Teach Yourself Urdu Complete Course Package (Book + 2CDs) (Teach Yourself Language Complete Courses) 1st Edition
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Bestselling language courses now with audio CDs!
From Danish to Spanish, Swahili to Brazilian Portuguese, the languages of the world are brought within the reach of any beginning student. Learners can use the Teach Yourself Language Courses at their own pace or as a supplement to formal courses. These complete courses are based on the very latest learning methods and designed to be enjoyable and user-friendly.
Prepared by experts in the language, each course begins with the basics and gradually promotes the student to a level of smooth and confident communication, including:
- Up-to-date, graded interactive dialogues
- Graded units of culture notes, grammar, and exercises
- Step-by-step guide to pronunciation
- Practical vocabulary
- Regular and irregular verb tables
- Plenty of practice exercises and answers
- Bilingual glossary
The new editions also feature:
- Clear, uncluttered, and user-friendly layout
- Self-assessment quizzes to test progress
- Website suggestions to take language study further
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Editorial Reviews
About the Author
David Matthews
taught Urdu for over 30 yearsMohamed Kasim Dalvi
is an experienced language teacherProduct details
- Publisher : McGraw-Hill; 1st edition (March 27, 2003)
- Language : English
- ISBN-10 : 0071414568
- ISBN-13 : 978-0071414562
- Item Weight : 1.05 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.4 x 1.65 x 9.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #7,720,332 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #9,095 in Study & Teaching Reference (Books)
- #9,266 in Dictionaries (Books)
- #20,933 in Foreign Language Instruction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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I was 100% sure that the best way to learn a language was to be in a class all day, or immersion in the specific country, or among friends. This book proved me wrong. The content is difficult, especially after the 5th chapter because they remove the English transliteration and you are stuck reading the Urdu script and can only "cheat" by going to the back of the book. It seemed like every five chapters it got REALLY hard and seemed not gradual enough in the level of difficulty. But it took me three weeks to finish this book (I will admit, I should have gone slower) and after wards I was speaking and thinking in Urdu and the overall goal of "all around confidence" was definitely met.
That being said, I want to share the downsides, which are few. The errors that a lot of the reviewers talked about, I didn't notice until the last few chapters, and most of the students will probably notice this because by that point they are familiar with the Urdu script and it won't be a problem. Also, I learned Arabic script first from "Teach yourself Arabic Script" and "Very Simple Arabic Script" so I can't comment on their Urdu script introduction, which is needed for the rest of the book. You can't fake it past chapter five without knowing the script!
Finally, I would like to add that if you are *really* serious about learning Urdu, this is THE book to get, but still there is a long way to go. I *highly suggest* following up by getting "Urdu - An Essential Grammar" by Ruth Schmidt afterwards. I was so confident in Urdu after this "Teach Yourself" course but the Grammar book will make your realize that there is still a whole bunch more to learn and clear up the fuzzy spots. But overall, I very highly recommended "Teach Yourself Urdu Complete Course" very, VERY well done.
1) The book only devotes 20 pages at the start to introducing the alphabet and the various independent, initial, medial and final forms of the letters. No clear guidance is given on how to construct words from these letters (particularly as the Nasta'liq form of the Urdu script is written on the diagonal and letters can look different when written as words rather than individually). There is limited opportunities to practice writing the script and the accompanying aural exercises on the CD only give guidance on pronounication (not surprisingly!)
2) The size of the printed Urdu script in the text is so small as to make it almost illegible. This is particularly problematic when trying to identify individual letter forms in any given word. I found myself getting extremely frustrated and unable to understand the relationship between letters and words. This only serves to make it even more difficult to learn a complex alphabet in the already limited space.
My partner is a native Urdu speaker and after reading the book himself, he felt that this book was not suitable for a complete beginner *unless* they had experience of Arabic script as the Urdu script in this book is taught in a shorthand that is not obvious to newcomers. Looking at the reviews already posted, I think that the majority of the 4/5 star reviews come from those who are already familiar with Arabic script and therefore do not need to learn in the same way as an absolute beginner.
I have now purchased the Delancy book, 'Read and Write Urdu Script' (also in the Teach Yourself series), which appears to be much more suitable for absolute beginners like myself as it focuses solely on learning the Urdu alphabet and numbers and how to write the script rather than jumping straight into the language proper (although I still have some issues with the size of the text). I would recommend that other absolute beginners start with this book and I think the Complete Course book would benefit from directing students to this book first.
pros: has a mini dictionary, there is no english transliteration after unit 6 (but included as an appendix- it pushes you to try to understand), includes info about the culture and traditions as well.
cons: the dictionary could've been more comprehensive (a seperate verb list would be good), not enough chance to exercise what you've learned.
Lets start by saying I am an Arab, so I already know most of the letters and how the script works. Also lots of Urdu words originated from Arabic. I already have a head start so I decided to finally to learn the #1 language at my workplace.
The book delivered by gradually warming you up to the language, starting easy and gradually increasing your level of vocabulary and grammar. The audio CD is fine and clear however I would have liked if it were a menu driven program to easily navigate though the units and exercises.
My main complaint is that the Urdu script in the book is small and hard to read sometimes and also the paper quality is below average.





