French text books
#1
Original Poster
Joined: Jan 2004
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French text books
We're headed to Paris late September for a week, and I'm trying to find a couple of recommendations for the old beginner/intermediate text books I had used in college French - It's been a while, but I think I learned best from these resources, as opposed to the "conversational" varieties that are out in CD, DVD, etc. now. Can anyone recommend a few good solid texts to help refresh my memory for this beautiful language? My pronunciation has always been fine - just need to recall the basics.
Thanks!!
Thanks!!
#2
Joined: Jan 2004
Posts: 113
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Hi, I'm an elementary school French teacher (gr.4-6) and I use the following website to discuss grammar points with my students - they love the cartoons but also get the grammar points:
laits.utexas.edu/tex/
Sorry, I don't use textbooks very often anymore, but the Rick Steves French dictionary has a lot of useful information, even my students sometimes use it. It's very portable as well.
Bonne chance et bon voyage!
laits.utexas.edu/tex/
Sorry, I don't use textbooks very often anymore, but the Rick Steves French dictionary has a lot of useful information, even my students sometimes use it. It's very portable as well.
Bonne chance et bon voyage!
#3

Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 2,796
Likes: 0
Salut, Katietwin. No books to recommend, but I do love this website: http://french.about.com/. Not only can you look up any grammar point that needs work (I have the subjunctive bookmarked)but there are also quizzes, games, MBs, 'mots du jour,' etc.Give it a try, & enjoy your trip. Maybe we'll cross paths in Paris two months from now!
#5
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 409
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Grammaire Progressive du Francais isbn: 2.09.033854.7
Hi, this is my recommendation for French texts; it was used in two different French schools that I attended in the past two years. There is a series, I think with beginners and intermediate levels; one book is devoted to grammar, the other, I think perhaps to vocabulary. It's written by French people, so I find it more authentic than American texts. You could probably order ith through Amazon, but I would do it soon, given that it would probably have to be shipped from France.
Bon chance! In the meantime, I would recommend logging onto French in Action on the internet, because I think that it's very good, and offers a critical aural component.
Bon chance!
letour
Hi, this is my recommendation for French texts; it was used in two different French schools that I attended in the past two years. There is a series, I think with beginners and intermediate levels; one book is devoted to grammar, the other, I think perhaps to vocabulary. It's written by French people, so I find it more authentic than American texts. You could probably order ith through Amazon, but I would do it soon, given that it would probably have to be shipped from France.
Bon chance! In the meantime, I would recommend logging onto French in Action on the internet, because I think that it's very good, and offers a critical aural component.
Bon chance!
letour
#6

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 35,163
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I know what you mean, I still think my college French text is superior to any subsequent course or method. I had a very good text, though, and it is the best language text I've had (and I've studied 3 formally). That is one co-authored by two professors at my alma mater, UCLA -- "Langue and Langage" by Oreste Pucciani and Jacqueline Hamel. I'm sure you can find that available online, new or used. It had a companion set of language lab tapes, also, which were good.
(letour, that is "bonne chance", by the way. There is agreement between a noun and adjective in gender. It just really bothers me whenever people butcher that simple phrase who say they have studied French. It also affects pronunciation).
(letour, that is "bonne chance", by the way. There is agreement between a noun and adjective in gender. It just really bothers me whenever people butcher that simple phrase who say they have studied French. It also affects pronunciation).
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Jul 25th, 2005 05:31 AM




