surely there are teachers over there, maybe even german teachers.
call some international company (posing as some survey thingy) and ask them if they ever give their employees tranings in other languages, and where.
then call them
I've been using it to learn Danish. Sign up for the free demo, they will send you on or 2 emails with a coupon for 40% off (well at least they did back when I signed up)
You'll find that it's a pretty cool way to learn a language, the program works only in the language you are learning it does not use your native language at all. You learn as you did when you were a child. And you pick things up quickly. It has 4 methods of learning including speech comparison to see how well your pronunciation is.
german is not that hard, i think. building phrases is rather easy once you've understood what they consist of.
the only real work you have to do is to learn some basic vocabulary first and then go all the way with a combination of audio books/the same book written ~ and then translate and try to speak the sentences to yourself.
and/or watch some movies on german, to get used to the language ( you don't even have to bother with crappy german movies, most EU torrent sites have mainstream movies on german as well)
nah... grammar is easy. only if you want to write stuff, it gets complicated. i mean: in english there's not that much of a difference between spoken and written language.
in german it's like two completely different worlds.
and get yourself a tutor. you wont be able to get the pronouncuation right with a book. esp when english speaking folks pronounce "ch' as "k" :s
Are you kidding? German's pretty easy to learn. It has alot more similarities to English than any other language I know of. Honestly, languages like Spanish and French are harder to learn, not to mention languages from the middle east and asia.
if you've already learned a foreign language (ie- are familiar with the vocabulary of grammar like accusative, dative, present perfect, etc) it'll be pretty easy.
if you're looking for a textbook i'd recommend "komm mit" or "deutsch na klar" if you're looking for a conversational knowledge. if you have a really mathematical brain and are comfortable learning languages then you could get something more advanced like "a practical review of german grammar" by Dippmann... but that might be too much for a beginner. if you're not comfortable with the linguistic/grammar terms, get "English Grammar for Students of German" as well.
as far as german-english dictionaries go, I'd stick to Langenscheidt and Harper-Collins. the Oxford dictionaries can be sort of dated.
eepberries wrote:Are you kidding? German's pretty easy to learn. It has alot more similarities to English than any other language I know of. Honestly, languages like Spanish and French are harder to learn, not to mention languages from the middle east and asia.
dutch is even easier, though some of the phonetics gets dodgy.
i'm learning arabic now... much harder than french, which is in turn harder than german (imho).