What methods would you use?
What sources?
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What sources?
Etc...
LazyNomad Wrote:After finishing and mastering RTK1,2,3 does it worth to learn through RTH and RSH?I'm up above 200 in RTH and I've already come across 20 or so that are not in RTK 1 or 3.
LazyNomad Wrote:After finishing and mastering RTK1,2,3 does it worth to learn through RTH and RSH?Only you can know this . Here's how you can tell.
Womacks23 Wrote:Do you guys know of any kind of large bank of Chinese sentences with audio like the core 6000 series?Smartfm has an entire mandarin-chinese course.
deathtrap Wrote:Go buy Remember Simplified Hanzi or Remembering Traditional Hanzi. This will help you learn and memorize the characters immensely. Start doing 20 or however many you want per day, just be consistent and do it every day.I was about to write all of this, but I was beaten to it. I agree with everything said here.
Download the software called Anki so that you can review the characters.
Go get a free account at ChinesePod.com and start with the newbie lessons. Start from lesson one in the Newbie section. Listen to the podcasts and look at the dialogue transcript. At first you'll be thinking "wtf is this" , but after studying a number of lessons it'll start to click on its own. Just be sure to fully study each lesson, don't move on to the next one until you understand what each word means. After you study about 50 lessons or so expect to ramp up your pace of studying since there will be little new grammar from that point on and it'll just be about learning the few new vocab in each lesson.
deathtrap Wrote:What exactly do phrases like "one year under the belt" mean? Is it university classes? highschool classes? self study? if it's classes then how many hours per week would qualify for "one year" ?No need to nitpick; I think gyuujuice just means to have at least some exposure to Chinese before you start.
LazyNomad Wrote:Thanks for replies. What about meanings of the same kanji? Is there a lot of difference between RTK and RTH?When I first approached using RTH, I had similar thoughts/questions as you. Let me explain how I personally went through deciding the best approach.
zer0range Wrote:Also, I would recommend not learning how to write both systems. Pick one that you will write (they both have pros and cons) and learn how to write that one. Reading the other will come through exposure and frequent lookups.I second zerOrange's suggestion - it's better to learn one system well and the other one will eventually fall into place.
lagwagon555 Wrote:All that's holding me back is pronunciation (certainly seems a heck of alot harder than Japanese, and without a teacher I don't really know how I'll fare)The FSI Pronunciation and Romanization module, while dry as hell, is still the best thing I've ever seen for pronunciation. You'll need P&R tapes 1-6 and the Resource Module (PDF). Drill these few lessons for about a week or so, and you'll have good pronunciation.
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