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10-23-2007, 02:35 AM
I know this isn't answering your question, but you will never become fluent in speaking and listening without human interaction with native speakers. I am sure these are a good place to start, and you sound motivated, but don't count on fluency from self-study.
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10-25-2007, 02:23 PM
Quote:
1. There's no possible way to tell how long it will take you. The whole point of Rosetta Stone is to teach you conversational japanese at your own pace. 2. As far as I've seen with the (small) textbook, I didn't like it. It only teaches you words and sentances in Romaji. Basically, it doesn't teach you grammer or Hiragana/Katakana. I decided to go with the Genki 1 & 2 books; they've shown me that their book is definitely for grammatically-based people, while giving you structured, well written vocabulary lists and differant Kanji (with Furigana) every lesson. Plus, they only use Romaji for the first two lessons, so I'd suggest (if you haven't already) your learning of Hiragana and Katakana. If you want to be truly fluent in Japanese, than stay away from Rosetta Stone. postscript: all of this was written in my own humble opinion of Rosseta stone, so if anybody used it first and then went on to other books and such, than that's great. Second Generation! "Forum 家族: Kitski葉私の巨大です" |
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