You're no idiot, of course. You appreciate wine and brie, can pronounce "croissant," and know that "bonjour" means hello. But when it comes to actually learning the language, you feel stranded on the Eiffel Tower with no way down. Don't strap on your parachute just yet! The Complete Idiot's Guide to Learning French, Second Edition makes mastering French fun and entertaining--instead of bogging you down with verb tenses and vocabulary lists. You'll feel confident about "parlaying" your new proficiency into conversations with native speakers. In this Complete Idiot's Guide, you
This is an idiot's guide, it is not a textbook or a Pimsleur course or a phrasebook... But it kind of tries to be something in the middle of all three.
I definitely learnt things from the book, but not as much as I had hoped, and it felt a bit all over the place (though this is a style that idiot's guides tend to use).
It was good, if I saw a second hand copy I would buy it for my reference shelf, but I wouldn't spend money on a new copy.
I wish I would have had this book a few months ago when my nephew decided to take French and then brought his homework over to me since I took French in college in the early 1990's.
Est-ce que je peux vous aider? (May I help you?) This book might be the helper that you need to fake it until you make it in French.
Maybe I am not a complete idiot, like I thought I was when I bought this book. I bought it and tried to study it. It wasn't helpful for me. I lived in Paris at the time and this specific book, which was written by a polyglot who has taught French for many years, confused me. The way she structured the grammar explanations, as well as the exercises she provided, were not enough. I really couldn't understand why at the time, but for me it was a jumble. She interjects small anecdotes from her own life, I guess to make the book less formal, and I was trusting that since she taught French at a high school and I think a university that she had a set manner of getting the information across, but the whole time I had that book, I didn't progress at all. I think I did learn that j'ai with a verb meant the past simple, and I think I understood a little bit the past progressive, but for me the book really had me confused for months. I actually felt like I must be stupid since I could not get it. However, there are other books, grammar books which presented the language much clearer, which were much more useful to me when I finally had the sense to stop trying to learn with this book. I even bought miniature travel translation books for Czech and a travel guide for Thailand which were not language books (the Czech had useful phrases and a dictionary) but they were much more useful (for helping with their respective languages) than this book to learn French.
I decided to learn french, although I have no idea why. This book has been really helpful in explaining everything and does an excellent job of spelling everything out phonetically! I have come to appreciate it very much.
Nice way to get a quick summary of French. It must have done something, because I can now understand some basic conversation stuff and the majority of what I've read in passing.