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J**S
Good introduction to French Grammar
Having owned many French grammar books and possessing a high level of French, I can say that this book is a good introduction to French grammar. As the front cover states, it contains grammar needed for conversational speech and I agree. The explanations are good and straight to the point. They do not use very technical grammatical terms to explain the grammar. Even if you don't know what a direct or indirect objects is, the back of the book has a glossary explaining those terms. This book does a good job of trying to make connnections with the English language and has a long list of cognates. If you are interested in learning French and do not know where to start, I recommend buying this book and using it with Duolingo. Once you get to a higher level, it would be best to buy a more comprehensive book.
J**.
Hard copy yes! Kindle version no!!
The hard copy of Essential French Grammar is very helpful! However - the Kindle version is full of errors and typos and is laid out so that it is very difficult to read. I would definitely recommend the hard copy and would definitely not recommend the Kindle version.
W**.
Very helpful as a refresher on French grammar
Great supplement to a more comprehensive language learning system. I am learning French with Babbel and I enjoy that, but at times I need to review some points of grammar. That is where this book shines. You won’t learn enough to be able to speak French just from this book, and to be totally fair the author is clear that is not his purpose. It is to be a supplement. Buy it for that purpose and I think you’ll be as happy as I am.
T**E
Read it over and over again.
I'm a self taught student of French, and this is the best one volume grammar book that I possess. It's perfect to take with you and read when you find yourself with some down time: in a waiting room, on public transit, or eating alone.It's the book I turn to when I need an explanation of some point of grammar in my regular text book. Read it over and over again. You can't go wrong with this book.
E**3
The right balance
You NEED this book to learn French.There is no ONE perfect medium for learning a language. You need several different tools. Start with a good phrase book (Rick Steve's are the best) to learn enough to be a good tourist (i.e., to have more fun on your trip). Next, use a good computer or online program to learn vocabulary. (The vocabulary comes faster if you have already learned a lot of useful phrases.) These programs are glorified flash cards, but flash cards are actually a very effective way to learn vocabulary, and the best programs (a) teach you the words you will use the most and (b) focus on the words you know the least. The best flash cards also have a combination of written flash cards, spoken flash cards, and picture flash cards. My personal favorite is the free online program is duolingo.com. I like Rosetta Stone, too, but it is expensive. It uses a great combination of written, spoken and picture flash cards. It is also dumb: it doesn't keep track of what you know well and drill you on what you know the least. Still, I think it's a good program if you've got the money. But flash card programs are a TERRIBLE way to try to figure out complicated grammar rules.So, in addition to a phrase book and a flashcard vocabulary program, you need a couple of books on the language that include vocabulary and grammar. I say a couple because reading two books on the subject will teach you much more than reading the same book twice. Vocabulary makes a lot more sense after you've learned a lot of phrases and learned some vocabulary. (You have a lot of "aha" moments about grammar rules if you learn phrases first. If you learn grammar first, it seems like a bunch of capricious rules, and it just won't stick in your head.)THIS is THE BEST little book on grammar, emphasis on the word "little". If you've learned basic tourist phrases, and you've learned some useful vocabulary, NOW you need to learn the ESSENTIAL grammar, and I prefer learning in 125 pages instead of 525 pages. Comprehensive books are too complicated for the beginner. You can't tell the critical from the rare, and there is so much you end up remembering nothing.THIS book teaches you the most important things you need to know, in a logical order, and it is very compact. Perhaps "condensed" is a better word. If you don't know any French grammar, this book can be a little hard to follow. Buy a comprehensive grammar book, too. If you don't understand something in this book, look up the same subject in a second, bigger, more comprehensive book.BUT, as I said, I would much rather learn (a) the most important stuff in (b) the fewest pages than try to learn EVERYTHING in THOUSANDS of pages.So, five stars specifically because this book is NOT comprehensive.(Eventually, in order to learn the language, you also need to speak with other French speakers. There are great sites for this, where you can chat free or cheaply online with native speakers. You will find these sites and other good tips on learning a foreign language efficiently in "Fluent in 3 months".
R**S
Great condition
I had been looking for a good grammar book--not too large, not too small. I believe that grammar is important in learning a language, but it is not extremely necessary on the first stage of such a process.I would recommend you to spend about four months with the Assimil book of you choice (apply Luca Lampariello's "full circle method"), do one lesson a day, six days a week. At the same time try to listen to radio, watch TV, and even read the news in that language. Soon your brain will start to adjust to your new language. It would be helpful to speak to natives of that language just to practice, although it also helps to speak to yourself, and even record and listen to yourself to correct your accent mistakes. Within a year to a year-and-a-half, you will have a great understanding of the language you started learning a while ago.Of course you could use other courses, you just have to have to motivation to learn a language. Most people have to work or go to school, so they don't have a lot of time to spend on language learning. An hour a day would work perfectly. I wouldn't recommend Rosetta Stone or Pimsleur approach; I have tried them both; "you can't say something's not good only because is popular." You must realize that, say, Rosetta Stone is popular because of all the propaganda. You don't believe me? Go ahead and spend $400 on the course and come back within a year telling me how fluent you've become.Too much talk. The "Essential Grammar" book arrive in a great condition.
L**N
its still contemporary in tone and a great take along reference
This is the "Elements of Style" for the French language! Small and portable, but with enough examples to help me jump through French with quick clarity.Although the book dates to the Cuban missile crisis, its still contemporary in tone and a great take along reference.
B**D
A greate quick reference
An excellent reference. I speak French comfortably, but since I'm not a native speaker I like to be able to quickly check myself when teaching my daughter. This makes it easy to confirm or correct myself mid-lesson.
P**S
Frech refetence book
Well priced reference book. Not exciting but useful. Good condition and swift delivery.
M**E
Four Stars
good refresher thanks
T**S
Four Stars
Arrived swiftly, contains most of necessary basics.
B**G
Five Stars
excellent book
R**Z
Me gusta mucho
Un libro bastante útil, que explica por lecciones la grámatica de forma detallada. Los materiales con que está hecho es de buena calidad
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