Pimsleur Farsi
 

Pimsleur Farsi - Pimsleur Persian

Pimsleur Farsi - Pimsleur PersianPimsleur Farsi / Persian Audio Books - MP3 Pimsleur Downloads.

Save money with these Farsi / Persian Pimsleur Audios language downloads and start your first Farsi lesson in a few minutes from now. Speak your first Farsi phrases in only a few hours from now, it's possible!

The Persian Language - Farsi

Persian (or Farsi) is an Indo-European language spoken in Iran (Persia), Afghanistan and Tajikistan.

Persian / Farsi and its varieties have official-language status in Iran, Afghanistan, and Tajikistan. According to CIA World Factbook, based on old data, there are approximately 72 million native speakers of Persian in Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan and about the same number of people in other parts of the world speak Persian. Thus, about 150 million people speak Farsi.

Persian / Farsi has been a medium for literary and scientific contributions to the Islamic world. It has had an influence on some neighbouring languages, particularly the Turk languages of Central Asia, Caucasus, and Anatolia. It has had a lesser influence on Arabic and other languages of Mesopotamia.

 

 

 

 

 

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What satified customers have to say about the Pimsleur FARSI audios:

 

This set of CDs or tapes will get you started in basic Farsi.

The teaching principle is sound linguistically in that it offers ample opportunity to repeat words in different contexts and teaches grammar by example in a transformational setting. However, if what you are looking for is a long list of grammatical constructions and explanations or vocabulary lists, this is not for you. You will learn basic greetings, how to ask for directions, and how to invite someone to go shopping or out to eat, as well as proper forms of address and how to tell time, but that is about the extent of the vocabulary used.

However, you will also learn basic verb forms, and how to construct sentences intuitively, and when you learn new words from other sources, it will be easy to use the words in grammatically correct sentences based on what the audio teaches you.

This is an excellent starting point, but by no means does it cover all possible grammatical constructions nor provide extensive vocabulary. What it does do is give you an intuitive feel for the structure of the language and the pronunciation of words.

Some of my friends are Iranian, and I had managed to pick up a few words by listening to them converse, but after using this program for an hour a day for about 2 weeks, I was able to understand and follow much of their conversation, though I still cannot speak well. I agree that there needs to be either an expansion of what is currently on the program, or an intermediate and advanced course developed.
Anita Poole, Atlanta, GA, USA