Want cheap Books? Compare Book prices before you buy!   
Best Book Price - Cheap UK Books                       
 Enter your new search here:
     
Help FAQ Links
  Books     DVDs     CDs     Games    

Teach Yourself French Book CD Pack (Teach Yourself Complete Courses)

By: Gaelle Graham
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Teach Yourself
ISBN: 0340946768
ISBN-13: 9780340946763
Released: 31 Aug 2007
RRP: £22.99
Average Rating:


Comparing Prices...

Customer Reviews

Let's hope you speak some French, first. (Mini Review) - By: Mr. T. G. Heavens, 03 Dec 2008
I will have to agree with the other reviews for this publication. Teach Yourself French is most probably the worst Teach Yourself I have come across thus far & I do not recommend it.

Very little is said about pronounciation, the exercises are so easy you will not learn anything & the information is often presentedin large, unfriendly chunks which gives it a very churned out, inaccessible feeling.

Without repeating the other reviewers, I believe Gaelle Graham has not made a sufficient enough attempt to make it easy & understandable for her TeachYourself-ees because the material is either much too easy or too bewildering & needs a good rethink. The Norwegian & Dutch versions are excellent & carry an interesting storyline whereas this does not seem to go anywhere.

Not recommend. Try the Colloquial series.
French (Teach Yourself) - By: , 26 Feb 2006
I found the combination of the BOOK AND CASSETTE very helpfulin teaching me the basics of French. (The book alone is good but lacks the helpful "how do you say it" that you get with the cassette.)
A good refresher, but not for beginners - By: , 17 Feb 2004
I bought this CD/bookin an attempt to relearn French 17 years after O level. At the same time I bought the Michel Thomas CDs & went to night school. The Gaelle Graham course is really only for people with a prior knowledge of French. I agree with the previous reviewer that the spoken bits are very fast & hard to keep up with, but then so is Frenchin France & so the recordings are certainly not patronising like some. I think this course is rarein being truly quite a useful intermediate / adjunctive coursein a market swamped with beginners resources but without other materials I don't think that this would be enough. If a beginner wants to learn French (or Spanish, German or Italian) from scratch, then Michel Thomas is by far the best way (in my humble opinion!).
For those with low intelligence and a photographic memory. - By: the great amphibian, 10 Feb 2004
For some reason this book just doesn't give the user anything to learn. It is not really surprising that languages such as Latin & Ancient Greek, (and Russian), would generally have better learning materials for them, as French is a much more popular language for people from this country to learn & there are many more course books to sieve through. This is one of the french courses that should be sieved out. There is one good french course that I know about, but it wasn't this book. The way that grammar is introduced couldn't be more arbitrary & the phrases that the author suggests the reader to learn are unbearably trite. The cartoon scenarios are also unbearably trite & unimaginative. I bought the analogous "Teach Youself Welsh" book & tapes & that was of exactly the same layout as this book but turned out to be very good. I think it is because plenty of originality & imagination was put into the Welsh course, butin this french course, the author distances herself from the reader & makes it seem more like a chore than fun. And my reason for learning languages, (as is the reason that many other people learn languages I expect), is for the aesthetic value of the languages, & this book just doesn't offer any help to the learner of French, whatever their reason for learning the language. More could be gained from buying a French dictionary & remembering words, or certainly by getting a phrase book & remembering some phrases. As far as the grammar treatmentin this book goes I can't stress enough how much easier it would be to get a grammar guide, (and verb drills exercise book etc.); it seems that the book is intended for people of low intelligence but with photographic memories. I prefer the approach of being offered to learn a language as a difficult undertaking, but one which is possible if you are intelligent & hard working enough, but without needing any special abilities like a photographic memory.
Very disappointing - By: Spare-Time Critic, 03 Jul 2002
I'm sorry to say this is probably the worst self-taught language product I've run into. I've just been through the first chapter & I won't be going further. The box & book look good, but you'd have to know French pretty well already to get anything out of this program. It *might* work as a brush-up for someone who's just out of practice but, for a beginner, it's next to useless.

There's very littlein the way of instruction. You are shown a few phrases, with no clue how to pronounce them, then you have a chance to hear a dialog from the CD using the phrases you were shown. Now it's "your turn" to answer questions from the book. You can check the answersin the back of the book to see if you've guessed correctly, then hear the answers on the CD. "Sounds fair enough," you say? Not really. The native speakers rush through the dialog so fast you can barely read along, let alone try to repeat what the've said. There's no pause while you practice your pronunciation. The best you can do is skip back to the beginning, listen to the whole conversation, then muddle through your own versionin a big, garbled lump. Kind of demoralizing, really.

And the questions you're given are absolute quesswork, because you haven't had a chance to get familiar with the material. Often, it's more a matter of picking out a few words that are similar to English & figuring out the answer from those.

Here's an example from Chapter 1:

Look at the illustrations (cartoons of a cafe table, a taxi, & a shopping cart) & listen to the three short dialogs. In the first dialog, a woman says, "Taxi! Taxi! La gare du Nord, s'il vous plait!" And a man replies, "Oui madame!" That's the whole dialog. And the question is: Are the people (a) at home (b) at a grocery shop (c)in a taxi?

I guessed (c)in a taxi -- & that was the correct answer. I must be learning French!

Erm... right. I might learn something from this course if I plow on ahead, but... I think there are better products out there. And why make it harder on yourself than it has to be? Now I'm off to look for a better product, & you can believe I'll check & make sure it has good customer reviews first.


Book Categories

Browse through the categories below:
Antiquarian, Rare & Collectable
Art, Architecture & Photography
Audio CDs
Audio Cassettes
Biography
Business, Finance & Law
Calendars, Diaries, Annuals & More
Children's Books
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Crime, Thrillers & Mystery
Fiction
Food & Drink
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Family & Lifestyle
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Humour
Languages
Mind, Body & Spirit
Music, Stage & Screen
Poetry, Drama & Criticism
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science & Nature
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Scientific, Technical & Medical
Society, Politics & Philosophy
Sports, Hobbies & Games
Study Books
Travel & Holiday
Young Adult
Copyright ©2003-2008 Best-Book-Price.co.uk. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of Best-Book-Price.co.uk is prohibited.
No warranty either express or implied is made about the accuracy of the information on this site
Links: Buy books, Buy Cheap dvds, Argos
Shops: Home Page, Amazon UK, AOL UK, Argos, B&Q DIY, Cahoot Bank, Coral, Currys UK, Debenhams Stores, DialaPhone UK,
Disneyland Paris, Dixons online, ebookers, Egg, eSure insurance, Expedia UK, Green Flag Roadside Assistance, Jessops Cameras, John Lewis online,
Littlewoods Direct, Marks and Spencer, Mothercare World, Next, ntl UK, PC World Computers, RAC breakdown