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Assimil Italian

  Tags: Italian | Assimil
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renaissancemedi
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 Message 1 of 12
07 October 2013 at 9:08am | IP Logged 
I know this has been discussed before, and I have read all the related threads I could find. I would still like to ask this question:

I have started with the 1950s assimil Italian without toil, because I have heared that the older versions offer more knowledge. However, after seeing the 1980s and 2005 versions, I think I should switch now, while I am still reading the first chapters. Considering that I also have perfectionnement italien from the 1980s that I will use afterwards, which of the three methods should I use? The 1950's, the 1980's or the 2005 one?

Goal: I have three months to be able to use only Italian and no English, for a trip. To be able to really speak with people.

For example, the first word you hear in Italy is: Salve! That's in the 2005 version of assimil, first lesson and everything. But the reviews say that it's the least rich generation, especially compared to the 1950s one. Which, in its turn, teaches you to speak only very formally etc.

I'm totally lost here.

Any advice, prego, before I go on further with the lessons?




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Lykeio
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United Kingdom
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 Message 2 of 12
07 October 2013 at 11:13am | IP Logged 
I've actually flicked through both the old 1950's one and le nouvel Italian sans peine,
though I don't recall the latter starting with salve...I think it was a phone
conversation? So it might have been, sorry.

Anyway I just wanted to weigh in, admittedly as someone who doesn't value Assimil
highly, that you probably ought not to worry. The difference in quality isn't as much
as people say. I prefer the content of the earlier one...I like how it mixes up
grammatical categories, it appears me natural, whereas the modern one takes everything
very slow and seems a bit stilted. However the newer ones DO have better audio. But I
doubt it matters if you supplement whichever book you choose.

I was in a similar situation, I had to pick up Italian for academic purposes VERY
quickly. I did so, falling back on my Latin a lot but rapidly getting to the point
where I could read academic articles. I basically kept on reading articles and books
etc but then suddenly found myself about to go to Italy in a few weeks. I did use
Assimil (1950's) a bit but by large I just made sure my grammar and syntaxis were fine
and listened to podcasts over and over again and I was absolutely fine when I got
there.

Basically just make sure you do some everyday, revise the same material often (this is
my trick when having to speak/read a language quickly) and supplement it with "fun"
stuff and you'll be fine. The older version seems to give you more bang for your buck,
but let your preference guide you.
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renaissancemedi
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 Message 3 of 12
07 October 2013 at 11:24am | IP Logged 
Thank you for very your helpful comments.

I have been spending the last hour looking through all three books, but I am still not sure. I have to make a decision today, otherwise this will keep bothering me. Maybe I should just stick with the one I started.

I listen to a lot of RAI, and watch films online. That's my fun stuff. Oh, many songs a s well. No books or newspapers yet.
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Andy E
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 Message 4 of 12
07 October 2013 at 12:01pm | IP Logged 
Lykeio wrote:
I've actually flicked through both the old 1950's one and le nouvel
Italian sans peine, though I don't recall the latter starting with salve...I think it was
a phone conversation? So it might have been, sorry.


"Salve" is from "Benvenuto in Italia" in the "L'Italien" version rather than from "Al
telefono" in the "sans peine" series.

If I'm understanding you correctly - you have all three? If so, then my advice would be
to do a few lessons of both old and new and see how you go - maybe up to the first
revision point (i.e. Lesson 7). The earlier lessons are simple enough to allow that.
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renaissancemedi
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 Message 5 of 12
07 October 2013 at 12:03pm | IP Logged 
That's a really good idea.
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sillygoose1
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 Message 6 of 12
07 October 2013 at 4:16pm | IP Logged 
I wouldn't use the newest one. It was my first choice, but compared to Le nouvel/Toil, it's way too light on vocab.

I'd say go with Le nouvel + Perfectionnement.

Since you only have 3 months, Toil would be too different from the modern language. You won't have as much time to learn differences.

Edited by sillygoose1 on 07 October 2013 at 4:17pm

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Juаn
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 Message 7 of 12
07 October 2013 at 5:54pm | IP Logged 
All of them! You really don't have to choose. Do the first lesson from the third generation, then the first lesson from the second generation, and then the first one from the first generation. Move on then to the second lesson from each generation and continue in this fashion until you have finished all three books. I'm not completely certain as I don't own both books yet, but I believe the new Perfectionnement is different from the original one. If so, go through them in the same way as well.

A quick structural overview of the mechanics of the language would enable you to get the most out of Assimil from the very first lesson. For this purpose I really like the Berlitz Self-Teacher: Italian.

Of all the materials and approaches to learning a language not far removed from those you know already, in my opinion at least there is none better and more effective than this. I first studied French in this manner, and by the end of French without Toil I could already make out most out of a newspaper article. And it is true, working through these courses as I describe, you realize how much more substantial the old generations of Assimil were compared to the new ones.
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renaissancemedi
Bilingual Triglot
Senior Member
Greece
Joined 4357 days ago

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Speaks: Greek*, Ancient Greek*, EnglishC2
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 Message 8 of 12
07 October 2013 at 6:40pm | IP Logged 
You have all helped me go for the Le nouvel + Perfectionnement.

I wish I could study all three, but I don't think I have time! Although it is a very tempting idea. :)


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