HomeCookbooksMexican CookbooksThe Everything Learning Brazilian Portuguese Book: Speak, Write, and Understand Basic Portuguese in No Time (Everything: Language and Literature) |
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73 of 78 found the following review helpful:
Great intro to the language! Dec 19, 2008
By Andrea N. It's nice that there actually is an affordable and effective book for a beginner to learn quite a bit of Brazilian Portuguese. I thought this book was really well organized and a solid introduction to the language. There are exercises throughout the book as well to practice what you learned. There is also an audio CD which is helpful (A native Brazilian speaker repeats words and phrases which are also written in the book). The chapters are:
1)Introducing the Portuguese Language (Why learn it, similarities to Spanish, European Portuguese vs. Brazilian Portuguese, tips on learning Portuguese, recognizing what you already know) 2)The Sounds of Portuguese (Portuguese alphabet, accent marks, listening practice, consonants, stress pattern in Portuguese, oral and nasal vowels, typing in Portuguese) 3)Beginning Conversation (Greetings, talking on the phone, saying goodbye, etc) 4)Nouns, Articles, and Contractions 5)Introducing "ser" (the verb "to be") 6)Introducing "estar" (the other verb meaning "to be") 7)Describing People and Things in Portuguese 8)The Vocabulary of Numbers 9)First Conjugation Verbs 10)Second Conjugation Verbs 11)Important Verbs to Know 12)Verb Tenses: an Overview 13)More Verbs 14)Negative Words and Constructions 15)Questions and Exclamations 16)The Future and Other Tenses 17)Imperative and Subjunctive Constructions 18)Carnaval, Samba, Feijoada, and Futebol (Brazilian culture!) 19)Means of Communication (In person, by mail, making phone calls) 20)Traveling to Samba-Land (getting papers in order, hotel reservations, currency, a bit of information about the most popular cities...)
I was mostly looking to learn the language, not the culture, and this book is indeed mostly teaching the language. I liked the bits of information about the culture though in this book and found it interesting.
I definitely recommend this as a book to start off with to anyone serious about learning the language. I went through this while going through Pimsleur lessons for Portuguese and found it to be a great supplement to my learning (In my opinion, Pimsleur goes at quite a slow pace and this book helped me learn more about grammar in a shorter amount of time, as well as expressions, etc, without going at too fast a pace). I recommend it to travelers only if they want to spend some extra time learning a bit more than they absolutely "need".
46 of 50 found the following review helpful:
kindle version? Mar 17, 2009
By Cesar Trujillo
"Cesar"
without the CD I'm not sure this book will be that great. Amazon has a great product with the Kindl but I don't think 9.99 is a good value for this book since it is missing half the content...the audio part. So unless the publisher offers the audio portion as a free download with this Kindle version, then Amazon needs to come up with a way to blend these two mediums in the future.
22 of 23 found the following review helpful:
Effective, but not great! Nov 26, 2009
By ALICE Good book. You will learn the basics in portuguese. That being said, it's a very slow method: you will have to reach page 58 to learn "to be" (present tense) in portuguese. Moreover, each lesson begin with a very basic grammar explanation (what is a noun?, what is an article?). I find it a bit condescending (the author could have assumed that her readers went to elementary school). The CD is very helpful. I would not buy the book without it.
15 of 17 found the following review helpful:
Not for Travelers Nov 10, 2010
By Richard L Johns 'In No Time?' If you are a traveler or casual visitor to Brazil, this book is not for you. It is aimed at someone who plans to master some level of fluency far beyond basic communication. For travel or quickly learning basic, useful phrases you will be disappointed by the 'Everything' approach.
I just returned from 10 days near Sao Paulo and found that I relied on phrases learned from English speaking Brazilians and upon my basic Spanish skills far more than what I derived from 'The Everything Learning Brazilian Portuguese Book'. I found that a reasonable number of locals speak some Spanish although less English.
The CD section of the book contains about 90 short segments that offer pronunciation and grammar skills, etc. but very few aimed at travelers. The printed book itself I found illogically laid out, especially for the casual or quick learner. I found that the format of the book works against speedy learning of the language.
Bottom line: Brazil visitors/travelers, seek elsewhere. If you wish to invest the time to develop advanced competency in Brazilian Portuguese, you may find this book helpful. The 'In No Time" promise from the front cover is very misleading. You will need to invest a significant amount of time to develop conversational or written skills.
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Good tool for the do-it-yourself learner Jun 10, 2011
By casdea I have just got it, but I have to say that is seems like a useful tool for the disciplined learner who wants to study at home without a tutor or without having to go to a formal classroom set to learn the language. I like the voice and accent of the speaker in the CD as well. It's close to what I would call a "standard" accent.She may be from São Paulo. The quality of the audio could be better though. At times it sounds as though she is almost whispering the words instead of speaking them clearly and enthusiastically. I especially liked the chapter on the sounds of Portuguese because they compare it with the sounds of English words. This helps learners whose L1 is English.
See all 23 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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