DELF A1 Comprehension de l’Oral (Listening): Format, Tips, and How to Pass

The Comprehension de l’Oral (Listening) section of the DELF A1 is worth 25 points and tests your ability to understand simple, everyday spoken French. All audio recordings are short — brief conversations, simple announcements, or single instructions — and are played twice. At A1 level, the language used is slow, clear, and supported by context. You do not need to understand every word: identifying key information such as names, numbers, places, and the main topic of each recording is sufficient to pass. This guide explains the format, the three task types, and strategies to score well.

DELF A1 Comprehension de l’Oral – Module Overview

FeatureDetails
DurationApproximately 20 minutes (including listening time and answer time)
Total marks25
Pass mark5 out of 25 for this section; overall DELF A1 pass is 50 out of 100 with no section below 5
Number of tasks3–4 short tasks
Audio lengthVery short: 15–45 seconds each; played twice
Language levelVery simple French: slow, clear pronunciation; basic everyday vocabulary
Answer formatsMultiple choice, True/False, matching pictures/words, simple short answers

Task Type 1 – Short Conversations and Announcements

You listen to a brief everyday exchange — a greeting, a simple request, a short announcement in a public place — and answer one or two questions about it. Questions at A1 level are factual: what is the person’s name, what time is it, where is the speaker going, what is being sold?

Question TypeStrategy
What is the name / number / price?Focus only on the specific data point; ignore surrounding words you do not understand
Where does this take place?Listen for location vocabulary: “la gare / le supermarche / l’ecole / le restaurant”; match to the picture or option
What does the speaker want?Listen for “je voudrais / je cherche / avez-vous / est-ce que je peux”; identify the request
True or False statementsThe statement rephrases what was said in different words; listen for the key factual detail to confirm or contradict

Task Type 2 – Matching Audio to Images or Options

You hear three to five short pieces — a person describing themselves, simple descriptions of objects, short instructions — and match each to a picture, a word, or a short written phrase. At A1, the vocabulary tested is from very high-frequency, concrete everyday categories: food, clothing, family, numbers, colours, rooms in a home.

CategoryKey A1 Vocabulary to Recognise
Numbers and pricesun, deux… vingt; cent; euro; combien; gratuit; premier, deuxieme
Time and dayslundi… dimanche; matin / apres-midi / soir; heure; aujourd’hui / demain
Placesmaison / appartement; ville; rue; gare; ecole; hopital; supermarche; restaurant
People and familyhomme / femme; enfant; parent; ami; nom / prenom; age; grand / petit
Food and objectspain / lait / eau; chaise / table; livre / telephone; rouge / bleu / vert

Task Type 3 – Simple Practical Listening

The final task is typically a short practical scenario: a voicemail message, a simple recorded instruction, or a brief information announcement. You complete a form, fill in missing details, or circle the correct option. Focus on extracting specific data: a phone number, an address, a day and time, a first and last name.

Common Data PointsHow to Catch Them
Phone numbersDigits are read in pairs in French: “06-12-34-56-78”; write each pair as you hear it on the first listen; verify on the second
NamesSpelled out letter by letter or spoken slowly; if spelled, write each letter; French spelling: “J comme Jacques / M comme Marie”
AddressesStreet name + number + city; number comes before the street name: “quinze rue de la Paix”
Times and datesListen for “a / le / ce”; times use “h” (“dix heures et demie”); days spoken clearly at A1

The Two-Listen Strategy for DELF A1

Every audio in DELF A1 is played twice. Use the gap between the announcement and the first play to read the question and answer options. On the first listen, focus on the general meaning and note one or two key words. On the second listen, confirm or correct your answer. Do not leave any answer blank — at A1, educated guessing from context is highly effective.

DELF A1 listening is the most accessible section for beginners because the language is designed to be understood by someone with only basic French. Regular exposure to simple spoken French — children’s programmes, A1 podcast series, basic phrasebook audio — will build the vocabulary recognition you need. languagetest.in provides DELF A1 Comprehension de l’Oral mock tests with audio, answer keys, and transcripts to support targeted A1 preparation.

References: DELF A1 official guide: ciep.fr/delf-dalf | Alliance Francaise DELF A1 information: alliancefrancaise.in | languagetest.in DELF A1 listening preparation

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