Product Details
The Rough Guide Phrasebook Mandarin Chinese (Rough Guide Phrasebooks)

The Rough Guide Phrasebook Mandarin Chinese (Rough Guide Phrasebooks)
By Lexus, Rough Guides

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Product Description

Whether you want to reserve a hotel room, hire a bicycle or pay the restaurant bill – The Rough Guide Mandarin Chinese Phrasebook will help you all the way. The A-Z English to Mandarin and A-Z Mandarin to English translations will have you speaking the language even before you step off the plane. Practice your pronunciation with 16-pages of additional scenario material; available as downloadable audio files, the scenarios have been recorded by native Mandarin speakers and are compatible to either your computer or iPod. This thoroughly-revised third edition includes a detailed grammar section and a helpful menu and drinks list reader to ensure you always choose the right dish. With this phrasebook in your pocket you are sure to have a great trip!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #147446 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-04-27
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
Compiled by Lexus.


Customer Reviews

Many Pros and only a few Cons4
This is a brilliant book in some ways and a disappointing book in others.
The way it is much better than its competitor 'The Lonely Plant Phrasebook to Mandarin Chinese' is that it includes, in brackets, the pronounciation guide = Extremely helpful for me - I was saying things like 'I would like a late (not plate) please' instead of 'I would like a fork please'

But the way that the 'Rough Guide to MC' is not as good as the lonely planet one is under its useful phrases section it isn't written out in chinese. Really unfortunate if your talking isn't that good.
Whereas if you show a chinese person the Chinese Script and radicals and they'll instantly understand you regardles of whether you are in a mainly Cantonese or a mainly Mandarin part of China.
Apart from not writing out the phrases underneath in chinese, the only other cons would just be picking really - e.g. the emergencies section wasn't as good as the Lonely Planet Phrasebook section.

My advice would be to buy both the Lonely Planet and the Rough Guide Phrasebooks, I have, as they both have their uses.

A helpful start!4
I carry this phrasebook with me everywhere in China and find it extremely useful. I would agree with my fellow reviewer on the fact that Chinese Characters in all sections of the book would be useful.

Thanks to this book I was able to make a confident start to communicating in Chinese. I found the pronounciation guide on pages 250/251 excellent. From my experience I would say it is well worth spending time studying these two pages to learn the proper pinyin pronounciation rather than relying on their suggestions in brackets after each word/phrase. Personally the suggestions in brackets I have found to be unreliable at times.

This book rescued me from the frustration of not being able to communicate.

Fruity1
No good if you are trying to start a conversation with a piece of fruit.