Turkish Language Learning - Learn to Speak Audio CD Book
The House of Oojah Learn to Speak Turkish Audio Books
Turkish Language Learning Audio

The House of Oojah logo
  • Pimsleur Turkish Audio
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    Pimsleur Comprehensive Turkish Level 1 Get other Turkish Language audio click here Comprehensive Turkish I includes 30 lessons of essential grammar and vocabulary -- 16 hours of real-life spoken practice sessions -- plus an introduction to reading. Upon completion of this Level I program you will have functional spoken proficiency with the most-frequently-used vocabulary and grammatical structures. You will be able to: * initiate and maintain face-to-face conversations * deal with every day situations -- ask for information directions and give basic information about yourself and family * communicate basic information on informal topics and participate in casual conversations * avoid basic c more here.....

  • Teach Book Audio Yourself Turkish Turkish
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    Teach Yourself Turkish - 1 Audio CDs and 288 page Book Get other Turkish Audio Language Learning - click here Brand New (still shrink wrapped): Book and 1 Audio CDs - 2 Hours Teach Yourself Turkish - 2 Audio CDs and 288 page Book Goal *all-round confidence category Content *learn how to speak understand and write turkish *progress quickly beyond the basics *explore the language in depth Teach Yourself Turkish is a complete course for beginners in written and spoken Turkish. It is also ideal for those wanting to brush up existing knowledge of the language and those who are studying with a teacher and are looking for supplementary material. There are 16 carefully graded and interlocking uni more information.....

  • Learn Book Discount speak Audio CD Basic Pimsleur Turkish
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    Pimsleur Basic Turkish 5 Audio CDs More Turkish Language Learning click here Pimsleur Basic Turkish 5 Audio CDs Brand New : . 5 CDs This Basic program contains 5 hours of audio-only effective language learning with real-life spoken practice sessions. 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 Turkish structure without tedious drills. Learning to speak Turkish can actually be enjoyable and rewarding. The key reason most people struggle with new languages is that they aren't given proper instruction only bits and pieces of a language. Other language programs sell only pieces click here.....

  • Learn Turkish CD Book Minutes Turkish Audio Berlitz
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    Berlitz Turkish in 60 Minutes Audio CD Get Other Turkish Audio click here Berlitz Turkish in 60 Minutes Audio CD Brand New 1 Audio CD With Berlitz Turkish in 60 Minutes anyone can get a quick start to learning basic Turkish words in just one hour. The all-audio format quickly and easily instills over 250 essential words and phrases you need to start communicating—without a need for books or grammar rules. Topics include basic expressions questions making friends eating out and more. If you want to associate what you hear with what you'll see the accompanying 16-page booklet provides every word in the audio program written with phonetic pronunciation and translation. About the Turkish click here.....

  • About the Dutch Language
    Dutch is a West Germanic language spoken by around 24 million people, mainly in the Netherlands, Belgium and Suriname, but also by smaller groups of speakers in parts of France, Germany and several former Dutch colonies. It is closely related to other West Germanic languages (e.g., English, West Frisian and German) and somewhat more remotely to the North Germanic languages. Dutch is a descendant of Old Frankish and is the parent language of Afrikaans, one of the official languages of South Africa and the most widely understood in Namibia. Dutch and Afrikaans are to a large extent mutually intelligible, although they have separate spelling standards and dictionaries and have separate language regulators. Standard Dutch (Standaardnederlands) is the standard language of the major Dutch-speaking areas and is regulated by the Nederlandse Taalunie ("Dutch Language Union"). Dutch is also an official language of the European Union and the Union of South American Nations. Dutch grammar also shares many traits with German, but has a less complicated morphology caused by deflexion, which puts it closer to English. Dutch has officially three genders, masculine, feminine, and neuter, however, according to some interpretations these are reduced to only two, common and neuter, which is similar to the gender systems of most Continental Scandinavian languages. The consonant system of Dutch did not undergo the High German consonant shift and has more in common with English and the Scandinavian languages. Like most Germanic languages it has a syllable structure that allows fairly complex consonant clusters. Dutch is often noted for the prominent use of velar fricatives (ch and g, pronounced at the back of the mouth), often picked up on as a source of amusement or even satire. Dutch vocabulary is predominantly Germanic in origin, considerably more so than English. This is to a large part due to the heavy influence of Norman French on English, and to Dutch patterns of word formation, such as the tendency to form long and sometimes very complicated compound nouns, being more similar to those of German and the Scandinavian languages.
  • Esperanto
    Esperanto is the most widely spoken artificial language. The name derives from Doktoro Esperanto, the pseudonym under which L. L. Zamenhof published the first book of Esperanto, the Unua Libro, in 1887. The word esperanto means 'one who hopes'. Zamenhof's goal was to create an easy and flexible language that would serve as a universal second language to foster peace and international understanding. Esperanto has a very regular structure. Words are often made from many other roots, and in this way the number of words which one must memorise is made much smaller. The language is phonetic, and the rules of pronunciation are very simple, so that everyone knows how to pronounce a written worde and vice-versa.Esperanto has had continuous usage by a community estimated at between 100,000 and 2 million speakers for over a century. By most estimates, there are approximately a thousand native speakers. No country has adopted the language officially. Today, Esperanto is employed in world travel, correspondence, cultural exchange, conventions, literature, language instruction, television (Internacia Televido), and radio broadcasting. Esperanto is also a language of internet websites, which can be explored from the Esperanto interface of Google Search.
Free template 'Feel Free' by [ Anch ] Gorsk.net Studio. Please, don't remove this hidden copyleft!