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Language is Music: Over 100 Fun and Easy Tips to How to Learn a Foreign Languages by Susanna Zaraysky EPUB [EN] screenshot
2009 | Create Your World Books | ISBN: 9780982018958 | 307 KB | 102 Pages | EPUB
Language is Music focuses on making learning foreign languages fun, easy and affordable for anyone with a desire to communicate effectively with people around the world. By applying over 100 simple tips to things you already do, such as listening to music or surfing the Web, you can experience the joy of "fluency" in any language without having to study abroad or spend money on private tutors.

In Language is Music, Susanna Zaraysky masterfully shares her listening methods so that anyone can have fun learning any language. With over 100 tips and 100 free or low-cost Internet resources, you will learn how to use daily activities, such as watching T.V. or listening to music; conversation partners; and attendance at cultural events to become a masterful speaker of any tongue. "Learning foreign languages is like learning to sing a song or play music," says self-made linguist Susanna Zaraysky and author of Language is Music. Zaraysky has what you might call "an ear" for languages, having used music to successfully learn English, Russian, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Ladino and Serbo-Croatian-all with excellent accents.


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comments

  Resident 21.04.2014 1805
+392
It seems to me to be a book of personal experience and some tips. The author takes a single example and creates rules for things, which worked maybe to her.

The title "Language is Music", confuses the reader.

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When you find yourself devoid of topics, the instinct is to pen a book with that very title. And so, this literary endeavor, a product of desperation, finds its way to the book graveyard—a place where forgotten ideas and abandoned dreams gather dust.

There was a time, not so long ago, perhaps up until the 1980s, when books written in English held an unparalleled credibility across the globe. They were the gold standard, the beacon of knowledge and culture. But those days seem to have faded into the background, overshadowed by the cacophony of modernity.

Today, the landscape is different. The art of mixing—whether it be blending musical genres or intertwining languages—has become a desperate attempt to capture attention. It’s akin to grasping for a last chance to sell a book in a world where most people scroll past titles without a second glance. The once revered written word now competes with fleeting digital content, and the depth of literature often gets lost in the noise.

In this era, the literary plethora that once commanded respect now struggles for relevance. The irony is palpable: as we strive to connect through diverse mediums, the essence of storytelling seems to slip further away. The book graveyard, once a metaphor for failure, now serves as a reminder of a time when words held power, and the act of reading was a cherished ritual.

As we navigate this new reality, one can’t help but wonder: will the written word ever reclaim its place, or will it continue to fade into the background, a relic of a bygone era?
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