This is an excellent, user—friendly textbook for learning Chinese.
Yi Ren has taught thousands of Americans to speak Chinese fluently. Now, she and co-author Xiayuan Liang share their secrets for fast mastery of Mandarin Chinese with you. China has 1.3 billion people and due to initiatives to phase out regional dialects in favor of Mandarin Chinese, nearly all of them can communicate in Mandarin. Don't let yourself be intimidated by this rewarding language. Although it is true that mastery of the Chinese language takes time, Mandarin Chinese actually has simpler grammar than English and there are no conjugations—meaning anyone can learn a few important phrases in no time. Chock full of extra hints and tips drawn from the authors' many years of experience teaching Mandarin Chinese in adult evening classes, Chinese for Beginners focuses on realistic situations you'll encounter when you meet people in China. New words are explained in terms of how you'll actually use them to communicate with new friends. The language CD lets you listen and repeat and remember the sentences with ease, and will help you soon declare with pride, "I can say that in Chinese!"
Chinese for Beginners includes:
-Lighthearted approaches that bring Chinese to life in a down-to-earth fashion -Real-life dialogues and situations to help you converse with confidence -An "Extend Your Vocabulary" feature in each chapter helps you to remember and understand more words that you'd think possible -Native-speaker audio recordings teach you to pronounce Chinese tones accurately -Answer Keys help you keep track of your learning process -Interesting notes, idioms, sayings, photos, poems, and insider tips about China's culture, special places, and everyday life add to the adventure
This user-friendly guide to learning the basics will work for anyone who wants to speak and understand Chinese for business, for pleasure, or for travel—and who wants to enjoy the process of learning a new language while they're at it!
Yi Ren taught and did research in Beijing after graduating from Tsinghua University. On moving to the U.S. she began to teach Chinese and has more than 15 year Chinese-teaching experience. She has published 15 articles and one book in Chinese. At her adult students' urging, Yi decided to offer her dynamic Chinese teaching method via Chinese for Beginners to help others learn the language while enjoying it. She lives with her family in Denver, Colorado.
Xiayuan Liang practiced medicine in China before coming to the United States. She currently is an associate professor at University of Colorado School of Medicine. In her spare time, Xiayuan likes to read and to discuss interesting topics with friends--in Chinese, of course!
I really enjoyed reading this book and learning the vocabulary, syntax and grammar for basic daily communication in the pinyin phonetic symbol system with graphics presented in 190 files in the audio list. Based on both small and medium talk in dialogue with the navigation in space time, this book provides the English/Chinese translations for greetings and introductions for getting together. How to apologize and say thank you as well as talking about the weather using numbers with the time and date. Making a phone call and going to the restaurant or tea house or where to go for sightseeing is a common experience of travel with discussion in the book. Obtaining money at the bank to go shopping and use transportation is something that always requires additional vocabulary beyond small talk. This minimal vocabulary with realistic dialogue for these activities mentioned is provided in the glossary. The 16 poems along with cultural and etiquette tips are great for preparation of Chinese travel and adventure.
These poems ordered by chapter are:
Thoughts for a Quiet Night by Li Bai Love Sickness by Wang Wei Ascending the Stork Tower by Wang Zhi Huan Pastoral Peace by Wang Wei Song for Travelling Son by Meng Jiao Spring Dawn by Meng Hao Ran A Village Chant by Shao Kangjie Quatrain 2 by Du Fu Love Stirs in the Spring by Li Bai The Industrious Peasant by Li Shen Drinking Tea With A Friend by Lu Yu, On the Double Ninth Day by Jiao Ran On Seeing Off His Friend by Meng Hao Ran At Yellow Crane Tower by Li Bai Quatrain 1 by Du Fu Gazing At The Waterfall On Lu Shan by Li Bai Golden Threaded Clothes by Anonymous Poet Departure From Bai Di Cheng by Li Bai
The sound of the poems, idioms and proverbs are wonderful in Chinese and fun to research in detail with a Wiktionary, the free dictionary and Hanzi drawing at www.qhanzi.com. Overall, I highly recommend this immersion into 34 practical real-life scenarios with dialogue for writers and for those that love the sounds and graphics of the Chinese language.
An unexpectedly strong introductory text. Interesting, useful, relevant content, nicely matched by the author's informative yet casual tone. The result is something far richer than a phrasebook and far less ponderous than most introductory language textbooks.
I've thumbed through dozens of introductory books on learning Chinese; this is one of the best I've encountered. Supplemental audio content, available for free, adds even greater depth to the text.
My only qualms are that I purchased an ebook version, and the content clearly hasn't been optimized for that format. In some exercises the Chinese text seem to be images rather than actual text; on a Kindle those images often appear rough and jagged. The Chinese poems provided at the ends of each chapter suffer from a similar drawback. If those technical issues could be resolved, I'd easily award this book five stars.
Despite its 200+ page length, this book hardly teaches anything. Though it does have brief dialogues with basic words and sentences, most of the book is literally just filled with random stock images, long ramblings on Chinese history, cartoons and poetry that isn't even written in Simplified characters. It also has a lot of cultural notes, but that's not really the point of a language book. Also, it doesn't teach any handwriting, or grammar, and offers no way of re-inforcing/testing you on the little vocab it has, so you're likely to forget it all.
This book is very informative and continues to help me learn Chinese. The formatting is unintimidating, the writing style is easy to understand, and the PDF and audio files enable you to learn wherever you are! I recommend this book. -Jordan Koornneef