Colloquial French Vocabulary: Learn How to Speak French Like a Native: Thousands of the Most Essential French Slang and Idioms with Mp3s for Pronunciation by MR Frederic Bibard (Paperback / softback, 2014)
Understand the real French If you simply stick to the formal vocabulary you are taught on your French course, you will have a hard time understanding native-speakers. This eBook will help you to progress in everyday French, the kind you can hear on the street, movies and radio. Impress your French-speaking friends Get a more intensive conversational level that rises above the banal by using some well-chosen slang. Your friends will be impressed by your level of French and will consequently speak to you in a more natural way. Fun book in itself This book contains some curse words and interesting expressions used by the French. I am sure you will have a good laugh while learning some of them. Learn anywhere Free Mp3 download in 2 versions: French tracks only and French/English Translation tracks. You can t only learn slang by reading but also through listening, and kw how to prounce them in the right way. Learn on the go Continual up-to-date slang Slang is ever-evolving, and terms can grow outdated quickly. The main book has selected the most consistent terms you can hear throughout the years, but, as a bonus, I have created a list of contemporary French terms. This short eBook (around 200 slang expressions) gets regularly updated with new expressions that appear in media (example: YouTube). The most complete French Slang eBook available Most books available only contain around 400/500 French slang expressions. This eBook offers more than 1400. It is also the only one with audio. Technical detail: +1400 slang expressions divided into 23 topics MP3 with audio with French only and French/English (+5 hours 53 tracks)
Frederic Bibard is the founder of TalkInFrench.com, a French language and culture website named as the #1 language blog in the 2016 Best Language Learning Blogs by bab.la and Lexiophiles. He spent several years teaching French while traveling abroad and has since moved back to Paris to dedicate his time TO developing fun and helpful French language resources. He takes food seriously (he is French after all), but he complements it with a love of running which allows him to nurture his passion for good food while staying in shape. Say hello to him on Twitter (@fredericbibard) and Google+ or visit his website www.talkinfrench.com.