This is a thorough and expanded revision of Speak Chinese, by M. Gardner Tewksbury (1948), following two decades of classroom use. The twenty-four lessons of the earlier text have been regrouped into twenty, with the original vocabulary of 750 items increased to 850. Use of Speak Chinese disclosed a need for more exercises both for student use in preparing the lesson and for classroom use by the teacher; this revision therefore includes both a Student Workbook and a Teacher's Manual. The objective of the textbook is to present the basic structural patterns of colloquial Mandarin. The vocabulary is used in a series of dialogues from everyday life. No Chinese characters are used in this text; the Yale romanization is used throughout and the student's attention is concentrated on the new sounds, words, and patterns of the language. The spoken language is written in polysyllabic "words," as they are normally spoken, and not as monosyllabic characters, which helps the student to acquire the rhythm of the phrase as well as the pronunciation of the syllable.
This is the book I used when I first learned Chinese. It is a rather boring book to look at, but it is so straightforward that, with tapes or a native speaker to help you, you can make real progress rather quickly. The Yale romanization poses no problem as it is close enough to pinyin to make later adjustments quite easy. In my mind it's the best there is - and I've tried them all just about.
A great beginner book for training new students of Mandarin.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
This book was the primary text to my course in college. Within weeks, students developed small, but functional speaking vocabularies. Though the Yale system of romanization is used for this book, its phonetic system properly trains the vocals for Beijing Mandarin. It is personally felt that after first learning Yale romanization, conversion to Pinyin and Wade-Jiles is a simple adjustment which creates a more universal Mandarin Chinese Student.
Good study book for spoken Chinese
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 27 years ago
This is a good grammar text book for spoken Mandarin Chinese. It gives lots of examples, drills and grammar explanations in its twenty lessons. It uses an outmoded phonetic spelling system developed during WWII by Yale University which is similar to the the widespread Pin Yin phonetic spelling. This Yale romanization is actually designed for the English tongue, so it seems more natural to pronounce than Pin Yin, but since not many places teach it, it's of limited use.
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