French fluency II
Book Details
Author(s)Alexandre Pelletier
ISBN / ASINB006VJHS5E
ISBN-13978B006VJHS51
Sales Rank2,070,974
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
This book is for all those who have learned French in a tradition classroom setting or in a book, understand French grammar, but still can't have a conversation with French people or understand French television.
What most people lack to become completely fluent is the understanding of pronunciation patterns and all the colloquial/slang words & expressions the French use on a daily basis. There is not a single better place to learn all these words and expressions than in French fluency II. This is the secret to French fluency. The second part of my method will allow you to speak like the French and fully understand them. This is the content of what you might have learned after spending at least a year in France. The MP3 files are among the greatest features of this method and can be obtained at www.frenchfluency.org. Each sentence is pronounced slowly, and fast, the way a French person would pronounce it in a conversation (letters or whole words are skipped, and new sounds are sometimes created from the blending of two consonants). To know more about the author, visit www.monprofesseur.org.
What most people lack to become completely fluent is the understanding of pronunciation patterns and all the colloquial/slang words & expressions the French use on a daily basis. There is not a single better place to learn all these words and expressions than in French fluency II. This is the secret to French fluency. The second part of my method will allow you to speak like the French and fully understand them. This is the content of what you might have learned after spending at least a year in France. The MP3 files are among the greatest features of this method and can be obtained at www.frenchfluency.org. Each sentence is pronounced slowly, and fast, the way a French person would pronounce it in a conversation (letters or whole words are skipped, and new sounds are sometimes created from the blending of two consonants). To know more about the author, visit www.monprofesseur.org.
