Mutant Groupie United States Joined 3914 days ago 45 posts - 60 votes Speaks: English* Studies: French, German
| Message 337 of 376 18 March 2014 at 11:27pm | IP Logged |
So far for me it's Assimil (Spanish and French), FSI (Spanish), and Linguaphone (Thai), with Assimil being my hands-down favorite. I will turn to it in the future for my language learning needs first.
I also like the series of "Essential Grammars" published by Dover. I have them for French and Spanish and they make a great companion to Assimil. And they're cheap!
Of course, I wouldn't have known about any of these resources if it weren't for all of the much more experienced polyglots on this forum, so thank you all!
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JasonUK Triglot Newbie United Kingdom learnalanguagein1yea Joined 5259 days ago 29 posts - 38 votes Speaks: English*, Mandarin, French Studies: Thai, Spanish
| Message 338 of 376 18 March 2014 at 11:33pm | IP Logged |
Hi Mutant. I bought a ton of resources for Thai. I tried the Linguaphone PDQ which was utter rubbish. Or you
referring to the Linguaphone complete course? Did you really pay all that money for it? I also have the assimil Thai is
a very good course but it's only good for you if your french is good.
I want to also add the 'colloquial books' They teach about 40+ languages and they are normally better than teach
yourself although i'm still a fan of the teach yourself book.
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Mutant Groupie United States Joined 3914 days ago 45 posts - 60 votes Speaks: English* Studies: French, German
| Message 339 of 376 19 March 2014 at 10:29am | IP Logged |
JasonUK wrote:
Hi Mutant. I bought a ton of resources for Thai. I tried the Linguaphone PDQ which was utter rubbish. Or you
referring to the Linguaphone complete course? Did you really pay all that money for it? I also have the assimil Thai is
a very good course but it's only good for you if your french is good.
I want to also add the 'colloquial books' They teach about 40+ languages and they are normally better than teach
yourself although i'm still a fan of the teach yourself book. |
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No, I bought the complete Thai course. Yeah, I paid quite a bit for it, but it's really a great course. Four books, 8 cds, 40 lessons. I'll have to check out the Assimil course.
Edited by Mutant on 19 March 2014 at 10:30am
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lsilvaj Diglot Senior Member Brazil Joined 4133 days ago 34 posts - 42 votes Speaks: Portuguese*, English Studies: German, Italian, French, Russian
| Message 340 of 376 06 April 2014 at 4:48pm | IP Logged |
I like Pimsleur. It has its faults (several), but nothing beats it when you're daily stuck on traffic for 30 min. Hell, I even like to listen to it at the gym, on the treadmill.
I have finished French IV and now been doing German IV. I hope to post a review some of these days.
My other favorite methods are Assimil and TY. Michel Thomas was great for French and German, too.
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baokieu Newbie Vietnam LangReviews.com Joined 4644 days ago 18 posts - 19 votes Speaks: Vietnamese* Studies: EnglishC2
| Message 341 of 376 28 May 2014 at 10:03am | IP Logged |
lsilvaj wrote:
I like Pimsleur. It has its faults (several), but nothing beats it when you're daily stuck on traffic for 30 min. Hell, I even like to listen to it at the gym, on the treadmill.
I have finished French IV and now been doing German IV. I hope to post a review some of these days.
My other favorite methods are Assimil and TY. Michel Thomas was great for French and German, too. |
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Your choice is very close to mine: Assimil, Michel Thomas, and Pimsleur.
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baokieu Newbie Vietnam LangReviews.com Joined 4644 days ago 18 posts - 19 votes Speaks: Vietnamese* Studies: EnglishC2
| Message 342 of 376 29 May 2014 at 1:08pm | IP Logged |
Hi,
I counted all of your “likes” for programs (from Sept 28, 2009 – May 10, 2014) and summed them up. (It took me a long time)
Here is the result:
1. Assimil: 61 likes
2. Pimsleur: 52 likes
3. Michel Thomas: 35 likes
4. Teach Yourself: 26 likes
5. FSI: 25 likes
My count could be wrong for +/- 5 “likes” as the maximum for each program, but should not be much than that.
The full list (to the 11th program) is on my website:
http://langreviews.com/pimsleur-language-review/#sumup
Edited by baokieu on 29 May 2014 at 1:13pm
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PeterMollenburg Senior Member AustraliaRegistered users can see my Skype Name Joined 5479 days ago 821 posts - 1273 votes Speaks: English* Studies: FrenchB1
| Message 343 of 376 29 May 2014 at 1:49pm | IP Logged |
My top list out of the programs I have used to date:
1 Destinos (Spanish only)- beginners up
2 French in Action (French only) - beginners up
3 Assimil - beginners up
4 Bien-dire magazine - I recommend intermediate onwards
5 Think French magazine - intermediate onwards
6 Fluenz (best computer based program I've seen)
7 Hugo in 3 months series (great grammar overview in short time)
8 Colloquial series (Good supplemental material in conjunction with Hugo)
Edited by PeterMollenburg on 29 May 2014 at 1:49pm
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Amo Newbie Spain idiomas247.com Joined 3818 days ago 3 posts - 3 votes Studies: English*
| Message 344 of 376 17 June 2014 at 11:28am | IP Logged |
I have used Rosetta Stone and Mattey Method at www.idiomas247.com. It´s pretty amazing, it´s the first time I have
ever tried to learn a language outside of my own. Initially I thought it was ridiculous because it focuses on speaking
before you get to see the grammar. You learn through listening and speaking and later you go through vocabulary
to understand what you have heard and spoken about with a tutor.
You have a week or two where you don´t remember anything and it´s all very confusing and then it all suddenly
falls in to place in your mind and your understanding becomes crystal clear.
I don´t know enough about the other methods on here, could someone tell me what TY is?
Thanks
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