Selected Product: | Rapid Greek: v. 1: 200+ Essential Words and Phrases Anchored into Your Long Term Memory with Great Music (Musical Brain Trainer) Audio CD Author: Earworms Learning Publisher: earworms Learning Release Date: July 2005 ISBN-10: 1905443013 ISBN-13: 9781905443017 List Price: £14.99 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Rapid Greek: v. 1: 200+ Essential Words and Phrases Anchored into Your Long Term Memory with Great Music (Musical Brain Trainer) by Earworms Learning (ISBN-10: 1905443013, ISBN-13: 9781905443017). At this time we have not yet written a review for Rapid Greek: v. 1: 200+ Essential Words and Phrases Anchored into Your Long Term Memory with Great Music (Musical Brain Trainer) by Earworms Learning (ISBN-10: 1905443013, ISBN-13: 9781905443017). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Quick and effective learning | Customer Rating: | I have bought vol 1 and 2 and have found both cd's excellent. Undoubtedly it is a good way of learning particularly if you are an auditory learner-the phrases really do seem to stick in the memory. I like the music although would have prefered some greek tunes for added interest. My only real criticism is about the small book that is included with the cd;the way the Greek has been transliterated is confusing. I have virtually every Greek book on the market as I teach Greek and have never seen Greek transliterated in this way. Another minor criticism for vol 2 is after listening to the cd over and over again the female speaker's giggling gets a little annoying. Overall I would recommend this series to people wanting to speak a good level of holiday Greek. I hope they bring out another volume. | It's all greek to me.... | Customer Rating: | Volume 1 has already been useful - my wife, daughter and myself were in Greece a couple of months ago and having even limited skills in the language totally changed the attitude of the locals towards us! Christine (daughter) was a great hit around the town we were staying in as she was the only British child who had any skills at all in the language.
The Rosetta Stone system is pretty good (and goes further) - but for pain free and quick learning of basics of a language at sensible prices, I'm really impressed with the Earworms method!
Volume 2 expands on vol 1 - although it can mostly be used standalone, you'll want some of the parts from Vol 1 - particularly the numbers track.
This volume leads you into talking about yourself and interacting with other people - it's billed as "allowing you to flirt" which is pushing what it gives you.
It includes a basic intro to verbs - how to speak in past/future and conditional, and extends counting introducing eleven to a hundred. Also covered is a meal at a taverna.
Good - a bit basic, but recommended!
Alex | Greek made easy | Customer Rating: | If you want to acquire some basic Greek phrases then I would highly recommend this CD as your best starting point. It is made up of ten tracks which cover some 200 basic words and phrases. Each track has music in the background - more about this later. There is also a booklet which accompanies the CD. It has the text which is spoken and also some advice on using the CD.
Everyone wants a shortcut to learning and it would be easy to be disappointed by any course which made such bold claims. This is not, in my opinion, a shortcut to learning a language. There is no magic here. The reason why it seems to work so well is that the musical background makes it much more palatable to listen to it over and over and over again. And, with repeated listening, things do start to stick.
Once you are familiar with the pronunciation on the CD you can then follow the text in the booklet. I also thought that this was useful. For example, the word for 'please' is often given phonetically as 'parakalo.' In the booklet it is written as 'baragalo.' By adopting a compromise between what was heard on the CD and what was written in the booklet, it did seem to result in an improvement in my pronunciation (I hope!)
Also with language CD's you can find that you are suddenly presented with a lengthy sentence which is difficult to assimilate. Here the sentence might be spoken and then broken down into its component parts. You get a chance to repeat each part before the whole thing is then reassembled. The repetition of words and phrases is very well done. | depends on your definition of 'melody' | Customer Rating: | | Just got my CD. I think it's a great concept. However, here's what they don't tell you on the box: while it is set to music, the words are spoken. There is no melody or beat to the words, but only behind the words. Sometimes they'll electronically repeat something, but it's still not singing; it's spoken. | Implants Greek words in your mind | Customer Rating: | | I think this cd is very good. I do a lot of driving and listened to it in my car. I take greek lessons in a class too and this definately helped to put some extra words in my vocabulary. |
|