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subject: Learning French On An Ipod [print this page]


Cell phones are tremendously innovated to suit almost all the basic human communication needs from the users. The elaborate functions accommodates a little more than just sending, receiving and storing messages, in fact recent studies have shown that the use of the cell phone is equivalent to an arm and many people are incapable of resuming a normal life without a cell phone.

A craze which swept in the 1990s was the Ipod, which has only audio functions and the tech industry in the United States are not very keen on predicting a successful run for this new, thin, metallic gadgetry. The lukewarm hype by the tech intelligentsia did not discourage the sales of the Ipod, because the demand in the market for it was undoubtedly high. Apparently, people love to listen to music while carrying out daily monotonous routines. The idea of listening to something while executing daily tasks may be due to the preservation of time resources because the noise interpretation is done by the ears and does not require assistance from other parts of the body.

Listen to a song for about three times redundantly, possibilities are that the listener is able to recall the entire chorus and may recognize a verse or two from the song. If the listener pays more attention and attempts to study the lyrics, the possibility for the listener to retain information is much higher. As verbal ingestion by the cognition in a human brain is more effective when audibly perceived, learning French on an Ipod is a favorable option for numerous beginners.

Tutorials are sometimes held in discs and tapes because the listeners is able to listen to instructions one by one, in contrary with written instructions in which the concentration of the eager eye is spread all over the manual. Most audibly distinguishable of a language is of course French, the foreign lingo which drives the beginners to a concrete block sometimes due to the indefinite pronunciations. Educationalists have since then began to link the audible and likable wealth of the Ipod to facilitate the ingestion of French syllables as well as the accurate pronunciations of the words. Learning French on an Ipod is fast becoming a less time consuming effort and many working adults adapt to this approach to perfect their French.

by: Chris Cornell




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