- Platform: Windows Vista / 2000 / XP, Mac OS X
- Media: CD-ROM
- Item Quantity: 1
Product Details
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Learn Naturally
Learn your next language the same way you learned your first language. Dynamic Immersion empowers you to see, hear and comprehend without translating or memorizing. You already have this ability. Rosetta Stone simply unlocks it.
Engage Interactively
Get feedback to move forward. You learn best by doing, and you'll apply what you've learned to get to the next step. Rosetta Stone adapts to your individual needs and skills, because you drive the program with your progress.
Speak Confidently
Start speaking immediately. From the very first lesson, you'll speak. You'll begin with essential basics, which form the building blocks of the language. Soon you'll create new sentences on your own, using words you've learned.
Have Fun
Best of all, Rosetta Stone is addictive. With every entertaining activity, you'll feel success. You'll want to use Rosetta Stone to have that next moment, that next breakthrough. So you'll keep using it, and you'll learn more!
That's language-learning success.
That's Rosetta Stone.
Think about all of the ways you've tried to learn a language: classes at school, tapes and cassettes, even software that uses your native language as a base for your next one. What do they all have in common? Translation and memorization.
Instead of taking a "direct flight" from your brain to your new language, translation and memorization connects you to your old language. You always have to "fly" from your brain, to your native tongue ... and then translate what you've memorized to communicate.
That might work for a few words, but what happens when you get to a sentence or phrase? When you have to change tenses? You're going to make a lot of "connecting flights." That's why those other methods are so frustrating ... and why they fail.
Enter Dynamic Immersion.
This method encourages you to think like a baby. You'll pair words with vivid, real-life images and make connections between things you know and the new language. Soon, you'll be thinking in a new language, stringing words together into phrases that you create.
Innovative technology.
Rosetta Stone places this Dynamic Immersion method at the core of a suite of software that works with you to develop your skills. The simple, intuitive interface helps to keep you engaged in the solution, while advanced speech recognition technology makes certain that you're speaking correctly and accurately. Best of all, Rosetta Stone never leaves you behind. You'll only move forward when you're ready, when you've become comfortable and confident.
Discover the building blocks and begin your exploration: Levels 1 & 2.
You'll learn a foundation of fundamental vocabulary and language and gain the confidence to master basic conversational skills. You'll move forward and learn to give and get directions, involve yourself in basic social interactions, dine out, use transportation, tell time and more.
Audio Companion
With Audio Companion, you'll enhance the Rosetta Stone experience wherever you go. You'll learn new skills on the computer, and then reinforce what you've learned with Audio Companion. Simply play the CDs on a stereo or download them to a MP3 Player. Each Audio Companion activity corresponds to a lesson in the Rosetta Stone software, so you can turn your travel time into productive language-learning time.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Give it more than thirty minutes and you WILL learn. I did!,
By TM "Y" (SoCal) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Rosetta Stone V3: Arabic Level 1-2 Set with Audio Companion [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
Did either of the other reviewers go past the first lesson? The material after that completely explains that whole first core lesson. These reviews are from lazy people that didn't give it more than thirty minutes. You will learn after 40 minutes and you will learn a ton more after that. The first lesson is nothing to base this software on and I know because I went past that and started understanding the language. These reviews should be revoked in my opinion because it clearly explains everything right after the first core lesson.I took a chance on this software because I had read the bad reviews on amazon. I needed to learn Arabic for my minor and I wanted a head start. Take it from an 19 year old guy who hates learning languages: This software works! I just have level 1 right now, and after only one core lesson and it's follow up lessons (roughly an hours time) I can now identify several verbs, their female/male counterparts, nouns, individual letters, and a lot more to come. This makes learning a language seem obsolete. With Rosetta Stone, you understand the language. You don't need to memorize anything because you begin to associate words, sounds, and letters together with pictures and native speakers to reach a level of comprehension that seems impossible through normal studying. I hate learning languages and this was actually fun. It allows you to work at your own pace and do things as many times as you want until you get it right. Language teachers probably can't learn it because they are too busy with their own methods to be open minded to this software. If you want to learn Arabic, or any other language for that matter, GET ROSETTA STONE! It's made a believer out of a cynic.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Please, please know what you're buying,
By
This review is from: Rosetta Stone V3: Arabic Level 1-2 Set with Audio Companion [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
Please read this before investing in this product.I've studied Arabic for 3 years. I started my Arabic studies with a brief stint using Rosetta Stone, and I'm afraid that the glowing reviews on Amazon are clearly written by people who haven't spent any time in an Arabic-speaking country. The Arabic taught in Rosetta Stone is Al-FusHa, which roughly means "Elegant Arabic". That may sound like a pleasant way to start your studies, but if you wish to actually speak with Arabs, I strongly recommend that you refrain from investing in this product. Let's say you manage to finish the full three-level course. If you were to try and engage someone in conversation on the streets of Cairo or Dubai, you would sound something like this: O Sir! Hast thou the hour? (Translation: What time is it?) Here's the kicker: they will barely, if at all, understand you. If they do understand, they giggle hysterically. Here's the double kicker: You won't understand anyone. At all. The problem is that learning a language requires active use of acquired knowledge by speaking, and the Arabic taught in Rosetta Stone is not spoken ANYWHERE in the Arab world except in prepared news reports by Al-Jazeera. It is a contrived spoken form that is based on the writing system. Rosetta Stone incorporates all the "case endings" which essentially are vowels at the end of each word that denote whether it is the subject, indirect object, direct object, adverb, etc. Case endings are archaic and very rarely spoken. You will spend months un-learning the case endings. Even the vocabulary is outdated. If you want to read the Qur'an, then by all means go for it. However, if communicating with Arabs, rather than translating old texts, is your goal, you should go down the other routes available: 1.) When starting from scratch, you can't do better than the book w/ DVD's Alif-Baa, which teaches the alphabet, basic vocabulary, and verbs. 2.) Pimsleur has good audio courses for Egyptian and Eastern Arabic. Michel Thomas Method Arabic is absolutely excellent but focuses exclusively on Egyptian Arabic (which is the most widely understood dialect), and doesn't teach the writing system. 3.) Google "GLOSS" by the Defense Language Institute. It's totally free and has more Arabic material by dialect than any resource I've found yet. However, it assumes that the learner is at a lower-intermediate level of study. 4.) Sign up for a free account at [...] (by Rosetta Stone) or [...], where you can find Arabs who will be happy to help you if you just help them with their English a little (75% of the users will speak English almost fluently). Plus, they can help answer some of the pesky questions you will come across. Talking via skype is one of the best ways to learn the language without a visa, and it's free. 5.) Al-kitaab fii ta'allum al-'Arabiyya is the best series for learning enough Arabic so that you can effectively communicate with most Arab people. They focus on Formal Spoken Arabic and they have plenty of good information on how the spoken dialects (especially Egyptian) differ from what they're teaching you. It's a classroom textbook, so you MUST buy the Answer Key that is also available on Amazon. Otherwise, you won't know if you're right or wrong about anything. 6.) Buy the Hans Wehr Arabic-English dictionary. There is no getting around this. 7.) Check out the free podcasts on iTunes for Arabic Students. They're pretty good, especially for learning how to phrase things more naturally and understanding flow-of-speech discourse. And finally, the best advice ANYONE can give you about learning Arabic... drum-roll, please... 8.) If you are intent on learning Arabic, the best approach is some combination of the above recommendations that suits your specific goals. Arabic has a vast vocabulary and has some grammatical conventions according to region, so think about how you want to use it. Any combination of the resources listed above will get you further along than RS Arabic at about half the cost or less. In my experience, the reward of learning a new language is the ability to communicate with new people, which no amount of RS Arabic will enable you to do. Lastly, don't shell out about a thousand dollars based on the review of a 19 year old kid who is getting a minor in Arabic. He's going to realize sooner or later that when it comes to communication, the Arabic taught in Rosetta Stone is to Spoken Arabic as a Shakespearean Comedy is to 30 Rock: One is something that is taught in classrooms as funny, whereas the other is something that actually is. Good Luck!
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Rosetta Stone Version 3 Arabic,
By
This review is from: Rosetta Stone V3: Arabic Level 1-2 Set with Audio Companion [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
Rosetta Stone Version 3: Arabic Level 1, 2 & 3 Set with Audio CompanionI should have paid more attention to the review of this product before I bought it, but, unfortunately, I only read it after I bought the set and started trying to do the lessons. I got stuck from the very start and I agree whole-heartily with the other reviewer. There does not seem to be any rhyme or reason as to how this program was set up. I majored in French in college and also studied German, Spanish, and Russian and have done conversational language training for Greek and Polish using other language learning products, so learning languages is not new for me. However, I have never seen a language program set up like this one. It doesn't start with simple, basic expressions. It jumps right into sentences about kids eating, reading, running, dealing with singular and plural subjects before you even know how to say "Hello", "I", "You", etc. If you are hoping to learn enough Arabic to greet people and ask simple questions for a trip to an Arabic speaking country, DO NOT buy this product!! And, forget trying to use their car Audio Companion. There is nothing on the CDs that tells you what you're trying to say or repeat. There are little to no instructions for this program and just trying to plod through the first lesson was a joke. Don't waste your money! Try another, less expensive program, especially if you primarily want to learn some basic-intermediate conversational Arabic. After having heard for so long that Rosetta Stone was the best way to learn a language, I have never been so disappointed in a product as I was with this one.
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