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French III, Comprehensive: Learn to Speak and Understand French with Pimsleur Language Programs
 
Manufacturer: Pimsleur
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List Price: $345.00
Sale Price: $241.50
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Product Description

Comprehensive French III includes 30 additional lessons (16 hrs.), plus Readings, which build upon the language skills acquired in Levels I and II. Increased spoken and reading language ability.

Level III will increase your vocabulary and grammatical structures and triple your spoken proficiency. Upon completion of a level III, you will be able to:

* participate in most informal and some formal discussions on practical, social, and some semi-professional topics,

* form longer sentences while maintaining the target language syntax,

* be understood even by native speakers unused to dealing with foreigners,

* handle increasingly difficult grammatical structures,

* enjoy fluent conversations with a variety of strangers,

* have a near-native accent, and the subtleties of the language will be apparent in your speech,

* read at the same level at which you speak.

Note: In order for the Pimsleur Method to work correctly, you must first complete the Level I + II language programs before proceeding to the Level III language program.

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Customer Reviews

Still the best for beginners
 
Review Date: September 21, 2005
Reviewer: Steven Mason, California
I have tried a lot of audio methods, and Pimsleur is still the best by far. It is more expensive than most other audio methods, but it really works and it is enjoyable. Perhaps if you learn a language with family and friends and share the material, you can share the cost and practice with others! Or after you have completed the lessons, sell them (if you are generous, donate them to your library). Pimsleur really helps with proper pronunciation and uses a technique that makes what you learn stick in your brain - not any gimmicky memory tricks. Pimsleur covers a lot of basic material, but it does not overload the beginner with vocabulary or grammar - a case of less being more. However, I do wish Pimsleur included a print version of the audio material. At the end of 90 lessons (French I,II, and III), you will not speak at an intermediate level - no audio method can do that - but you will speak easily and well at a beginner level. Doing Pimsleur first, before taking a formal foreign language class, is the best way to go. I can't recommend Pimsleur highly enough.
A wonderful way to continue your knowledge of French
 
Review Date: November 22, 2008
Reviewer: PT Cruiser, CA USA
Have you had the same history of learning a language in the past as I've had? You buy a set of CD's or tapes, listen to the first one or two and find that you can't quite hear the pronunciation of a simple word or phrase. That word builds on other words and phrases and before long you find you don't understand what you thought it meant and the CD's or tapes end up thrown in a drawer never to see the light of day again. Over the years I've accumulated a drawer full of these.

I first met this Pimsleur language courses on a business trip years ago when I needed something interesting to listen to an a 2 hour drive. I bought the "teaser" first 8 lessons of Pimsleur French. These lessons were different than any other language CD I had listened to in the past. The words were completely clear, repeated several times by male and female voices, and there was never a question of what you were hearing or what it meant. Unlike some other language courses, Pimsleur doesn't just teach you phrases, it teaches you what each of the words in the phrase mean and rearranges them in several different contexts. I ended up buying the whole first course and then went on the buy the second and third. The third follows along, just like the first two.

The lessons start with the most commonly spoken phrases and subjects, like greeting someone, asking for directions, telling time, and talking about everyday subjects. The voices are very clear, you never have a question about what was said. And one lesson builds on the previous, adding more phrases and using words from the last lessons combined with new words. These lessons have you participating in conversations right from the start. It forces you to think about the way you put words together to form a sentence. You aren't just parroting back phrases with mysterious words. You're actually thinking in the language, even in the early lessons.

I've always had this fantasy about learning a some French and then just waking up one morning, suddenly speaking and understanding all, as if by magic. Unfortunately it doesn't work that way and you do have to apply yourself to learn, but for me, Pimsleur is the most painless way to learn a language. It doesn't feel like a chore.

The way I went about learning French I, II and III is to take the CD's along whenever I get into the car. The lessons are a little under half an hour each, and even a trip to the store is at least 10 minutes each way, so I get through the better part of a lesson. I can't tell you the number of times I've sat in the driveway after returning home to finish a lesson.

I try to get through one lesson every day or two. Some are more difficult and take several repetitions, some are easy and I can comprehend in a couple listens. What has worked for me is to count the number of errors I make and go on to the next lesson when I make 10 or fewer errors in a lesson. One lesson builds on the next and there is lots of repetition so this has worked very well for me. I also listen on my iPod often when I'm doing some mindless task. It makes the work go faster and I feel like I'm accomplishing two things at once.

Some people have complained about the lack of visuals with Pimsleur. There are a few words that they go over for pronunciation in a little booklet at the end of the lesson, but most of it is audio. I always thought I was a visual learner, but I found that I learn just fine with the audio. And I can find more time to listen than I can to sit down with a book. Of course, I wanted to also read French in order to practice my language skills. After several lessons I bought the Oxford French Mini dictionary that you can find on amazon. It's tiny enough to keep on the side when you're reading a book or magazine, and has over 100,000 words. I looked up a few French newspapers online and practiced reading those. Amazon also carries magazine subscriptions to a couple French magazines and a newspaper which come out weekly. My subscription to Paris Match was interesting enough to keep me reading, sometimes a couple hours per day. And amazon.fr is a whole new world in French. (And to my delight, after logging in there, my "1 click" magically works just like it does here!)

The other complaint I sometimes read about Pimsleur is that it's expensive. For me, I figure you get what you pay for. That drawer full of discarded language tapes and CD's that I couldn't use probably added up over time to a lot more than a Pimsleur course. The Pimsleur courses are fun to use and you actually learn something. The French courses gave me the ability to converse with people when we went to France on everyday type things and even more importantly it gave me enough knowledge of the language to build on it. I highly recommend it.
Excellent Product
 
Review Date: August 11, 2010
Reviewer: Dean Flory, California
Pimsleur French course I II and III are very comprehensive. They provide you with very good pronunciation and you definitely develope and ear for French as it is spoken in France. They introduce new phrases and then put them in common French conversations. They then reintroduce these phrases throughout I, II and III so you definitaly understand them. This increases your confidence two fold. You hear yourself speaking as they speak and you repeat it enought to feel confident speaking everyday French. I will be going to France soon and I will be staying at a little city in Provence. I am looking forward to speaking to the French people there and all of this is because Pimsleur is such an excellent program.
Easy and very thorough
 
Review Date: August 10, 2009
Reviewer: Dorinda, Dallas, Texas
I have ordered all three levels of the Pimsleur French courses through Amazon, and for me, it couldn't be easier. I was taking a French conversation course at the same time in college, and I learned much faster with the Pimsleur method. I listen to the CDs on my early morning walks, while I'm on my bicycle, and in the car to and from work - so I hear and speak French about 2 hours daily. The French III Comprehensive has made it much easier to hear the language as it is spoken in French films (though I struggle with some of the idiomatic expressions), and I can participate eagerly in my French Club with the more advanced French speakers. If you're on a budget, it's great to be able to sell the program through Amazon, when you have completed the course, as I have done. I would give the product five stars but Pimsleur doesn't include a readers manual, only a reference guide. I've listened to other French instruction programs, but I kept returning to Pimsleur.
Pimsleur French III
 
Review Date: June 14, 2010
Reviewer: Carolyn J. Tomlinson, CJT2747
I first purchased Pimseuler's French I in 2004 in preparation for a trip to France in 2005. I was pleased with what I had learned and what I was able to use when I actually needed to speak with someone while in France.

Once I decided to make another trip this coming September (2010), I dusted off French I, finished it, and purchased French II. After finishing that, I bought French III and I'm currently about 1/3 of the way through it.

The length of each lesson is approximately the same as my commute to and from work - 30 minutes by car. I work on each lesson as many times as necessary to get 80-90% of the content before moving onto the next lesson -- usually about 3 or 4 times. Each lesson builds on prior lessons and in addition to review, usually 5-6 new phrases and/or words & concepts are introduced. The program relies on listening and repeating. Some of the content is geared more toward business use than pleasure/tourist use, and more time is spent on the use of formal pronouns than familiar pronouns. However, that is good since one is more likely to use formal pronouns when traveling both for business or as a tourist.

I tried Rosetta Stone, thinking that both the written & spoken lessons would be better, but I really prefer Pimseuler as it is much easier to pronounce the words correctly by ear than when I see them written out.

I recommend the Pimseuler program for anyone who wants to add to their language skills for foreign travel.

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