Byes Ch. , Suan T.L. Teach Yourself Malay. - McGraw-Hill, 2006. -
307 p.
Учебник.
Нет страниц i-v.
Malay is spoken in Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei and parts of Thailand. Teach Yourself Malay is a self-access course for the independent adult leaer of Malay as a foreign language. Lively dialogues (recorded by Malay speakers on the accompanying double CD) in authentic Malay introduce the language, which is then explained in simple English, as it is not assumed that the student has leaed a foreign language before. Exercises - written, audio, and pictorial - are used to reinforce leaing. At the end of the book there are a 'taking it further' section, a key to the exercises and Malay-English and English-Malay vocabulary lists.
Table of Contents:
Introduction and pronunciation
Welcome to Malaysia – greetings/introductions/origins
At the airport – yes/no questions/possession
Getting to know you – personal information/nationalities and languages/basic questions
Working and studying – talking about jobs and studies/ capabilities
Family and home – talking about family members/location/numbers
Tourist information – Asking for information/existence and location/more numbers/telling the time/ days of the week
Invitations – making, accepting and declining invitations/ reasons / months
Asking the way – Asking for and understanding directions/location
Changing money – Higher numbers/ expressing distance, height and weight
Transport – buying tickets/ getting around/time expressions
Checking in – Getting accommodation/asking about services/saying what you usually do
Clothes/Souvenir shopping – Expressing size, colour, and what things are made of
Eating out – How to order food from street vendors and in restaurants
At the supermarket – Shopping for food/understanding a recipe
Hobbies and free time – Expressing likes, dislikes/saying how long you have been doing something/ hobbies and sports
At the doctor’s – Body words/ saying how you feel/ talking about illnesses
A phone call – What to say on the phone/ talking about the weather/ a look at very informal Malay and slang
Taking it further
Index
Учебник.
Нет страниц i-v.
Malay is spoken in Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei and parts of Thailand. Teach Yourself Malay is a self-access course for the independent adult leaer of Malay as a foreign language. Lively dialogues (recorded by Malay speakers on the accompanying double CD) in authentic Malay introduce the language, which is then explained in simple English, as it is not assumed that the student has leaed a foreign language before. Exercises - written, audio, and pictorial - are used to reinforce leaing. At the end of the book there are a 'taking it further' section, a key to the exercises and Malay-English and English-Malay vocabulary lists.
Table of Contents:
Introduction and pronunciation
Welcome to Malaysia – greetings/introductions/origins
At the airport – yes/no questions/possession
Getting to know you – personal information/nationalities and languages/basic questions
Working and studying – talking about jobs and studies/ capabilities
Family and home – talking about family members/location/numbers
Tourist information – Asking for information/existence and location/more numbers/telling the time/ days of the week
Invitations – making, accepting and declining invitations/ reasons / months
Asking the way – Asking for and understanding directions/location
Changing money – Higher numbers/ expressing distance, height and weight
Transport – buying tickets/ getting around/time expressions
Checking in – Getting accommodation/asking about services/saying what you usually do
Clothes/Souvenir shopping – Expressing size, colour, and what things are made of
Eating out – How to order food from street vendors and in restaurants
At the supermarket – Shopping for food/understanding a recipe
Hobbies and free time – Expressing likes, dislikes/saying how long you have been doing something/ hobbies and sports
At the doctor’s – Body words/ saying how you feel/ talking about illnesses
A phone call – What to say on the phone/ talking about the weather/ a look at very informal Malay and slang
Taking it further
Index