![]() ![]() That might take up a lot of time, plus you're supposed to study other materials as well. You first listen back to the recordings from the previous 4 days, then translate English to Russian with a check, then re-record them. ![]() It seems you listen to (up to) 50 new sentences each day, then use them for dictation, then record yourself saying them. I'm planning to try it out (Russian) for the next week or two. Note that with the usual caveats regarding online crowd-sourced offerings and accuracy of same, you can lots of sentences for free on, although a minority of the sentences there seem to have audio. So probably a monolingual Pimsleur type of product, though I am not sure how many non-repetitive L2 sentences one gets in 3 levels of Pimsleur if one cut out all the English. That is not necessarily bad, but I would bet its utility is more for a beginner stage. The question is how useful are the majority of the sentences? Even if highly useful and conversational, it basically seems to be an audio phrase-book, to be played over and over via the SRS algorithm. There seems to actually be 3000 sentences read by a native speaker per course, and it is touted as a supplement to language learning, rather than a complete method. ![]() Basically it is 10K sentences/AJATT with an audio component type of method. There is a multi-year thread on HTLAL discussing his method, and later these courses for sale: Glossika Polyglot: Sentence Method. Basically another polyglot seeking to commercialize his/her knowledge (not necessarily bad).
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