Pimsleur Conversational Mandarin Chinese - 8 Audio CDs
Brand New : 8 Audio CDs - Note incorporates Pimsleur Basic Mandarin Chinese
HEAR IT, LEARN IT, SPEAK IT
The Pimsleur Method provides the most effective language-learning program ever developed. The Pimsleur Method gives you quick command of Chinese Mandarin structure without tedious drills. Learning to speak Chinese Mandarin can actually be enjoyable and rewarding.
The pimsleur dialect education routine is a language acquisition mode developed by Dr P Pimsleur. The method is centred on some central themes : anticipation, graduated interval recollection, primary vocabulary, in addition to organic remembering. The Pimsleur structure is an audio-based technique, in which the learner builds sentences or repeats from memory along with a recording. Foreign language programs regularly want a learner to say again subsequent to an tutor, which Pimsleur argued was a slow method of studing. Pimsleur designed a "challenge and answer" skill, where a learner was prompted to convert a expression into the learned language, which was then confirmed. This method creates a more dynamic way of studing, requiring the learner to cogitate before responding. Dr paul pimsleur believed the principle of anticipation mirrored real-life conversations in that a orator ought to call to mind a phrase quickly.
The Dr paul pimsleur means in no way shows grammar explicitly, instead leaving the student to infer the grammar through ordinary patterns and sentences recurring over and over. Pimsleur alleged this inductive technique is exactly how native speakers discover grammar when they are kids; only in schools is it "taught" on the blackboard.
About the Chinese Language
Traditional Chinese is a category of related Chinese dialects spoken across most of northern and south-western China. When taken as a separate language, as is often done in academic literature, the Mandarin dialects have more speakers than any other language.
In English, Mandarin can refer to either of two distinct concepts:
* to Standard Chinese or Standard Mandarin (Putonghua/Guoyu/Huayu/Hanyu), which is based on the particular Mandarin dialect spoken in Beijing. Standard Mandarin functions as the official spoken language of the People's Republic of China, the official language of the Republic of China (Taiwan), and one of the four official languages of Singapore. ‘Chinese’ — in practice Standard Mandarin — is one of the six official languages of the United Nations.
* to all of the Mandarin dialects spoken in northern and south-western China.
In everyday use, Mandarin refers usually to just Standard Mandarin (Putonghua/Guoyu). In its broader sense, Mandarin is a diverse group of related dialects, some less mutually intelligible than others. It is a grouping defined and used mainly by linguists, and is not commonly used outside of academic circles as a self-description. Instead, when asked to describe the spoken form they are using, Chinese speaking a form of non-Standard Mandarin will describe the variant that they are speaking, for example Sichuan dialect or Northeast China dialect, and consider it distinct from ‘Standard Mandarin’ (putonghua); they may not recognize that it is in fact classified by linguists as a form of ‘Mandarin’ in a broader sense. Nor is there a common ‘Mandarin’ identity based on language; rather, there are strong regional identities centred on individual dialects, because of the wide geographical distribution and cultural diversity of its speakers. Moreover, it is of note that despite its wide use in the Occident, most native Mandarin speakers are reluctant to recognize the term 'Mandarin', since the word does not reflect any Chinese origin. Instead, they would rather call the language simply 'standard Chinese'.
From an official point of view, there are two versions of Standard Chinese Mandarin, since the Beijing government refers to that on the Mainland China as Putonghua, whereas the Taiwanese government refers to their official language as Kuo-yü (Guoyu in pinyin).
Technically, both Putonghua and Guoyu base their phonology on the Beijing Chinese accent, though Putonghua also takes some elements from other sources. Comparison of dictionaries produced in the two areas will show that there are few substantial differences. However, both versions of ‘school’ Standard Chinese Mandarin are often quite different from the Mandarin dialects that are spoken in accordance with regional habits, and neither is wholly identical to the Beijing dialect. Putonghua and Guoyu also differ from the Beijing dialect in vocabulary, grammar, and usage.
It is important to note that the terms ‘Putonghua (The Common Language)’ and ‘Guoyu’ refer to speech, and hence the difference in the use of simplified characters and traditional characters is not usually considered to be a difference between these two concepts.
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