Dear customers: Only two days left until will be raising our prices back to $100 per course on February 5th. Thank you for your patronage.
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MP3 DVD Price $19.95
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All our course material comes directly from NTIS, notice their price is $500 for Volume I and II, our price is $19.95!
Here is a picture of our Cambodian Basic Course Cassettes that we mastered using the Tascam Pro Audio equipment below. Double click the images to see a detailed image.
Language Experts agree, our courses are the most complete and thorough self-instructional language course available. Repetition, vocabulary, sentence structure are the building blocks our course utilizes to teach a language. Lots of repetition drills. Dialog drills. Pronunciation drills. Vocabulary. The audio material is from native speakers and the corresponding textbook is your guide. Our Methodology, Guided Imitation, sets the student on a path to a certified level of fluency. We no longer sell our courses in Volume I and Volume II, so there's no up sell for the next level. You will receive the entire course material, on DVD, for the lowest price we can afford to produce, $19.95. Our shipping cost is $5.45 for domestic shipping and $16.45 for international shipping, which is the exact price we pay the U.S. Postal Service to ship priority mail. We do not make money off of shipping, and ship priority mail because it is the fastest and least expensive way to ship. The DVD will play in both a PC or MAC, and the audio can easily be saved to an IPOD or other MP3 device. You will need Adobe Reader to access the PDF textbook.
The Cambodian Basic Course, as you can see, sells for $500 from NTIS, the United States printing service for audio/visual materials; however, they only sell it on audio cassette as you can see from our screen capture of their shopping cart. We purchased the material from NTIS, as evidenced by the screenshot provided of the original Cambodian Basic Course Audio Cassettes, and did the remastering work. We had the textbook professionally digitized into a PDF file. And then we spent countless hours remastering the cassette to a digital form, now we are providing this course to you for less than 4% of the cost of original material. Only $19.95!
We used Tascam Pro Audio equipment to do the initial digital remastering from cassette to compact disc. Once completed, we converted the compact discs into an uncompressed WAV file. We copied what would have been on Side B of the Cassettes, to the end of Side A, creating one continous file, saving again as a WAV file. We used audio software, like Nero and Audacity, to clean up the audio even more. This multi step process includes converting the mono file to stereo, normalizing the volume across the entire WAV file, removing "clicks and pops", doing a low frequency filter, then a high frequency filter, truncating silences to 3 seconds to ensure the audio is quick to begin and end without dead space, normalized the volume again, and outputting the file as another WAV file. We used an MP3 encoder to convert the WAV file to an MP3 file, and we tagged all files with Subject, Title, Copyright, Volume I, Volume II data.
The remastering process and filter work means that silence sounds like silence. And in this case, silence truly is golden. Our product is of unparalleled quality, and we can honestly make the claim that no one has spent more time making these courses sound as good as our courses sound. We have provided significant improvements to the sound quality versus the original masters, and even the material we were selling just a year ago, thanks to current technology. All you have to do is open our files in a sound editor and see that silence is a straight line, not wavy, and this means clarity.
FSI Cambodian Basic Course contains 28 hours of audio, and two textbooks in PDF file format with 820 pages.
The material of the Cambodian Basic Course is arranged in groups of five units with a common theme. The first four units of each sequence are based on Dialogues, usually in the Phnom Penh dialect, and the fifth is based on a Narration, in Standard Cambodian, which reviews the immediately preceding subject matter. The text for Units 1-20 is entirely in standard style. From Unit 21 on, most of the text is given in Phnom Penh dialect (except for the Narrations), but a parallel Standard version of each Dialogue is provided in the Dialogue for Comprehension. Vocabulary lists include both forms wherever there is a difference.
Drills are recorded first for listening, then for familiarization through repetition, and finally for participation. During the participation step, when the student performs the required manipulation, his utterances are confirmed on the audio immediately following the space provided for his participation.
Drills are generally in two groups in any unit: a) variation drills on pattern sentences, which provide opportunities for the student to develop flexibility in the use of patterns already memorized, and b) grammar drills, which are intended to provide practice for the student in the operation of the patterns explained in the immediately preceding grammar notes.
Learn Cambodian 1 - Classroom expressions
Learn Cambodian 2 - Please say it again. Khmer is easy to learn.
Learn Cambodian 3 - Open books to page three, the yellow book. Numbers and colors
Learn Cambodian 4 - The word "learn"
Learn Cambodian 5 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 6 - Questions and answers in Cambodian
Learn Cambodian 7 - Answer my question
Learn Cambodian 8 - Khmer is hard to learn
Learn Cambodian 9 - Discussing the difficulties of writing in Khmer
Learn Cambodian 10 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 11 - Classroom objects like a pencil, book, pictures
Learn Cambodian 12 - Discussing the map of Cambodia
Learn Cambodian 13 - Numbers and colors
Learn Cambodian 14 - Making comparisons
Learn Cambodian 15 - Discussing classroom objects
Learn Cambodian 16 - Numbers and colors.
Learn Cambodian 17 - Comparisons: Smallest and Largest
Learn Cambodian 18 - Describing the picture of the flag
Learn Cambodian 19 - Dialogue
Learn Cambodian 20 - Counting
Learn Cambodian 21 - Greetings: Hello, how are you?
Learn Cambodian 22 - Is she Cambodian?
Learn Cambodian 23 - Is your family in Phnom Penh?
Learn Cambodian 24 - What's your name?
Learn Cambodian 25 - Where did you study Cambodian?
Learn Cambodian 26 - How are your children?
Learn Cambodian 27 - Discussing the house
Learn Cambodian 28 - Invitation to eat
Learn Cambodian 29 - Car breaks down
Learn Cambodian 30 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 31 - Directions to the restaurant
Learn Cambodian 32 - Directions to the post office
Learn Cambodian 33 - Where would you like to go?
Learn Cambodian 34 - Going to Angkor Wat on the weekend
Learn Cambodian 35 - How far is Angkor Wat from Siem Riap?
Learn Cambodian 36 - Plan to rent a boat
Learn Cambodian 37 - Are we about to arrive in Phnom Penh?
Learn Cambodian 38 - I want to buy a ticket to Poipet
Learn Cambodian 39 - My car won't start the battery is run down
Learn Cambodian 40 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 41 - Buying cloth for a suit
Learn Cambodian 42 - Do you know any soothsayers
Learn Cambodian 43 - At the barber
Learn Cambodian 44 - Are you a soldier? Where are you from? What rank are you?
Learn Cambodian 45 - Narration: Going to the market and shopping
Learn Cambodian 46 - Going to the market
Learn Cambodian 47 - At the Kok Meng restaurant
Learn Cambodian 48 - What time does the movie start
Learn Cambodian 49 - Going to the movies
Learn Cambodian 50 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 51 - Have you gone anywhere today? Shopping?
Learn Cambodian 52 - Do you have a fever?
Learn Cambodian 53 - Cambodian Restaraunt
Learn Cambodian 54 - Going to school
Learn Cambodian 55 - Going to the Doctors
Learn Cambodian 56 - Preparing a meal, what time do we eat?
Learn Cambodian 57 - Do you have brothers and sisters?
Learn Cambodian 58 - Work around the house, cooking..
Learn Cambodian 59 - How much to rent a room
Learn Cambodian 60 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 61 - Planning a trip to Kompong Cham
Learn Cambodian 62 - Boarding the boat
Learn Cambodian 63 - Arriving in Kompong Cham by boat
Learn Cambodian 64 - Today is Bon Pheum, all the stores are closed
Learn Cambodian 65 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 66 - Hello, I am well, how many years have you studied
Learn Cambodian 67 - What subjects do they teach here?
Learn Cambodian 68 - Monks only eat two times a day
Learn Cambodian 69 - Cambodia has many nationalities
Learn Cambodian 70 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 71 - Discussing the Mekong River
Learn Cambodian 72 - Farming and the Mekong River
Learn Cambodian 73 - Hello, how are your children?
Learn Cambodian 74 - Planning to seed the crops
Learn Cambodian 75 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 76 - When did you arrive?
Learn Cambodian 77 - Shopping for clothes
Learn Cambodian 78 - Arriving in Phnom Penh
Learn Cambodian 79 - What to pack for Phnom Penh
Learn Cambodian 80 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 81 - Returning from the airport
Learn Cambodian 82 - Studying in Cambodia
Learn Cambodian 83 - System of educationin Cambodia
Learn Cambodian 84 - Method of examinations
Learn Cambodian 85 - Narration
Learn Cambodian 86 - Newspapers in Cambodia
Learn Cambodian 87 - Is the paper private or government?
Learn Cambodian 88 - Newspapers
Learn Cambodian 89 - Listening to the radio
Learn Cambodian 90 - Narration
Over five and a half million people in Cambodia speak as their mother-tongue the language called Cambodian or Khmer. The Cambodian language is a member of the Mon-Khmer language family which includes many languages and dialects spoken in Burma and Malaya as well as in Cambodia.
Cambodians vary in their speech habits as much as speakers of any other languages. Thus there are dialectal differences in the speech of Cambodians native to Siem Reap or Battambang or various other areas of Cambodia, as compared with the speakers of Phnom Penh.
There are two series of vowels and diphthongs in Cambodian, which will be called the first and second "registers." Second register vowels and diphthongs are marked by a accent.
Short vowels do not occur in native Cambodian words without a final consonant following them. When a Cambodian needs to pronounce a short vowel with no consonant following it, he closes the vowel with a glottal stop or, sometimes, with a k.