#31
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I tried Rosetta Stone and I don’t think its very good. Michel Thomas is much better. He teaches you how similar English and French are and you have to "think it out" not just memorize a bunch of words. It worked great for me however, I kind of lost the desire to learn and I haven't finished the tapes. Plus his method is free and you can listen to it on your iPod wherever you go. Its great for long flights and bus rides.
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It was fun while it lasted.
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#32
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A french lesson I found on failblog.org.
<a href="http://failblog.org/2008/08/25/french-lesson-fail/"><img src="http://failblog.wordpress.com/files/2008/08/fail-owned-french-lesson-fail.jpg" alt="fail owned pwned pictures" class="alignnone size-full wp-image-3915" /></a><br />see more <a href="http://failblog.org">pwn and owned pictures</a>
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One of the serious problems in planning the fight against American doctrine, is that the Americans do not read their manuals, nor do they feel any obligation to follow their doctrine... - From a Soviet Junior Lt's Notebook |
#33
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It's taking me a while to learn French but I'm getting there. It's getting easier to translate random French quotes or sentences I come across so I know that I'm learning. I started last July and I still have a bit of difficulty in reading the dual language French/English books I have. About half the nights, I don't work on French because of whatever reason and when I do work on it, I probably spend only about 45 minutes to an hour each night. Typically, I work on French during the commercials of whatever show I'm watching unless there's nothing on so I just turn the TV off. I sometimes catch up a bit on the weekends but it's not enough to make up for not working on it every night. If I actually spent 60-90 minutes every night, I'm sure I'd be a lot further along than I am now.
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