Read Thai in 10 Days


Book Description

With only a few hours a day for less than 2 weeks, you'll be able to decrypt the mystery of the curious Thai characters and start reading right away guaranteed. Read Thai In 10 Days is a comprehensive Thai learning course including sound files so you learn how to pronounce words correctly from the start.




Oxford Picture Dictionary English-Thai Edition: Bilingual Dictionary for Thai-speaking teenage and adult students of English


Book Description

4,000 words and phrases are organized thematically within 163 topics. Includes English to Thai translations of vocabulary throughout, and an extensive index in Thai at the back of the book. A fully integrated vocabulary development program in American English, progressing from essential words to the more complex, delivered in short thematic units. Realistic scenarios and modern artwork are easy to relate to and these, together with story pages and practice exercises, have been applauded for their success in promoting critical thinking skills. Content is fully supported by a range of components (in English only) - including Workbooks, Classroom Activities, Audio and website.







Preston Lee's Conversation English For Thai Speakers Lesson 1 - 40


Book Description

This book is designed to help English learners begin speaking conversation English. It is also an excellent learning resource for reading and comprehension. Have fun and learn English the easy way. This book has been written for all ages, children and adults alike. - Written for all ages - 40 excellent lessons for everyday English conversation - 40 fun worksheets for review - Practice tests to reinforce learning - Activity pages for easy learning - Frequently used verbs in 4 grammatical forms - 40 practical and commonly used idioms - Vocabulary words include Thai translations Written by ESL specialists, Kevin Lee and Matthew Preston have taught English as a Second Language for over 20 years around the world. The lessons in this book have been carefully chosen to help the learner really understand a range of topics for everyday talk. A great book to be used with Preston Lee’s Beginner English 100 Lessons




Master the Thai Alphabet, a Handwriting Practice Workbook


Book Description

Do you want to perfect your Thai handwriting? Do you need a trustworthy resource to teach your small children to trace the Thai alphabet? Then this workbook is the perfect companion for your studies. In it, you'll find all the Thai consonants and vowels, including the both the Traditional and the Modern versions of each letter. Your benefits: Clear large letters make it easy to recognize even the most detailed of the Thai characters and diacritics. Detailed stroke order instructions provide you with a strong foundation to build your skills in both the traditional and the modern writing styles. Dedicated "Trace and Learn" sections are designed to imprint proper stroke technique unto your muscle memory. Font variations train your brain to recognize alternative character styles. As a bonus, for each character, you'll find an extra 8.5 x 11 inches page fully dedicated to the handwriting practice of that letter with and without guiding background light-gray letters. Feel free to photocopy these bonus pages as you wish to extend the lifetime value of your workbook. Special information: Like all Lang Workbooks, this work is also a labor of love. Accordingly, if you are a teacher, a student of Thai, or homeschooling your children, then you can photocopy any part of this workbook for your own, or your students, personal use. Learning to write the Thai script by heart has never been made easy.




Finding Their Voice


Book Description

The rural, Lao-speaking people of northeastern Thailand constitute over a third of the entire population of Thailand. Over the last century, this ethnically separate community has evolved from a traditional peasantry into “cosmopolitan” villagers who are actively shaping Thai politics. Eminent anthropologist Charles Keyes traces this evolution in detail, beginning with the failure of a Buddhist millenarian uprising in 1901–2 and concluding with the successful election of the Thai Rak Thai/Pheu Thai Party in the 2000s. In the intervening century, rural northeasterners have become more educated and prosperous, and they have gained a sophisticated understanding of the world and of their position in it as Thai citizens. Although northeasterners have often been thwarted in their efforts to press government agencies to redress their grievances, they have rejected radical revolutionary efforts to transform the Thai political system. Instead, they have looked to parliamentary democracy as the system in which they can make their voices heard. As the country engages with the processes of democracy, the Pheu Thai Party and the Red Shirt movement appear to have established the people of northeastern Thailand as an authentic voice in the nation’s political landscape. Highlights • Traces the evolution of a marginalized peasantry into a significant political force in Thai society • Examines the disjunction between the urban middle-class negative perspectives on the northeastern Thai rural population and real characteristics of that population • Highlights the different views of political authority and legitimacy in Thailand that have contributed to the twenty-first century crisis in the Thai political order What Others Are Saying “Finding Their Voice by anthropologist Charles Keyes is a culmination of decades of careful ethnography consistently combined with an astute political analysis and sense of history. Reminiscent of Eugen Weber’s classic, “Peasants into Frenchmen,” Keyes’s book shows that the people of Isan have become the makers and undoers of governments and are more firmly wedded to the modern notion of parliamentary democracy than are the refined urban elites. This book has as much to say about the polarized politics of Thailand as it does about the rich culture and history of Isan.” —Philip Hirsch, University of Sydney




First and Second Language Use in Asian EFL


Book Description

Many Asian education systems discourage or even ban the use of L1 in L2 classrooms – although in fact L1 remains widely used by teachers. Why is L1 use still devalued in this context? By observing classes and interviewing teachers, this book explores three dimensions of L1 use in L2 teaching: • pedagogy: what teachers actually do, and what they say about it • the personal: what happens to identity when we ‘perform’ a foreign tongue • the professional: how textbooks are used, and what is distinctive about the EFL domain.




Catalogue


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The American Printer


Book Description