Assimil Perfezionamento Tedesco Pdf Reader
Rotasu wrote:I do the same thing with Assimil but i put them in a text file so I can read and highlight on my phone with Jade Reader:3 I also need to find the time to actively study listening x.x Well, once I get a smartphone I'll do pretty much the same thing. As for listening, I myself neglected the files that come with Assimil. They are just soooo slow, I'm hoping in higher units they start talking normally. --- Here's a question I've just started wondering: to what level does Assimil get you? And what to do after Assimil?
I got some old intermediate level courses I downloaded, but most of them I never heard of since they're names are in Japanese and I've spent more time finding a good beginner course. (At work so cant check) On my log, someone posted a lot of links about Assimil and I think one of them was a post on the old forum about your question. Someone tested it out and I think they got to B1.
Assimil Superpack PERFEZIONAMENTO DEL RUSSO - Learn. Assimil Perfezionamento del tedesco (German Edition).
Rotasu wrote:I do the same thing with Assimil but i put them in a text file so I can read and highlight on my phone with Jade Reader:3 I also need to find the time to actively study listening x.x Well, once I get a smartphone I'll do pretty much the same thing. As for listening, I myself neglected the files that come with Assimil. They are just soooo slow, I'm hoping in higher units they start talking normally. --- Here's a question I've just started wondering: to what level does Assimil get you?
And what to do after Assimil? I got some old intermediate level courses I downloaded, but most of them I never heard of since they're names are in Japanese and I've spent more time finding a good beginner course. Officially their new Japanese is supposed to get you to B2 but that's really optimistic. They don't offer any 'Perfectionnement Japonais' yet so once you're done with that book you're on your own. Delodephius wrote:The way I have been using Assimil is first I copy the main lesson text into a Word document, so I don't have to look at the Romaji or Furigana. This bit has me confused. Do you mean that you have an electronic (non-scanned) copy of Assimil from which you can copy and paste?
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Or do you OCR the text and copy and paste that? Or are you typing in each Japanese sentence by hand? I'm thinking about typing in example sentences from some of my text books (right now I'm thinking about doing this for 日本語総まとめ N3 文法) but it look slike an awful lot of work (which is why I've been thinking about it rather than typing it in. So I'm interested in what other people do. For the record, most fo my example sentences have been copied and pasted from JPOD101 PDFs and from sources on the net such as. (They do a word of the day, but it seems to repeat after a year, so there's no need to go back too far when sentence mining). So if Assimil is a non-labour-intensive source of fresh sentences, I need to go looking!
Delodephius wrote:The way I have been using Assimil is first I copy the main lesson text into a Word document, so I don't have to look at the Romaji or Furigana. This bit has me confused. Do you mean that you have an electronic (non-scanned) copy of Assimil from which you can copy and paste? Or do you OCR the text and copy and paste that? Or are you typing in each Japanese sentence by hand? I copy by typing it all, by hand, into Word from the PDF. To just select and copy-paste would kinda lessen the effort.
Arnaud wrote:In fact, when you buy the MP3 pack, each sentence is recorded on a different track and you can read the text in the MP3 player, so the text is somewhere in the tag of each mp3 track. I think someone with knowledge in programmation could certainly write a little script to extract the text and paste it in a file. It's ease to extract each sentence with programs like Audacity. As for the text, as I said I prefer copying it by hand. Why do programmers have to go and ruin all the good old hard work?