Pimsleur Turkish
 

Turkish Lessons

Turkish lessons in Istanbul are mot likely the best way to learn Turkish...

But if you are among the vast majority of Turkish students who can't afford to spend 6 month in Turkey to learn the Turkish language, then you need a valuable alternative.

If you can get Turkish lessons in the town where you live, preferably given by a native speaker, then by all means sign up and get your Turkish classes there.

In some parts of the world, it might be difficult to find Turkish classes within reasonable distance, and thus other methods need to be explored to learn Turkish. Turkish text books might be an alternative, but books lack one important aspect of language, i.e. sound. Reading the phonetic spelling might help, but it's not really a replacement of the acutal sound.

By far the better emthod to learn Turkish are Turkish lessons on audio. These audio lessons are set up in a way that you progressively learn more of the Turkish language. From simple Turkish phrases like greetings and a few sentences that two people who meet might exchange, you progress to more involved conversations.

The beauty of such Turkish courses is that you learn the way we are menat to learn any language, and that we all learned our first language: By listening and repeating you start to make sense of the sounds you hear that make up individual Turkish words and phrases. The vocabualry and the understanding of Turkish grammar are delivered at the same time without you having to learn it separately.

This integrated approach is best on the Turkish audio lessons by Pimsleur. You may listen to sound samples for any of these files, simply click the links to the left.

Have fun exploring the Turkish language, when you listen to these Pimsleur Turkish lessons for only 30 minutes every day, you'll be speaking Turkish in less than a month from now!

 

 

 

Turkish lessons

 

 

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What customers say about the Pimsleur TURKISH audios:

 

I've wanted to learn Turkish for a long time now. My wife is Turkish, and I can't communicate with her family (yes, I know, to some that would be a problem not worth fixing).

This is an excellent audio course, and it has no fluff in it whatsoever. You start playing the audio, and GO! I use it during my 1 hour commute each way in the car. As others have said, I sometimes need to rewind because I can't always think as fast as they want me to, but I transferred it to my mp3 player, and it's easy to go back a few seconds and try it again.

I've tried Rosetta stone, but basically it just sat there because I had to dedicate the time to sit in front of a computer and do it. For me, this is much better.

Be forewarned, however, that you need to repeat things out loud constantly, and if you are not in a private place, it's not going to work out.

In the very first lesson, they start by saying, "Listen to this conversation in Turkish." Only 30 minutes later, you listen to the exact same conversation and you understand it!  -- Simon Cohn, Rutherford, NJ, USA

 

I admit that I was skeptical about whether or not I would truly be able to absorb and learn to speak and understand Turkish with 30 minutes a day for 16 days but -- Wow! I have had this product for 4 days and I'm not only impressing myself but the native Turks that I work with. At the beginning of the first 2 lessons, I was a little overwhelmed because I didn't think I was retaining any of it and I was struggling to recall the words. I'm not sure how but, at some point, it became almost second nature and I relaxed and the words came out. It helps that I have native Turks to converse with and I get extra practice.

I don't really see any negatives in this program except the price of the full set. I'm not sure why it is so much more but, since I'm hooked and want to know more, I'm considering buying it anyway. I guess that explains the price! I've tried to learn Spanish and French before with traditional methods and I can't speak either of them. I think the biggest thing that I noticed is my ability to understand the native speakers. They certainly do not speak it as perfectly as the people on the CDs and there are some slight variations in pronunciation but I still understand it.  -- B. Gardner, Southeastern PA, USA