Learn Japanese In Flight (Living Language) (1 Audio CD - MP3)
- Type:
- Audio > Audio books
- Files:
- 2
- Size:
- 88.78 MB
- Spoken language(s):
- English, Japanese
- Tag(s):
- learn japanese
- Quality:
- +0 / -0 (0)
- Uploaded:
- May 13, 2010
- By:
- Anonymous
Audio Books : Self-help : MP3/192Kbps : Japanese http://www.amazon.com/Flight-Japanese-Learn-Before-Land/dp/0609810723/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1273735211&sr=8-1 Product Description Living Language In-Flight Japanese is the perfect boarding pass to learning Japanese before you land. There's no better way to make use of all that spare time on a plane than to master the essentials of a language. This 60-minute program is the simplest way to learn just enough to get by in every situation essential to both the tourist and business traveler. The program covers everything from greetings and polite expressions to asking directions, getting around, checking into a hotel, and going to a restaurant. There are even sections for meeting people and spending a night on the town. Short lessons make In-Flight Japanese easy to use. Audio CD Publisher: Living Language (June 19, 2001) Language: English ISBN-10: 0609810723 ISBN-13: 978-0609810729
Thanks for this language audio course.Sayonara.
I tried this, and I wouldn't recommend it for beginners (maybe it would be useful for someone wanting a quick review of things they already know).
The issues I found with this are:
- some long phrases are hard to grasp, and they aren't repeated. Furthermore, they're spoken at native (or near-native) speed.
- There's no written material (the audio refers a leaflet but it isn't included in the torrent)
- All the lessons are glued together in a single file, which makes it hard to replay a specific lesson
- The level of Japanese assumed for the listener is uneven, or at least grows at a way too fast for someone actually learning Japanese. Again, maybe it'd be useful for someone who already knows some stuff and wants to consolidate/review them.
The issues I found with this are:
- some long phrases are hard to grasp, and they aren't repeated. Furthermore, they're spoken at native (or near-native) speed.
- There's no written material (the audio refers a leaflet but it isn't included in the torrent)
- All the lessons are glued together in a single file, which makes it hard to replay a specific lesson
- The level of Japanese assumed for the listener is uneven, or at least grows at a way too fast for someone actually learning Japanese. Again, maybe it'd be useful for someone who already knows some stuff and wants to consolidate/review them.
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