This aproach has helped me to rather quickly achieve conversational fluency in Italian, French and Spanish. You will not be able to write formal letters, and you will definitely speak with errors, but you will be speaking, reading and understanding French.
Get a audio course. Michel Thomas is great. Pimsleur is also very good. These audio courses will teach you basic vocabulary and grammar, in a completely "natural" way. You can find intros of it on the interwebs for free, and the whole series on Amazon (or elsewhere ;)). The only drawback is the lack of vocabulary, as both courses teach you only around 800 words after you finished them. Which brings me to point 2.
Get a frequency dictionary. By far the best investment if you want to broaden your vocabulary quickly. in day to day speech, the most used 2500 words make up like 90% of all what is being spoken. The series below also provides you with IPA phonetic transcription and French to English example sentences. It's kind of like a bilingual book if you look at it that way.
Listed below for your convenience:
Hope this helps! Good luck in your journey :)
This aproach has helped me to rather quickly achieve conversational fluency in Italian, French and Spanish. You will not be able to write formal letters, and you will definitely speak with errors, but you will be speaking, reading and understanding French.
Get a audio course. Michel Thomas is great. Pimsleur is also very good. These audio courses will teach you basic vocabulary and grammar, in a completely "natural" way. You can find intros of it on the interwebs for free, and the whole series on Amazon. The only drawback is the lack of vocabulary, as both courses teach you only around 800 words after you finished them. Which brings me to point 2.
Get a frequency dictionary. By far the best investment if you want to broaden your vocabulary quickly. The series below also provides you with IPA phonetic translation and French to English example sentences. It's kind of like a bilingual book if you look at it that way.
Listed below for your convenience:
Hope this helps! Good luck in your journey :)
Hey there,
To quickly gain conversational fluency, I recommend investing in:
1) An audio course. Personally I like Michel Thomas, but friends of mine use Pimsleur. Pimsleur is a bit more "boring" imo.
2) A frequency dictionary with phonetic pronunciation (preferably) and example sentences. I like this one.
In my opinion, an audio couse and a frequency dictionary are the essential two tools to rapidly gain a base in any language. You won't be able to write an official letter, or speak 100% without error.. but if your goal is fluency for day-to-day activities you're golden.
Hope this helps!
Hey there,
To quickly gain conversational fluency, I recommend investing in:
1) An audio course. Personally I like Michel Thomas, but friends of mine use Pimsleur. Pimsleur is a bit more "boring" imo.
2) A frequency dictionary with phonetic pronunciation (preferably) and example sentences. I like this one.
In my opinion, an audio couse and a frequency dictionary are the essential two tools to rapidly gain a base in any language. You won't be able to write an official letter, or speak 100% without error.. but if your goal is fluency for day-to-day activities you're golden.
Hope this helps!
Hey there,
To quickly gain conversational fluency, I recommend investing in:
1) An audio course. Personally I like Michel Thomas, but friends of mine use Pimsleur. Pimsleur is a bit more "boring" imo.
2) A frequency dictionary with phonetic pronunciation (preferably) and example sentences. I like this one.
In my opinion, an audio couse and a frequency dictionary are the essential two tools to rapidly gain a base in any language. You won't be able to write an official letter, or speak 100% without error.. but if your goal is fluency for day-to-day activities you're golden.
Hope this helps!
Hey there,
To quickly gain conversational fluency, I recommend investing in:
1) An audio course. Personally I like Michel Thomas, but friends of mine use Pimsleur. Pimsleur is a bit more "boring" imo.
2) A frequency dictionary with phonetic pronunciation (preferably) and example sentences. I like this one.
In my opinion, an audio couse and a frequency dictionary are the essential two tools to rapidly gain a base in any language. You won't be able to write an official letter, or speak 100% without error.. but if your goal is fluency for day-to-day activities you're golden.
Hope this helps!
Hey there,
To quickly gain conversational fluency, I recommend investing in:
1) An audio course. Personally I like Michel Thomas, but friends of mine use Pimsleur. Pimsleur is a bit more "boring" imo.
2) A frequency dictionary with phonetic pronunciation (preferably) and example sentences. I like this one.
In my opinion, an audio couse and a frequency dictionary are the essential two tools to rapidly gain a base in any language. You won't be able to write an official letter, or speak 100% without error.. but if your goal is fluency for day-to-day activities you're golden.
Hope this helps!