Learn Conversational Greek Vol. 1 & 2 Bundle cover art

Learn Conversational Greek Vol. 1 & 2 Bundle

Lessons 1-50. For Beginners

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Learn Conversational Greek Vol. 1 & 2 Bundle

By: LinguaBoost
Narrated by: LinguaBoost
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About this listen

Learn Conversational Greek Vol. 1 & 2 is an audio course for beginners or for anyone who struggles with becoming fluent in Greek. The focus of this course is to practice speaking conversational Greek from the very first lesson. Each lesson contains useful everyday phrases related to a specific topic.

Based on techniques and strategies that make language learners succeed:

Learn in short bursts every day. Each lesson takes about 10-15 minutes to complete.

Learn in context. Isolated words or random sentences won’t get you far. By learning phrases related to a specific topic or situation, you will see much better results.

Focus on high-frequency words. Starting with the most frequently used words will boost your comprehension and communication in your target language.

Review the material. Repeating the phrases at certain specified intervals is a powerful technique to help your memory absorb and recall what you have learned.

Listen to native speakers. All the phrases are translated and spoken by native speakers.

©2019 LinguaBoost (P)2022 LinguaBoost
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All stars
Most relevant
This course is excellent value and, for practice, I thought that it taught pronunciation well. There is a free written version to download from Linguaboost and this helps a lot when the more complex/difficult words are spoken. Why I have given less stars than 5 is because it approaches verbs and past and present tense without explaining conjugation or past and present and by putting them within the general phrases so you learn these parrot fashion. This is confusing and hard to recall for a first-time learner. It becomes difficult to transpose the verbs so you can use them in different instances/situations. And sometimes they are inaccurate. For example, by Chapter 14, they repeat phrases with "episkefto" and "pigaino" translating them both to mean "visit". As a new learner by this time you've already grasped that "pigaino" means to go, so why state, without explanation, that they both mean visit? On the whole, not a waste of credits but approach with caution.

Good Value But Average Teaching

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