Do You Want To Learn German More Quickly & Easily?
★★★Learn NOW the Basics of German in 10 Days!★★★
Click the "Buy" button and START NOW your journey with German. Read on your PC, Mac, smart phone, tablet or Kindle device. If You Don't Have Kindle You Can Still Read This Book On Your Web Browser using Amazon Free Cloud Reader
This book contains proven steps and strategies on how to learn to speak the German language in less than two weeks. The German language is spoken by at least 130 million people around the world as of 2014. More than half of those people speak it as their native and language, with the rest having adopted it as a second language.
My goal is to help you on having a new approach. This book lets you appreciate the beauty of the German culture as evidenced in their language. The chapters will give you appropriate examples that you will find useful once you learn to talk and converse in full German—all that, in a span of 10 days. Whatever reasons you have for desiring to learn German, choosing “German for Beginners: A Practical Guide to Learn the Basics of German in 10 Days!” offers you more than just an opportunity to learn the language; it is giving yourself a good headstart towards your goals.
Here Is A Preview Of What You'll Learn Inside
✔ German Basics ✔ Pronouncing German Words ✔ Days and Numbers ✔ Meeting and Greeting ✔ Family Life ✔ Telecommunications ✔ In the Workplace ✔ Shopping ✔ Dining ✔ Sports and Leisure ✔ Much, much more!
Take Action Right Away, Click The Buy Button and START your amazing journey with German!
Good idea but poorly executed. the only reason to read this book is if you want to waste your time and learn things backwards. There many many many mistakes. Not only typos (which are abundant and should be non existent in a book trying to teach a language), but also explanations that are so wrong that I wanted to scream. To the author, I'd recommend to spend some time or money on editing and to do some research before writing. Take the task more seriously. Or just don't write books. No wonder he claims someone can get a hold of German in 10 days with this book. You certainly can... if you do not care how wrong and inaccurate your knowledge is.
I'm using my phone now but I will post my full review with specific info as soon as I get to my laptop.
*Edition now that I have the laptop (and I'm less irritated by this):
- Typos such as: "Fotografun" (instead of Fotografin) or Beri welcher ...? (instead of Bei welcher ...?), or 'Morden' as a translation of 'morning' (instead of "Morgen"... btw "Morden" means 'to murder'... definitely not a nice thing to tell someone when you first see them!)
- Grammar mistakes (even in English!) such as "The German months is very similar..." (no explanation required)
- Meaning mistakes: "Tschüs" means "goodbye" not "hello"!
- Mixed words: Using "Morgen" (morning/tomorrow) instead of "Montag" (Monday) when teaching the days of the week. That could be very confusing, for example, if you have a meeting on Monday and you understand that is tomorrow.
And my uber favorite: "Eins is only used when referring to a specific number which is one but if used similarly with articles a or an, you should use einen. For instance: "I need a book ... ", translates to "Ich brauche einen Buch ... " in German. "Einen Buch" means "a book".
There are so many mistakes in that statement that I don't even know where to begin. Let's start by saying that if that was the case, the nightmare of all German learners would be over. Why? Because he is not paying attention AT ALL to noun genres (German has 3) or to the cases (there are 4).
That being said, a or an can be either ein, eine, einer, einen or einem depending on the case and noun genre. Not that simple, right? So, in conclusion "einen" is for masculine nouns in the accusative case.JUST THEN . And the correct translation for "I need a book...! would be "Ich brauch ein Buch" (because Buch is neutral).
Anyway, thank you if you kept reading this far, but I needed to rant.
This book is informative on the German culture and provides vocabulary you would likely need on a daily basis while visiting or living in Germany. However, there are also quite a few typos, which in a fully-English book is a bit of a nuisance but mostly easy to ignore, but in a book where you're learning a foreign language can be quite problematic since it makes it difficult to know if the German words and sentences provided are written correctly or not.