Saturday, October 25, 2008
Chinese Studies - spoken chinese -
> Learning Chinese > Speaking and Listening
spoken chinese
Home New Posts
Login: Pass: Log in or register for standard view and full access.
buanryoh -
I was wondering if anyone could give me some tips on improving my spoken chinese, not tones,
conversational (i already know around 3000 characters and I'm not sure how many words) without
actually have anyone to respond to what I saw. Basically, I want to improve my Chinese without
having anyone to respond, as I don't currently live in China. Any ideas?
Thanks!
Buanryoh
Pleco Software Learn Chinese with our Dictionaries for Palm and Pocket PC.
Learn Chinese in China Learn to speak Chinese 1MonthChinese.com -Mandarin School in China.
Chinese Textbooks Wide range, cheap, varied languages. Also Chinese cartoons, toys, gifts.
Study Chinese in Beijing Affordable Mandarin language courses at BLCU with ChinaUnipath.com.
HNHSoft Dictionary Learn Chinese on Smartphone and PDA with real person's voice.
XueXueXue IQChinese Get beyond the plateau.Take your Mandarin to a new level.
Chinese in Lijiang Short term Chinese study in a beautiful town with a focus on daily life.
MandarinTube Chinese Access to current everyday Chinese language and culture, 24/7.
Learn Chinese Homestay Chinese course, cultural activities & volunteer events in China.
Learn Chinese Online 1-on-1 instant tutoring, diverse courses, native teachers. FREE trial now!
Nihao Chinese Progam Free one-on-one Chinese lesson. Win 5-years of free lessons now!
About Ads (and how to hide them) -- Your message here
Koneko -
I think, language acquisition requires interactive involvements.
Of course, you can improve your Chinese without having anyone to respond by verbal repetition,
practising yourself in front of a mirror, etc. But you could progress much quicker if you have the
right environment, say studying in China, having Chinese-speaking friends etc.
K.
OneEye -
Find someone that speaks Chinese and make a point of meeting up every once in a while to practice.
It doesn't have to be a real tutor per se, just a friend or someone willing to help. Once I know
enough to actually converse, there's a guy that owns a Chinese restaurant down the street from me
that is willing to talk to me for a few minutes a few times per week. There's also a Chinese
book/DVD/CD store a couple towns away and the owner teaches me something new every time I go in. I
work in a restaurant, and there are a few Chinese families that request my section when they come
in because I make an effort to say a few phrases to them in their language. They tip quite well
for it, too.
The point is to find someone that doesn't mind helping. It should be do-able.
randall_flagg -
try thinking in chinese. when you walk to the subway, brush your teeth, wait for your toast to pop
out of the toaster, try to actively think in chinese. try it, you'll be suprised!
flameproof -
Read a lot (for fun, not learning material)
Listen a lot (i.e. the Antiwave podcasts)
Watch some Chinese TV, maybe "Pink Lady / 粉红女郎" (Sex & The City, Shanghai style)
Chat online (use QQ, it's also great for voice chat, 99.9% of users are Chinese)
Do whatever you like to do, but in Chinese
ange9s -
You'd be surprised at how many Chinese people in your area would be willing to speak with you in
Chinese if you help them with English as well. Try putting up a note on any local university
bulletin boards, I'll bet you'll get responses.
buanryoh -
Thanks for the help, must of the mentioned methods I am already carrying out, but it just seems
like I am not improving as fast as I want. I found 粉红女郎 on PPstream, so I'm watching that
at the moment!
Marc
Hero Doug -
If you want to work on fluency take a couple pieces of A4 and divide them into equal pieces
(something like a business card).
Write a word on each piece, put them together and shuffel them up. Make sure each work is face up
read to be read (so you can just flip through them).
Look at the first word and start talking (in Chinese of course), include that word in whatever
you're saying as quickly as possible and go on to the second word and include that as possible.
Just get through as many words as you can as quickly as you can and create the story as you go.
The idea is to learn how to recall the words quickly and speed up fluency.
All times are GMT +8. The time now is 04:23 PM.
Learn Chinese, Learning Chinese, Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing,
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment