Anyone use Rosetta Stone

pontifex

Lifer
Dec 5, 2000
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I was looking at their site and took the demo they had. I don't quite understand how it works. How do I end up understanding the language without pictures? How do you get to the point of actually speaking it?

In the demo (which was pretty simple), I was able to remember what was what and easily choose the right pic, but if I didn't have the pics I don't know that I would have got it right.

 

I Saw OJ

Diamond Member
Dec 13, 2004
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I downloaded it, dont really quite get it. They go from simple words like cat, dog, man, woman to complete sentences without anything in between. I'm gonna keep using it, but so far I dont really care for it.
 

pontifex

Lifer
Dec 5, 2000
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any other recommendations for learning a language (other than classes)? Also, hopefully cheaper?
 

akshatp

Diamond Member
Oct 15, 1999
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Originally posted by: pontifex
any other recommendations for learning a language (other than classes)? Also, hopefully cheaper?

Move to a country where they speak the language you want to learn. Take a translation book and just wander around the busy part of town and "speak" to as many people as you can. Chances are you will pick it up within a few months :)
 

Demo24

Diamond Member
Aug 5, 2004
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Originally posted by: pontifex
any other recommendations for learning a language (other than classes)? Also, hopefully cheaper?

you could try through books, as in the books used at college courses. I dunno what language your looking for, but I can tell you my german book if you're interested.
 

Freshgeardude

Diamond Member
Jul 31, 2006
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i tried to learn Japanese with this, like others that have said, goes from word to sentence. and, for example, a boy was under a picnic table, which could mean: the boy was hiding, the boy was scared, the boy was having fun, the boy was under the table, etc had many meaning it could be. which I didnt like so I stopped using it
 

Synomenon

Lifer
Dec 25, 2004
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Why don't any of the people in the Rosetta Stone commercials do the commercial in the language they supposedly learned w/ the software?
 

ttown

Platinum Member
Oct 27, 2003
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My daughter uses it in her high-school language class.

She loves it -- and is doing very well.

She's taking French, but others in the class are taking other languages and they like it too.

From what I've seen, it seems pretty decent.

-ttown
 

johnjohn320

Diamond Member
Jan 9, 2001
7,572
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Originally posted by: IsLNdbOi
Why don't any of the people in the Rosetta Stone commercials do the commercial in the language they supposedly learned w/ the software?

So that people who they're trying to sell to (who haven't used the software) can understand it?
 

DomS

Banned
Jul 15, 2008
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I learned Italian. It teaches you like you're in kindergarten and moves up basically. You learn the language from the very base, which is why it's so easy to work with and progress.
 

Martin

Lifer
Jan 15, 2000
29,178
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Its good, but not sufficient on its own. I tried learning Spanish for a few months and actually got somewhere - I could read and understand simple things, say some stuff etc. What I did is I used RS, then kept my own dictionary of all the words I learnt (using spanishdict.com), and used some grammar websites and books from the public library.

I think I could have learnt basic conversational spanish if I kept at it, but I stopped since Spanish has no practical use to me whatsoever.
 

Synomenon

Lifer
Dec 25, 2004
10,547
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81
Originally posted by: johnjohn320
Originally posted by: IsLNdbOi
Why don't any of the people in the Rosetta Stone commercials do the commercial in the language they supposedly learned w/ the software?

So that people who they're trying to sell to (who haven't used the software) can understand it?

That's why they'd put subtitles / closed captions showing what they're saying.
 

luv2liv

Diamond Member
Dec 27, 2001
3,505
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Originally posted by: lightstar
i have some pimsleur language cd's that are excellent

Pimsleur is awesome! it's audio cds, repeat what you just heard. i was able to speak mandarin after a month! the vocabulary is quite extensive too. writing mandarin is another story. i dont think i will ever invest time in writing... or reading
 

Reckoner

Lifer
Jun 11, 2004
10,851
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I see that damn Phelps commercial every friggin' day, so no, I have not, and will not, use Rosetta Stone. It's almost as annoying as Saved by Zero.
 

destrekor

Lifer
Nov 18, 2005
28,799
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the concept of Rosetta Stone is just like the concept of learning your first language, except the critical part is you are missing the element of 24/7 immersion.
Remember how you learned English? Progressively more challenging books with pictures describing nearly every action described. And you had your parents and teachers there to point out things and say what they were. Rosetta Stone attempts to boil all that down into a program, and succeeds. But it's going to vary by person though, based on how committed they are, and if they are taking steps to really let every sink in, or just doing what is necessary to pass the tests.

It can definitely help, and if you have other sources, it'll be an extremely beneficial addition to your studies.

Taking Russian courses, I absolutely hate the translation-based style of learning a new language - everything is compared to your language. And I'm terrible at learning languages. I haven't put much time into Rosetta Stone yet (get it online through the Army, sweet), but what I've used definitely helped, and you start seeing how different aspects of the language are applied when sentences are brought into the picture. Much better way to learn the Russian case system than through textbooks. Ugh.
 

Vehemence

Banned
Jan 25, 2008
5,943
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Originally posted by: PaulNEPats
I see that damn Phelps commercial every friggin' day, so no, I have not, and will not, use Rosetta Stone. It's almost as annoying as Saved by Zero.

I'd say Phelps is worse since he talks like such a dick