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Now You're Talking Chinese in No Time (Paperback)
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Author/Publisher: Scott D. Seligman, I-Chua Chen
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Format: paperback |
Emphasis: Spoken Mandarin Chinese, Chinese Phrases |
Level: Beginning - Intermediate |
Note: In Simplified Chinese Characters |
List Price: $16.95
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Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Here is a handy language helper for English-speaking travelers. A bilingual
phrasebook is combined with a 90-minute cassette featuring simplified
bilingual dialogues in Chinese and English. An accompanying transcript
booklet contains printed versions of the tape's dialogues. The language
phrasebook, Chinese at a Glance, presents more than 1,500 Chinese
expressions with translations that will help English-speaking travelers get
around in hotels, airports, train stations, restaurants, and other travel
sites. The newly revised edition has been improved with more attractive and
useful city maps, availability of ATMs, faxes, and other modern facilities
in far-away cities and towns, and much more.
Language Notes
Text: English, Chinese
Product Details
- Paperback: 336 pages
- Publisher: Barron's Educational Series; 2 edition (January 1,
2001)
- Language: English
- ISBN: 0764173618
- Product Dimensions: 7.9 x 5.0 x 1.4 inches
- Shipping Weight: 10.6 ounces.
- Average Customer Review:
based on 3 reviews.
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Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review
helpful:
Two books in one! Phrase book and dictionary, February 22, 2005
This book is just what it promises: A phrase book that concentrates on
practical tourist and business situations and a brief dictionary that will
help you get around. It's not an attempt to teach you Mandarin Chinese,
but if you visit China with no language skills you'd be able to make a
stab at one or two phrases--to the delight or amusement of your hosts. It
is especially valuable in the pronunciation guide and the words in the
book are marked with diacriticals so you have a hope of approximating the
difficult tonal aspects of the language. It's written by Scott Seligman
whose book on Chinese Business Etiquette is also invaluable. |
3 of 3 people found the following review
helpful:
Great pocket sized travel dictionary., February 14, 2003
Reviewer: |
mhnstr (Baltimore, MD
United States) |
I would not suggest this book as a means of learning Chinese. Nor is
this a book you would want to use for the translation of Chinese documents
into English. The reasons being that only a few hundred words are in the
dictionary and the book does not concentrate on grammar. Rather, the
intention of this book is to be a handy travel dictionary and in this
function, the book works very well.
I carried this book with me everywhere during my year of travel in
China. The first edition of the book was written during the time when
foreigners could only shop in the Friendship Stores and so some of the
shopping and restaurants phrases were a bit out of date. However, the book
presents a translation of words and phrases, separated by topics such as
"at the restaurant" or "at the hotel".
There are words and phrases for use at the hotel such as "I would like
to pay my bill", or "There is a problem with my room." You will find the
words for dozens of foods which are arranged for example in groups of
meat, vegetables or dessert which is very convenient when you go to a
restaurant. Best of all, the book not only shows the pinyon, but also the
characters. So, even if you can not pronounce the word correctly, you have
the characters to show the waitress what you want to order. Very handy! |
3 of 7 people found the following review
helpful:
Just a phrasebook -- won't teach the language, February 7, 2000
This consists of two phrasebooks: "Chinese at a Glance" (Seligan, Chen)
and a very similar credit-card sized version. The tape does nothing but
read from the smaller phrasebook. The larger book makes a small attempt to
explain pronunciation. But neither makes any attempt to explain the
grammar or anything about the language except by giving whole-sentence
examples. The larger book has a small C-E E-C dictionary in the back.
The two phrasebooks cover the same material, but with the phrases in a
different order, making it impossible to follow the tape in the larger
book. The type in the smaller book is very small, making the intonation
marks almost illegible sometimes.
Either book is very portable on a trip. The smaller one is really tiny,
so if you're looking for a highly portable phrasebook, this isn't a bad
choice. But this is a poor choice for learning the language. |
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