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Relou

Annoying

FR
Example

T'as vu il m'a encore appelé trois fois ? Sérieux il est relou.

When to use it

Someone keeps texting you while you're trying to watch a film — you mute your phone and mutter 'il est trop relou ce gars.'

What it means

Verlan of 'lourd' (heavy), which in French already carried the figurative sense of being a burden or socially exhausting before Verlan flipped it. The transformation stuck because 'relou' sounds softer and almost comic, making it perfect for complaining without fully escalating. It's now so widespread that even French teachers accidentally use it.

Don't confuse it with

"Relou" does not mean laid-back, generous, talkative. It specifically means "Annoying".

Hear It in Action

Watch real videos where "Relou" is used naturally.

Why Learn Verlan: the French they flipped upside down?

📚 What Is Verlan and Why Does It Matter

Verlan (itself 'l'envers' backwards) is a form of French slang that reverses syllables within words, creating a parallel vocabulary that signals cultural belonging and linguistic creativity. Words like 'meuf' (femme), 'relou' (lourd), 'chelou' (louche), and 'ouf' (fou) are now so common in French that you'll hear them dozens of times daily in Paris, Lyon, Marseille, and beyond. Understanding verlan isn't just about learning vocabulary — it's about accessing an entire layer of French culture that traditional courses completely ignore.

🎯 Why Learn Verlan

If you've studied French for years but still feel lost listening to French rap, watching French films about contemporary life, or talking with French people under 40, verlan is the missing piece. It's spoken by millions of French people daily, dominates French youth culture and music, appears constantly in French social media and text messages, and signals cultural awareness versus tourist-level French. Without verlan, you're missing a fundamental component of modern French communication. It's the difference between academic fluency and street credibility.

👤 Who This Course Is For

This advanced course (B2-C1 level) is designed for serious French learners who already have strong grammar foundations and want to break through to genuine cultural fluency. Perfect for expats living in French cities who want to understand their neighbors' conversations, French hip-hop and rap fans who want to actually understand lyrics, advanced students preparing for immersion in French urban environments, and anyone who's mastered textbook French but feels lost in real French conversations. You should be comfortable with conversational French and ready to dive into the informal registers that define contemporary French language.

Explore the full course