Study group for people tricked into learning CZECH (or SLOVAK) -- those learning of their own free will also welcome

An area with study groups for various languages. Group members help each other, share resources and experience. Study groups are permanent but the members rotate and change.
Cavesa
Black Belt - 4th Dan
Posts: 4991
Joined: Mon Jul 20, 2015 9:46 am
Languages: Czech (N), French (C2) English (C1), Italian (C1), Spanish, German (C1)
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Re: Study group for people tricked into learning CZECH (or SLOVAK) -- those learning of their own free will also welcome

Postby Cavesa » Thu Dec 29, 2022 6:31 pm

I've visited my home country for the end of the year. And of course I went to a bookstore (got a few czech scifi books etc),and noticed a new series of coursebooks. They look a bit thin, but they officially go up to C1. Here is a video presenting them:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnsX_Z2QMQg

The name is a bit stupid, "Czech it out", but they are trying to make a modern thing from start to C1.

Perhaps it will be useful to some of you.
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raoulhjo
White Belt
Posts: 22
Joined: Fri Feb 14, 2020 5:35 pm
Languages: French (N)
English (B2)
Czech (beginner)
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Re: Study group for people tricked into learning CZECH (or SLOVAK) -- those learning of their own free will also welcome

Postby raoulhjo » Thu Jan 12, 2023 10:43 pm

Thanks a lot; I will check 'czech it out'.
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Irena
Green Belt
Posts: 392
Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2022 11:42 am
Languages: Serbian (N), English (C2), French (C1), Russian (C1), Czech (C1), dabbled in a couple of others, dreaming of many others
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Re: Study group for people tricked into learning CZECH (or SLOVAK) -- those learning of their own free will also welcome

Postby Irena » Fri Jan 13, 2023 6:32 am

A small remark for people considering the Czech It UP series: there is an answer key, but you have to go to their web page to download it. You can just download it, no special permission needed. I didn't immediately realize there was an answer key (in fact, I only just realized it :oops: ), but it's obviously very important.

I actually bought their C1 textbook a few months ago, but I ended up not using it. At least not yet. Well... I looked at the topics, and they're your typical cheesy textbook topics, and I decided I'd rather just read books. However, the grammar exercises in particular could be very useful for me, and I should get to them at some point.
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Irena
Green Belt
Posts: 392
Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2022 11:42 am
Languages: Serbian (N), English (C2), French (C1), Russian (C1), Czech (C1), dabbled in a couple of others, dreaming of many others
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Re: Study group for people tricked into learning CZECH (or SLOVAK) -- those learning of their own free will also welcome

Postby Irena » Sun Jun 11, 2023 7:18 pm

Since I don't have my own log, I suppose this is the best place to post the news: I passed the CCE-C1 exam! :D :D :D I took it in mid-May, and they gave me a code with which to check my results once they became available, and - there they were a couple of days ago. :D Except that my scores are so much better than anything I would have dared to hope for that I keep wondering if there's a mistake. :?
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raoulhjo
White Belt
Posts: 22
Joined: Fri Feb 14, 2020 5:35 pm
Languages: French (N)
English (B2)
Czech (beginner)
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Re: Study group for people tricked into learning CZECH (or SLOVAK) -- those learning of their own free will also welcome

Postby raoulhjo » Fri Dec 08, 2023 6:00 pm

I have been studying Czech with a textbook (le verbe tchèque) for one year. I watched some episodes of 'Games of thrones' dubbed in Czech. I am satisfied to be able to understand some of it. There is still of lot to learn of course. I ordered an easy reader (A2 level) because my vocabulary is insufficient to read the real thing.
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raoulhjo
White Belt
Posts: 22
Joined: Fri Feb 14, 2020 5:35 pm
Languages: French (N)
English (B2)
Czech (beginner)
x 46

Re: Study group for people tricked into learning CZECH (or SLOVAK) -- those learning of their own free will also welcome

Postby raoulhjo » Thu Apr 25, 2024 3:19 pm

After reading Easy readers level A2, I am starting a czech translation of a novel by Arnette Lamb. The gap is huge in terms of unknown words. Some sentences are incomprehensible but I ordered the english version of the novel. Still, I enjoy reading this book.
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User avatar
Iversen
Black Belt - 4th Dan
Posts: 4792
Joined: Sun Jul 19, 2015 7:36 pm
Location: Denmark
Languages: Monolingual travels in Danish, English, German, Dutch, Swedish, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Catalan, Italian, Romanian and (part time) Esperanto
Ahem, not yet: Norwegian, Afrikaans, Platt, Scots, Russian, Serbian, Bulgarian, Albanian, Greek, Latin, Irish, Indonesian and a few more...
Language Log: viewtopic.php?f=15&t=1027
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Re: Study group for people tricked into learning CZECH (or SLOVAK) -- those learning of their own free will also welcome

Postby Iversen » Fri Apr 26, 2024 7:52 am

When I first vaguely began thinking about maybe attending the upcoming gathering in Praha (mostly because of the promised 'language tables') I also started out studying Czech. I had a Routledge grammar and a Langenscheidt dictionary, and as usual I used Wikipedia and Google Translate to produce bilingual study texts. I even listened to snippets of Czech read aloud by the machine voice in Google Translate. It helped me that I already had spent time learning some other Slavic languages at least passively, including Polish and Slovak.

But alas, then I went to Madagascar and forgot all about language learning for almost three weeks, and since I came home mid April I have spent most of my time on other things, including my photo collection and my garden and inland tourism (making 'museum drawings'), and when I have watched Youtube videos and read goodnight goodies I have favoured languages which I already understood, like Germanic and Romance. However today it's pouring down so now I'm going to study Czech again - at least for a couple of hours until the rain stops. My goal is to be able to read simple wikipedian stuff with the help of a dictionary (maybe I can find a smaller one than my thick yellow Langenscheidt once I have arrived down there), but I will definitely NOT be able to speak it nor to understand its spoken version.
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