Read more
Informationen zum Autor Michel Thomas (1914-2005) had an amazing life. Born in Poland, he spent his early years in Germany and then in France, where he studied psychology at the Sorbonne in Paris. When war broke out, he fought with the Resistance and suffered imprisonment in labour camps. At the end of the war he joined the US liberation army and later settled in the US where he established his world-famous language school. Languages, being his strength and passion became the focus of the next 50 years of his life that he spent developing a method that he hoped would change the way we teach and learn - so that everyone could succeed. He developed this method 'that works with the brain'. After creating several courses of his own, he passed on his method so that other teachers might use it too. Natasha Bershadski studied at Moscow State Linguistic University and has taught at King's College London, University College London, and in the FCO Diplomatic Service. She is the author of all Michel Thomas Russian courses and co-author of Colloquial Russian (Routledge). Natasha Bershadski studied at Moscow State Linguistic University and has taught at King's College London, University College London, and in the FCO Diplomatic Service. She is the author of all Michel Thomas Russian courses and co-author of Colloquial Russian (Routledge). Klappentext The original no-books! no-homework! no-memorizing course that gets you speaking and understanding Russian in weeks! not years. The revolutionary! stress-free Michel Thomas Method is in tune with the way the brain prefers to receive! store and retrieve information. It has helped over 5 million people learn a language. Zusammenfassung The original no-books, no-homework, no-memorizing course that gets you speaking and understanding Russian in weeks, not years. The revolutionary, stress-free Michel Thomas Method is in tune with the way the brain prefers to receive, store and retrieve information. It has helped over 5 million people learn a language. Inhaltsverzeichnis : Ways of forming the plural of nouns : Adjectives with various endings: forming adjectives from English cognates and Russian roots : More short adjectives (noun-like endings): 'You are right', 'I will do it myself' : Describing things/places: 'What/what kind of city is it?' : Giving directions: 'Go to the right/left/straight on' : Endings/suffixes to form nouns: -tura, -nik, (sputnik), -nost (glasnost), etc. : The meaning of prefixes used for forming nouns and verbs: po- with verbs = to do a little/for a while (to read for a while - pochitat'); v - in, into; vy - out, out of; pere- (perestroika) = re-, over, etc. : Families of words formed from the same root: prav, chas, etc. : Various prepositions: v - in/into; na - on/onto; k - towards/in the direction of; po - along, according to; s - with, etc. : Expressing one's need, interest, wish: 'I need a car with an air conditioner', 'The director needs a good secretary' : Giving/asking for advice: 'I advise / recommend you to buy this' : Buying / paying for things: 'How much is this?' : Passive constructions: 'I was told/given/shown', 'Where is ... sold?', 'How is it spelled/read?' 'as they say ...' : 'In order to ... (know /understand, etc.)' : 'I want you to do this' : Time expressions: always, often, usually, as usual, just, temporarily : Food: 'I don't eat meat', 'tea with milk', etc : Likes and dislikes: 'I like pizza'/ I like the pizza' : Colours : Days of the week (+ user guide): 'I don't work on Saturday' : Months (+ user guide): 'in May' : Countries (+ the user guide) : Subjects: 'I'm studying history' : Transport: 'We are going by car' : Going verbs: 'I am going to the cinema ...