Mensagens: 11
Idioma: English
Lifixs (Mostrar o perfil) 5 de julho de 2007 07:54:17
Thus I'm looking for something I can obtain in physical form and study without the distractions presented to me by the internet.
Any suggestions? Keep in mind that I'm just starting out.
Thanks
pastorant (Mostrar o perfil) 5 de julho de 2007 08:09:52
Kurso de Esperanto
Charlie (Mostrar o perfil) 5 de julho de 2007 20:41:17
Take a look under Learning -> Downloads for courses that can be downloaded and printed. A number of courses are available in PDF.
erinja (Mostrar o perfil) 5 de julho de 2007 20:48:34
I like "Esperanto: Learning and Using the International Language" by Richardson. It's got a pretty good mix of lessons (with answers in the back), overviews of Esperanto history and culture, reading texts to practice with, and a pretty decent glossary. You can get a copy from the ELNA catalog (www.esperanto-usa.org) or a used copy from one of the sellers at Amazon.
Karedio (Mostrar o perfil) 6 de julho de 2007 01:59:32
erinja (Mostrar o perfil) 6 de julho de 2007 13:02:52
You could also print out the information to study it on paper offline.
More information at either one of these links:
http://pacujo.net/esperanto/course/
http://bernd.wechner.info/Esperanto/fec.html
awake (Mostrar o perfil) 13 de julho de 2007 01:12:40
It's pricey ($30-40 per set) but the two volume audio course "Jen Nia Mondo" available from ELNA and audioforum.com is also a very good introduction to the language. It focuses on conversation and listening comprehension skills. The version I have is audio-only, but it's quite good. It's somewhat similar to pimsleur courses if you're familiar with those. I wouldnt use Jen Nia Mondo by itself, but it's a great supplement to other methods.
Lifixs:I have a problem in that I cant stay focused when using the learning tools available on this site.
Thus I'm looking for something I can obtain in physical form and study without the distractions presented to me by the internet.
Any suggestions? Keep in mind that I'm just starting out.
Cornelio (Mostrar o perfil) 13 de julho de 2007 02:52:02
That helped a lot. From the printed material in my library, it all seemed quite dated. No computer terms! It seems the latest up-to-date Esperanto is here. So I'd print out everything or take the email course.
bonan ŝancon; good luck
Cornelio
trojo (Mostrar o perfil) 13 de julho de 2007 18:09:24
awake:It's pricey ($30-40 per set) but the two volume audio course "Jen Nia Mondo" available from ELNA and audioforum.com is also a very good introduction to the language. It focuses on conversation and listening comprehension skills. The version I have is audio-only, but it's quite good. It's somewhat similar to pimsleur courses if you're familiar with those. I wouldnt use Jen Nia Mondo by itself, but it's a great supplement to other methods.Some (perhaps even all) of the "Jen Nia Mondo" lessons were broadcast on a radio station in Australia a few years back and are archived at RadioArkivo.org. Here is lesson one (note that the lesson is embedded as part of an hour-long broadcast, so you may have to fast-forward a bit):
http://www.radioarkivo.org/vidu.php/2232
I highly recommend "Jen Nia Mondo" for building listening comprehension.
EDIT: Yes it's a "virtual" resource, but you could always download it and burn an audio CD.
boon (Mostrar o perfil) 14 de julho de 2007 15:31:40
http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/8177
The HTML version is probably better. You can copy and paste the lessons into a Microsoft Word file, or similar text editor, and print them off.