characters in natural French text — é alone is one of the ten most frequent characters in French, may not appear at all. This makes short French tests good for tracking peak speed but unreliable for assessing French fluency. For a complete picture, pair this with a 3-minute or 5-minute French test.

French WPM Benchmarks at 30-Second

Typists who know English score 30–38 WPM on a 1-minute French test on average — 15–22% lower than English — French has the highest accent density of any language in this test, making it notably harder for QWERTY typists than Spanish or Italian. 30-second WPM is typically 8–15% higher than the same typist's 1-minute score. The primary speed barrier in French is the sheer density and variety of accented characters — 14 distinct accented forms appear in natural text, each requiring a dead key, layout key, or Alt-code decision in real time. Once those are automatic, French WPM climbs quickly toward your English baseline.

Making the Most of Short French Practice Sessions

for sustained French typing, the AZERTY layout or US-International dead-key method are most efficient; AZERTY moves A and Q, which QWERTY typists must retrain; US-International preserves QWERTY positions and uses dead keys for accents. For short tests, focus on maintaining peak rhythm without any hesitation — since moderate — 20–40 words providing some exposure to a language's less common characters, the words you type should all be familiar territory. Spanish and Italian use far fewer accents and are measurably easier for QWERTY typists; Portuguese is closer in difficulty to French due to its nasal vowels.

Is a 30-second French test enough to assess my typing?

For warm-up and peak-speed tracking, yes. For a proper assessment, no — a 15-second French test may include only common unaccented words — the full accent challenge only manifests statistically over 1+ minutes of text Use the 1-minute French test for your benchmark and the 3-minute or 5-minute test for professional purposes.

Why is my French WPM lower than my English WPM?

French typing is 15–22% lower than English — French has the highest accent density of any language in this test, making it notably harder for QWERTY typists than Spanish or Italian because of the sheer density and variety of accented characters — 14 distinct accented forms appear in natural text, each requiring a dead key, layout key, or Alt-code decision in real time. for sustained French typing, the AZERTY layout or US-International dead-key method are most efficient; AZERTY moves A and Q, which QWERTY typists must retrain; US-International preserves QWERTY positions and uses dead keys for accents. With focused practice on the unfamiliar characters, the gap closes faster than most typists expect.