Learn To Speak German Pdf Download
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We are all different. Some people prefer to use the latest technology when learning a foreign language while others still like paper textbooks that they can read in a pleasant environment somewhere on the beach or in bed. In fact, many German textbooks are available online as free downloadable PDFs (they usually open in the browser but can be saved to your disk). They are ideal for practicing grammar skills and improving vocabulary and reading comprehension. In addition, samples of various German language exams can also be downloaded from the Internet for free as PDF files.
Please note that this overview only includes German learning materials in PDF format available for FREE download. There obviously are tons of language teaching materials in PDFs or other user friendly formats that you can buy at Amazon or iTunes. For other types of free learning materials check out other sections of this website.
FluentU makes it possible to learn from authentic videos, which are the type that native German speakers actually watch. This includes movie clips, entertaining commercials, interesting talks, vlogs and other native content.
arrow_drop_down1: Hello! Free Listen to "Lesson 1: Hello!" on Spreaker. file_download Audio file_download PDF arrow_drop_down2: Who is this? Free Listen to "Lesson 2: Who is this?" on Spreaker.file_download Audio file_download PDF arrow_drop_down3: Where do you live? Free Listen to "Lesson 3: Where do you live?" on Spreaker.file_download Audio file_download PDF arrow_drop_down4: Where do you live? pt.2 Free Listen to "Lesson 4: Where do you live? pt 2" on Spreaker.file_download Audio file_download PDF arrow_drop_down5: What do you like to do? Free Listen to "Lesson 5: What do you like to do?" on Spreaker.file_download Audio file_download PDF arrow_drop_downReview lessons 1 to 5 Free Listen to "Review of lessons 1 to 5" on Spreaker.file_download Audio file_download PDF lock6: What do you like to do? pt.2 lock7: What do you like to eat? lock8: Do you go out much? lock9: What are you doing? lock10: What are you doing? pt.2 lockReview lessons 6 to 10 lockListening Comprehension: Lessons 1 to 10 lock11: Are you married? lock12: How old are you? lock13: Do you have children? lock14: Travel and vacation lock15: Where is...? lockReview lessons 11 to 15 lock16: What did you do today? lock17: What did you do today? pt.2 lock18: What do you do? lock19: What's the weather like? lock20: How was the weather? lockReview lessons 16 to 20 lockListening Comprehension: Lessons 11 to 20 lock21: Where are you? lock22: Where were you yesterday? lock23: Where were you yesterday? pt.2 lock24: Can you speak... ? lock25: Can you speak... ? pt.2 lockReview lessons 21 to 25 lock26: How often do you...? lock27: How often do you...? pt.2 lock28: How was your week? lock29: Opinions lock30: Time (and day) to talk lockReview lessons 26 to 30 lockListening Comprehension: Lessons 21 to 30
Politics, English, and the Hungarian-English Dictionary: The Work of László Országh JohnJablonski From late 1984 to 1987, I was fortunate enough to work as the Cultural Affairs Officer at the United States Embassy in Budapest, Hungary, during a fascinating time in its history. Life in Eastern Europe, especially in Hungary, was improving: exchanges of people and ideas were developing rapidly, western books and media were well represented. It was almost as if communism had died earlier than 1989, though there were still restrictions on intellectual freedom. For example, party members seemed to receive scholarships to study abroad more easily than non-party members, and, even though it was perfectly legal to subscribe to National Geographic, the September 1980 issue that discussed Afghanistan and its Soviet occupation in the early 1980s mysteriously was not delivered. As part of my training before going to post, I learned Hungarian and bought two volumes of the four-volume Hungarian-English dictionary . The name on the cover was Országh, and I paid no particular attention to it. After all, I did not seek to learn anything about Cassell or Langenscheidt when I was studying German. Besides Országh without the h means 'country'. When I arrived in Budapest, in late 1984, 1 had no idea that die dictionary's author had died in January of die same year, that I had entered Hungary as though landing in London in 1785, after the deatii of Dr. Johnson. Fortunately, my work brought me into contact with László Országh's former students: the country was, and still is, teeming with Boswells. I first learned about Országh as a lexicographer from Myron Simon, who in 1984-85 was a Fulbright LecDictionaries :Journal oftheDictionary Society ofNorth America 24 (2003) 228John Jablonski turer at Országh's university in Debrecen and who first referred (at least to me) to Országh "the Dr. Johnson of Hungary." Until this time, I had no idea that there was a link between the dictionary and the man. When I met Országh's former students, I was impressed by die reverence that they showed toward their teacher, everybody referring to him as Professor Országh, despite the fact, as I learned much later, that he helped students financially and even sent hand-written letters of good wishes to former students on die occasion tiieir marriages or die birtiis of children. As my time in Hungary drew on, I picked up anecdotes of Országh and have tried to piece together an American's reminiscence of a great lexicographer whom I never met. My work took me to what was then the Kossuth Lajos University in Debrecen, a city on the eastern border close to Romania, on the verge of Transylvania. My "contacts" all worked in die Department of English, of which Országh had been head until his retirement in 1969. A large picture of him hung in what used to be his office: even after his death, he was a presence. His students are among the finest teachers and scholars of English and American studies in Hungary, and all speak glowingly of their teacher. I wondered what it was like to be a scholar during the "bad old days," when students of western topics were, at the very least, discouraged, when travel to English-speaking countries was all but impossible for students, and when books in English were difficult to get, eitiier because tiiey were too expensive or were confiscated. Országh stands out as a singular figure in Hungary: he was a scholar and teacher in an officially unpopular discipline, a world-renowned lexicographer , and he represented the politics under which Hungarians had to work in order to claim the right to participate in the intellectual currents that had occupied them for over 1,000 years. László Országh was born in Szombathely, a city on the western border, in October 1907, and studied both English and German at the Pázmány Péter University in Budapest. Students of English at the time were encouraged to study in England, since it was relatively close, and ties between the two countries were strong. Orsz...
If you enjoyed German Short Stories for Beginners, it's time to level up now that you're an advanced German student! This audiobook includes 10 more captivating short stories read by native German speakers. The stories involve real-life relatable situations so that you can learn the vocabulary and phrases and use them in your everyday life. The most exciting part about listening to these stories? Now that you've been studying German, you'll notice that you can understand the stories with minimal effort and really enjoy listening!
Loving learning more German through storytelling? Check out Mord am Morgen, a fun and engaging detective story for advanced German learners. Follow the story of Kommissar Baumgartner and Kommissarin Momsen as they solve a small town murder mystery and banter with one another in German along the way. This audiobook is narrated in a conversational style, at the speed that native German speakers generally speak, but spoken clearly for German learners to understand.
Complete your journey with the Pimsleur Method in Pimsleur German Level 3. The final 30 lessons of the Pimsleur program build on what you have learned in Level 1 and 2, with an emphasis on pronunciation and comprehension, so you can understand and speak the German language with confidence. 2b1af7f3a8