background preloader

Language Learning Resources

Facebook Twitter

Livemocha. Languages - Homepage. Italian. Portuguese. Spanish. French. German. Greek. Chinese. Other Languages. Byki. Berlitz Home. Rosetta Stone. Totale: Learn, Practice, and Play Your Way to Success. | Rosetta. Learn 35+ Languages for Free in iTunes.

I was just browsing iTunes for poignant Morrissey covers when I discovered nearly a thousand free language courses on iTunes. 926 courses to be exact. Holy Moleskine, Batman! The extensive library of courses span over 35 languages, from Arabic to Yiddish. Each course comes as a convenient podcast which you can subscribe and put on your iPod or iPhone. To get the entire list of language learning podcasts, hit the browse button on the lower-right corner of your iTunes window–it’s the icon that looks like an eye.

Or you can simply do a search for the language you’re interested in. Here’s a sample list of available languages (with links to iTunes): Don’t forget to check out some of the more unusual podcasts such as: I’ve been teaching myself Brazilian Portuguese with Rosetta Stone, so having access to a free supplemental iTunes podcast is nice. If you liked this post, please share it on del.icio.us. What language have you been itching to learn? Language Teachers, Tutors, Classes - Private Lessons, Home Tutor. Verbal Planet. Lonely Planet Travel Guides and Travel Information. Learning Languages.

Languages. Language. Learn Esperanto. The Klingon Language Institute. Learn the Na'vi Language. Do You Speak Na'vi? Giving Voice To 'Avatar' Aliens. USC professor creates an entire alien language for 'Avatar' | He. James Cameron has big aspirations for “Avatar,” and here at Hero Complex we’re stepping up with some epic coverage plans: a 30-day countdown. Today’s topic: The USC professor who found himself on an unexpected Hollywood adventure when he was hired to create the language spoken by aliens on Cameron’s distant planet of Pandora. This modern era of moviemaking has plenty of peculiar challenges for actors — on green-screen sets, for instance, they have to watch a ping-pong ball hanging from a string and convince the camera that they actually staring down some magical beastie — but for the actors auditioning for “Avatar” the biggest challenge may have been reading a sheet of paper with words invented by a USC professor named Paul R.

Frommer. Frommer, a linguistics specialist, was brought in by “Avatar” writer-director James Cameron to create an entire functioning language for the tribe of 10-foot-tall blue aliens who inhabit Pandora, the setting for the film’s conflict. . – Geoff Boucher.