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Vocabulary

Je t'aime vs Je t'adore: I Love You in French

June 4, 2026 FrenchNow 6 minute read

Je t'aime vs Je t'adore: I Love You in French
Table of Contents
  1. The mistake that feels right
  2. Two verbs, two jobs: aimer vs adorer
  3. The one rule: person vs thing
  4. Je t’aime: the real “I love you”
  5. Je t’adore: fondness, not romance
  6. The bien trap: why je t’aime bien is the friend zone
  7. Other phrases you’ll meet
  8. How to say it: pronunciation
  9. Quick reference: which phrase do I use?

English speakers almost always guess this one wrong, and the mistake is the kind that makes a French person quietly smile. You reason by cognate: adore sounds bigger and more passionate than love, so je t’adore feels like the grander declaration. In French it’s the opposite. Say it to someone you’re falling for, expecting it to land as a confession, and you’ll get polite confusion instead of a kiss. Let’s fix the logic once, so you never misfire.

The mistake that feels right

The trap is purely social, not grammatical. Both verbs are easy, regular -er verbs. The problem is that French ranks them in a way that contradicts your instinct, and that one wrong word can downgrade a love confession into “thanks, pal.” Get the rule below and you’ll outclass every “10 ways to say I love you” listicle, because they list the phrases without ever explaining the one thing that actually trips you up.

Two verbs, two jobs: aimer vs adorer

The verb aimer is the heart of all of this. Its core sense is affection, and it does double duty: it can mean “to love” or “to like” depending on what it points at. The verb adorer literally means “to adore” or “to worship” (its old sense was worshipping a deity), but in everyday modern French it has drifted to an enthusiastic “to really like.” Crucially, adorer never carries the “in love with” meaning — it’s about enthusiasm, not romantic depth.

In the first person these elide nicely: j’aime and j’adore. Add the object pronoun te before a vowel and it becomes t’: je t’aime, je t’adore.

The one rule: person vs thing

Here is the whole article in a single idea. The same verb means different things depending on whether its object is a person or a thing, and the two hierarchies run in opposite directions.

FrenchAbout a PERSONAbout a THING
Je t'aime I love you (romantic, strongest) I like it (neutral)
Je t'adore I'm very fond of you (not romance) I love it! (strongest)
Je t'aime bien I like you (friend, weakest) I quite like it (mild)

Read it twice. For things, the scale is j’adore > j’aime > j’aime bien — adore wins. For people, the scale is je t’aime > je t’adore > je t’aime bien — aime wins, and adore tumbles down to mere fondness. The verb that’s top of the heap for chocolate is mid-tier for a human.

Je t’aime: the real “I love you”

This is the sincere, romantic declaration, and it carries genuine emotional weight in French culture. It’s reserved for partners — and, in family contexts, for very close family. The French do not toss it around the way English tosses “love you!” to friends and coworkers. You rarely hear it in ads or light social chit-chat. To intensify it (with a person), reach for de tout mon cœur or à la folie — never bien or beaucoup.

FrenchEnglish
Je t'aime. I love you. (the real thing)
Je t'aime de tout mon cœur. I love you with all my heart.
Je t'aime à la folie. I'm madly in love with you.
Je t'aime aussi. I love you too. (the standard reply)
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Je t’adore: fondness, not romance

Said to a person, je t’adore means roughly “I really like you / you’re wonderful.” It’s made for a close friend, a sibling, or someone who just did you a huge favour — warm, enthusiastic, affectionate. It does not declare romantic love, and using it as if it does is the classic learner slip. To a French ear, je t’adore aimed at a romantic interest sounds theatrical, or like a polite dodge of the real words.

For things, though, adorer is completely natural and extremely common — it’s your go-to for genuine enthusiasm.

FrenchEnglish
J'adore cette chanson. I love this song.
J'adore le chocolat. I love chocolate.
Je t'adore ! You're the best! (to a friend)
Mes amis, je vous adore. You guys, I love you. (a group of friends)

The bien trap: why je t’aime bien is the friend zone

Everywhere else in French, adding bien (“well/good”) makes things more positive. With aimer + a person it does the exact opposite: it downgrades love to like.

  • Je t’aime = I love you (romantic).
  • Je t’aime bien = I like you (friendly, platonic).

Say je t’aime bien to a partner and you’ve quietly signalled “I see you as a friend” — a small disaster. The same softening happens with beaucoup: despite meaning “a lot,” je t’aime beaucoup to a partner reads as warm affection or family-style fondness, not deep romance. For things, none of this drama applies — j’aime bien le café just means “I quite like coffee.”

FrenchSaid to a PERSONAbout a THING
Je t'aime. I love you (romance) I like it (neutral)
Je t'aime bien. I like you (friend) I quite like it (mild)
Je t'aime beaucoup. I'm very fond of you I really like it

Other phrases you’ll meet

A few more land in this territory. Tu me plais (“you appeal to me / I’m into you”) is early, lighter attraction — before love. Je suis amoureux de toi means “I’m in love with you,” and it needs agreement: a man says amoureux, a woman says je suis amoureuse de toi. And je te kiffe is youthful slang (“I really fancy you”) — casual, never for a solemn moment.

How to say it: pronunciation

Sound it as [zhuh tem]aime rhymes with English “stem,” not “tame.” The common anglophone slip is “jay tame” with English vowels, which lands noticeably off. And je t’adore is [zhuh ta-DOR]. Joining t’ smoothly to the next word is a small liaison habit worth building, and it pairs well with the silent-letter rules and the famously tricky French R sound.

Quick reference: which phrase do I use?

Ask yourself one question — person or thing? — then pick from the dual-direction table above. For a partner, it’s plain je t’aime. For a friend or a favourite song, it’s je t’adore. To merely like a person, je t’aime bien. Notice the je t’aime / je vous aime split too: it follows the same logic as tu vs vousvous to a group means “I love you all,” not formal romance. When you’re ready for the flip side of devotion, the phrase je te manque (“you miss me / I miss you”) hides its own backwards-feeling surprise.

Now you’ve got the rule that listicles skip. Pick the one phrase you need this week, say it out loud a few times, and let the rest follow.

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  1. How do you tell a romantic partner you love them?

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