In Lesson 05 you will learn how to introduce your family
Huffduffed from http://radiolingua.com/2007/11/lesson-05-coffee-break-french/
In Lesson 05 you will learn how to introduce your family
Huffduffed from http://radiolingua.com/2007/11/lesson-05-coffee-break-french/
In Lesson 04 you will learn how to say where you live.
Huffduffed from http://radiolingua.com/2007/10/lesson-04-coffee-break-french/
In Lesson 03 you will learn how to say where you’re from.
Huffduffed from http://radiolingua.com/2007/10/lesson-03-coffee-break-french/
In Lesson 02 you will learn how to greet people at different times of the day and how to say your name.
Huffduffed from http://radiolingua.com/2007/10/lesson-02-coffee-break-french/
First lesson in the Coffee Break French series
Huffduffed from http://radiolingua.com/2007/09/lesson-01-coffee-break-french/
A story of a collective linguistic experiment in which a clever Scotsman harnesses the power of Twitter for the greater grammatical good.
Tagged with collective nouns allsorts linguistics language twitter
Our top five language stories this month: Why Google Translate rules, and why human translators shouldn’t feel threatened; a weight-loss company advertizes for Product Testing Associates, whose sole task is to eat more food — not the first time an employer has over-egged the job title pudding; there’s evidence that certain accents are less welcome than others in corporate boardrooms; India’s economic rise and linguistically mixed marriages mean that fewer young Indians speak the languages of their parents; and French citizens vote on new words for “buzz”, “chat”, and “newsletter.”
Tagged with language translation accents linguistics google