Esperanto conversation
ya juri_Coreana, 20 Novemba 2017
Ujumbe: 5
Lugha: English
juri_Coreana (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 20 Novemba 2017 12:45:40 alasiri
한국인 분들도 있을 지 모르겠네요 ㅎㅎ 만약에 계시다면 에스페란토 기본회화랑 읽는 방법 좀 알려 주세요..ㅠㅠ
Metsis (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 21 Novemba 2017 10:11:29 asubuhi
Anhxlisto (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 21 Novemba 2017 11:39:56 asubuhi
1) "kurso" here, in lernu.net
2) http://kurso.com.br/ (download the program)
3) en duolingo.com (esperanto for english learners)
McAFish (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 2 Julai 2018 3:09:34 alasiri
Metsis (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 3 Julai 2018 7:02:51 asubuhi
McAFish:Merise is also a good website to learn EsperantoWhat's its address?
I have taken both the Nakamura and Duolingo course (both partially but up to high levels). While they not teach how to speak, they both teach basic expressions you need for conversations. You need to take a course with a human teacher to learn pronunciation, preferably one where E-o is the only common language between you and the teacher, so you must speak E-o
IMHO Nakamura is better of those two, since it uses E-o to teach E-o thus introducing more E-o vocabulary and concepts. Although the learning curve might be steeper at the beginning I recommend, that you start with the Nakamura course.
One huge problem with the Duolingo course is, that it assumes you speak perfect English. There is no setting "no, English is not my native language and don't punish me for stupid English idioms". Duolingo is a real nit-picker. For instance, I have many times been flagged for missing "a" or "an" in otherwise perfect translation. My native language does not have any articles, so they are mostly Hebrew to me. Duolingo is created in the USA meaning, that it sometimes uses those weird antique number words, measuring units and AM/PMs. Again mostly meaningless for the most of the Eart's population.
Remember also, that the webbrowser version of Duolingo teaches grammar, while the mobile app does not.
Sorry for the rant