Additional information
Publisher | Lonely Planet (21 July 2020) |
---|---|
Language | English |
Paperback | 168 pages |
ISBN-10 | 1838694196 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1838694197 |
Reading age | 6 – 8 years |
Dimensions | 16.51 x 1.27 x 20.96 cm |
Catarina 79 –
Great Italian phrase book!!
If you are considering buying an Italian Facebook for your children and or for you this is an excellent book! My husbands personal language is Italian and my family also comes from Italy therefore we are big on teaching our children Italian. We’ve done many Italian videos and Italian index cards. Once they were up to a phrase level we purchased this book. We are very pleased with it and so far we can only find one error (which is by no means a dealbreaker)!! If you are considering an Italian phrasebook this is definitely the one to buy!!** please note when I was reviewing the difficulty level for the age of my children, which is seven, I put moderate because for most children who have not had much exposure to Italian this book would be a moderate level of difficulty which brings them from an easy level of difficulty with vocabulary and single words to now putting those words together into simple and functional phrases. For my kids this book was easy to moderate. Therefore, as the phrases are simple and functional they still might be a little more challenging for a 67-year-old but totally appropriate!!!! Love this book!!
Teresa T. –
Great kids book
Lovely pictures with situations. Easy for kids to follow.Had to return as it arrived to Kate fir our needs.
M Manor –
This is the best series for babies to learn words! I have them all
I have everyone of these books.They have pig pictures. With the word…. plus the annunciation for the word. Very easy for my 2 year old to learn easy ways to speak basic words.Worth every penny
A. P. Grimsley –
Good book to help bilingual kids
Great little book with lots of phrases for our little boy
Leo-Neferuaten Boyle –
Just what is needed
A great book and well presented. Useful and ideal for beginners to help learn the language – thanks Lonely Planet!