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Paperback Teach Yourself Thai Complete Course Book

ISBN: 0844237825

ISBN13: 9780844237824

Teach Yourself Thai Complete Course

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

This is a complete course in spoken and written Thai. If you have never learned Thai before, or if your Thai needs brushing up, 'Teach Yourself Thai' is for you. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Good introduction for the vacationer

I bought this book to learn a little Thai before taking a vacation in Thailand. A great introduction to the Thai alphabet! Also, I found the phrases and topics covered very useful for my trip. If you are looking to do something besides vacationing, then you might look elsewhere, but this was perfect for our needs. I loved having the CD with the book. They absolutely would not be useful one without the other. Being able to see what I was saying and listen to how to say it was very helpful.

Probably the best one out there

This book is quite good to be modest, the main dialogues are provided both in romanized form as well as thai script, the thai script version is for later on when you can read the script better so you can go back to previous chapters and re-read the dialogue in script.The book gradually teaches you to read and write the script, I have read other books teaching thai script and this one is by far the best one, you can tell the author knows the language.Understanding the tapes can be hard at first since they speak at natural speed, but after some chapters you get the hang of it and its not too hard, and there are enough listening excercices for each chapter.The grammar is clearly explained and is easy to understand, as with many asian languages the grammar is the easy part - pronounciation and script is the real challenge.In each chapter you get to practice your knowledge of the script, you gradually build up you skills.The only shortcoming of this book is that I think there are to few excerices to practice the grammar, so you might want to get a extra book on practicing grammar.A good book for beginners.

Very Effective!

I am about to be transferred to Thailand and will be taking formal and intensive Thai instruction next month. I wanted to get a head start on the language and after reading the..reviews purchased the Smith book with the two cassette tapes. After three weeks of study I find myself (to my surprisE) learning to read and speak Thai. First let me mention some things I do NOT like (but remember I am a pure beginner). The transliteration is confusing and frankly often does not match what I hear on the tapes. Second, there are disconnects between the tapes and what the book says I am supposed to be hearing. Third, the tape's intro to tones is not sufficient. Now what I like about the Smith book. I am learning to actually read Thai! It is a complicated alphabet (no matter what David Smith says) but I am progressing. The text progresses easily from one step to the next. Contrary to some reviews I like the practical application in the dialogues e.g shopping, menu ordering. etc. But most of all I like the easy and maybe even chatty way the book guides you into the language. I must admit I certainly enjoy studying this language with this book. And Smith is correct that 20 minutes a day is more effective than one 2 hours session weekly. Yep, a new edition of the tapes is needed but it is the best 20 bucks I spent in a long time!

A very good place to start

I have looked at this book pretty extensively, and I must say that the author has to be familiar with the Linguaphone Thai Course, which has always been my favorite for self-study outside of Thailand. In particular, the Thai alphabet is taught according to the Linguaphone scheme, which is a very clever one. A previous reviewer didn't see the rationale, so I'll explain. The letters are introduced according to their consonant class. In Lesson One, we get an important subset of the low-class consonants, and then a chunk of mid-class consonants, and so on. The result is that the student automatically clumps them together as "the letters from Lesson One" and thus comes to identify consonant classes semi-automatically. As a bonus, the Lesson One consonants are the SPECIAL low-class consonants which are overridden in multi-syllable words.Now, this leaves you without the knowledge of the dictionary order, so you'll have to learn that as a separate task. But I think that the consonant classes turn out to be much more important than that dictionary order, because unless you're absolutely sure of the consonant class, you can't determine the tone(s) and therefore can't really pronounce what you're reading.I would also encourage all students of Thai to view the transliteration scheme (ANY transliteration scheme) as a mere bridge to get you to the Thai script. Burn the bridge as soon as you can (it may not be very soon!)If you find this book to be tantalizing but a little too short, I warmly encourage you to get yourself the Linguaphone Thai Course, which expands on this short book quite a bit.

listening, reading, writing, speaking, everything

Oh, c'mon, people! What's with all these bad reviews? This book teaches you how to speak, write, read, understand the Thai language. The Thai writing system is listed both in dictionary order in the back and in a more systematic tonal order on another page also in the back. There's also a handy summary of the tone rules on one page in the back. Copy it, laminate it, make a bookmark and dive in. This book maps the Thai language inside and out. Grammar explanations are there in abundance. The cassette tape is excellent, too (but there's one big boo-boo at the very beginning where the English guy says something like,"Here's how to ask someone what their name is:" and the Thai woman says,"Hello, how are you?" But that's such an obvious mistake anyone can catch it). The book teaches you how to read and write in little sections in each chapter. But from chapter one to the end the author gives you Thai script as well as a romanized transcription for all the dialogues. So you can start writing from the very beginning if you want to. Just skip to the writing sections of later chapters. Who said it's forbidden to read ahead? Just like, photocopy all the writing sections and put them all together in a little writing chapter pamphlet thingy. Take it, shake it, make it your own! This book has everything you need. It has cultural and historical points, too ; like, why is Bangkok called Bangkok? And why is the Thai word for Bangkok not "Bangkok"? (the Thai word for Bangkok is "GrOOng-tayp" which means "city of angels"... Los Angeles?) Thai people are super friendly and most people will speak Thai with you if you try even just a little bit. Get the book and go to Thailand. Now.
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