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The House of Oojah Learn to Speak Danish Audio Books
The House of Oojah Learn to Speak Danish Audio Books

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  • Phrasebook
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    Danish Dictionary and Phrasebook Danish-English and English-Danish Other Learn to Speak Danish Audio and Books click here Danish Dictionary and Phrasebook Paperback - 309pp Danish is the official language of Denmark Greenland and the Faeroe Islands. This two-way language guide offers the visitor or new resident of Denmark extensive vocabulary and phrases centered around travel-related and daily life situations. Practical cultural information on Denmark and the Danes is also included. About the Danish Language: Danish is one of the North Germanic languages (also called Scandinavian languages) a sub-group of the Germanic branch of the Indo-European languages. It is spoken by around 6 million p more information.....

  • Complete - Danish Audio Yourself and 2 Speak Book Teach
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    Teach Yourself Complete Danish Book and 2 Audio CDs Get Other Danish language learning Audio click here Teach Yourself Complete Danish - Book and 2 Audio CDs 2 CDs plus 384 page book Are you looking for a complete course in Danish which takes you effortlessly from beginner to confident speaker? Whether you are starting from scratch or are just out of practice Complete Danish will guarantee success! Now fully updated to make your language learning experience fun and interactive. You can still rely on the benefits of a top language teacher and our years of teaching experience but now with added learning features within the course and online. The course is structured in thematic units and the e more here.....

  • Danish CDs- Audio Pimsleur
    audio book audiobook
    audio book audiobook
    Pimsleur Danish - Audio CD Audio CDs play on Car/Portable/Home CD player Other Danish Audio Language Learning click here Other Pimsleur Audio click here Pimsleur Danish - 5 Audio CD Brand New : 5 CDs HEAR IT LEARN IT SPEAK IT The Pimsleur Method provides the most effective language-learning program ever developed. The Pimsleur Method gives you quick command of Danish structure without tedious drills. Learning to speak Danish can actually be enjoyable and rewarding. The key reason most people struggle with new languages is that they aren't given proper instruction only bits and pieces of a language. Other language programs sell only pieces -- dictionaries; grammar books and instructions; list find out more.....

  • Artificial languages
    Individuals and groups have constructed their own artificial languages, for practical, experimental, personal, or ideological reasons. International auxiliary languages are generally constructed languages that strive to be easier to learn than natural languages; other constructed languages strive to be more logical ("loglangs") than natural languages; a prominent example of this is Lojban. (The Logical Language Group (LLG) ) .Some languages, most constructed, are meant specifically for communication between people of different nationalities or language groups as an easy-to-learn second language. Several of these languages have been constructed by individuals or groups. Natural, pre-existing languages may also be used in this way - their developers merely catalogued and standardized their vocabulary and identified their grammatical rules. These languages are called naturalistic. One such language, Latino Sine Flexione, is a simplified form of Latin. Two others, Occidental and Novial, were drawn from several Western languages. Some writers, such as J. R. R. Tolkien, have created fantasy languages, for literary, artistic or personal reasons. The fantasy language of the Klingon race (a warrior race in the fictional Star Trek universe ) has in recent years been developed by fans of the Star Trek series, including a vocabulary and grammar.
  • About the Dutch Language
    Dutch is a West Germanic language spoken by around 24 million people, mainly in the Netherlands, Belgium and Suriname, but also by smaller groups of speakers in parts of France, Germany and several former Dutch colonies. It is closely related to other West Germanic languages (e.g., English, West Frisian and German) and somewhat more remotely to the North Germanic languages. Dutch is a descendant of Old Frankish and is the parent language of Afrikaans, one of the official languages of South Africa and the most widely understood in Namibia. Dutch and Afrikaans are to a large extent mutually intelligible, although they have separate spelling standards and dictionaries and have separate language regulators. Standard Dutch (Standaardnederlands) is the standard language of the major Dutch-speaking areas and is regulated by the Nederlandse Taalunie ("Dutch Language Union"). Dutch is also an official language of the European Union and the Union of South American Nations. Dutch grammar also shares many traits with German, but has a less complicated morphology caused by deflexion, which puts it closer to English. Dutch has officially three genders, masculine, feminine, and neuter, however, according to some interpretations these are reduced to only two, common and neuter, which is similar to the gender systems of most Continental Scandinavian languages. The consonant system of Dutch did not undergo the High German consonant shift and has more in common with English and the Scandinavian languages. Like most Germanic languages it has a syllable structure that allows fairly complex consonant clusters. Dutch is often noted for the prominent use of velar fricatives (ch and g, pronounced at the back of the mouth), often picked up on as a source of amusement or even satire. Dutch vocabulary is predominantly Germanic in origin, considerably more so than English. This is to a large part due to the heavy influence of Norman French on English, and to Dutch patterns of word formation, such as the tendency to form long and sometimes very complicated compound nouns, being more similar to those of German and the Scandinavian languages.
  • Dig deep into Lion: The best overlooked, underrated features
    Apple billed this summer's release of Mac OS X Lion as having more than 200 new features, but most coverage of Lion in the intervening months has focused on only a handful of them. While iOS-like navigation and app-launching interfaces, autosave/restore capabilities, AirDrop file sharing and an emergency restore partition are by all means important, there are a lot of helpful tweaks and ...
  • Real adventurers will swap romance for murky depths
    If you're reading this at home in the comfort of an armchair, shame on you: why are you not sailing solo round the world, rowing naked across the Atlantic or walking to the South Pole on your hands?