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Lonely Planet Thai Phrasebook (Lonely Planet Language Survival Kit)

Lonely Planet Thai Phrasebook (Lonely Planet Language Survival Kit)

List Price: $5.95
Your Price: $5.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Don't bother buying this one
Review: After traveling using a Berlitz phrasebook in Italy, I went to Thailand, and bought the only one available -- Lonely Planet. It is terrible.

The tone markers don't make much sense. They are not intuitive.

The Food section has something advertised as a "menu decoder" when it is really just the same section all over again. Compared to Berlitz's food section for Italy, the LP guide is rather lacking.

The Dictionary section is very lacking. It doesn't even have all the words listed elsewhere. The index is the same way. It makes finding information in the phrasebook next to impossible.

Unfortunately, this phrasebook has just been whipped out as a companion to LP's monopoly on guide books. Try to find something else.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best I've found
Review: As a student trying to study Thai in preparation for a foreign exchange to Chon Buri, I was a little hesitant to buy this book, but my fears were soon calmed once I opened it up. This book is an excellent guide to the Thai language - even if it is geared slightly for the Aussie/British English speakers rather than Americans. It starts off with pronunciation, then Roman transliteration (it takes a little to get used to - "ae" sounds like `a' in American "bat", and the tone markers {á, à, â, ã, a} ~ high tone, low tone, falling, rising, and mid, respectively, are a little different), but with practice, you can soon make yourself easily understood. While the Thai- English dictionary isn't very extensive, this guide will teach you basic Thai grammar, customs, food, do's and don't's , and even the Thai alphabet. In the subject guides, words are expressed in English, Thai in Roman letters, and Thai script. If you want to learn more than just the basics, I would recommend a good Thai-English dictionary as a companion with this - the two together will make for an unstoppable team! I would most certainly recommend this book to you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Excellent Beginning Thai Book!
Review: As a student trying to study Thai in preparation for a foreign exchange to Chon Buri, I was a little hesitant to buy this book, but my fears were soon calmed once I opened it up. This book is an excellent guide to the Thai language - even if it is geared slightly for the Aussie/British English speakers rather than Americans. It starts off with pronunciation, then Roman transliteration (it takes a little to get used to - "ae" sounds like 'a' in American "bat", and the tone markers {á, à, â, ã, a} ~ high tone, low tone, falling, rising, and mid, respectively, are a little different), but with practice, you can soon make yourself easily understood. While the Thai- English dictionary isn't very extensive, this guide will teach you basic Thai grammar, customs, food, do's and don't's , and even the Thai alphabet. In the subject guides, words are expressed in English, Thai in Roman letters, and Thai script. If you want to learn more than just the basics, I would recommend a good Thai-English dictionary as a companion with this - the two together will make for an unstoppable team! I would most certainly recommend this book to you.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not complete
Review: I bought this book for my trip to Thailand next winter, so I have not put it into practice yet.

However, Thai is a tonal language, and this book does not indicate what tones one is to use when pronouncing a word.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very useful but not (yet) perfect
Review: I have just started using it and it has a lot of very useful day-to-day phrases. I don't like the size of the Thai script. It is very difficult to read and one nearly needs a magnifying glass to be sure. I have learnt to read and write Thai by learning it through German transliteration (which is much more accurate than English because German has many more sounds which are closer to Thai) and would like to use the phrasebook without Cummings' phonetics. Enlarge the Thai script and the tone marks, clear up the mistakes and it will remain the best phrasebook currently available.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best I've found
Review: I recently bought a lot of phrasebooks and dictionaries in connection with a trip to Thailand that I've just returned from. Out of all of them, this was the book I routinely carried in my pants pocket.

Pluses:
o Thai-to-English dictionary as well as English-Thai
o I personally find the representation of aspirated consonants with h, eg "ph", "th" etc to be more attractive and logical than the alternatives like "d(t)" etc. The only problem is people who don't read the introduction and pronounce ph as f, etc.
o Generally good choices of vocabulary and phrases
o Useful sections on important cultural features

Minuses:
o No accompanying cd/cassette (but even when these are available they tend to be poorly integrated)
o Many words used in the phrases are unaccountably missing from the dictionary sections
o Many errors and typos, especially in the tones
o Useful sidebars are presented in a disorganized manner which makes them impossible to refer to. For instance, a section on "traditional music" is shoehorned into the "family" section, and is so long that for weeks I did not realize that the family section continued after it! Also, such sidebars are not included in the TOC.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Save your money
Review: I wouldn't bother with this one. Although I am a big fan of LPs guide books, this phrase-book was not particularly helpful. 9 times out of 10 they didn't have what I was looking for and when they did it was a real hassle to find. The pronunciation guide was not that helpful but the food section was good. If you already have the guidebook you could probably get by w/out this, but if you feel you need something, get a used copy over there(or maybe an Amazon auction.) If you do get fed up with it (as I did), it makes a very nice gift for a Thai friend. Next time I'll bring a pocket dictionary. Hope this helped.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Save your money
Review: I wouldn't bother with this one. Although I am a big fan of LPs guide books, this phrase-book was not particularly helpful. 9 times out of 10 they didn't have what I was looking for and when they did it was a real hassle to find. The pronunciation guide was not that helpful but the food section was good. If you already have the guidebook you could probably get by w/out this, but if you feel you need something, get a used copy over there(or maybe an Amazon auction.) If you do get fed up with it (as I did), it makes a very nice gift for a Thai friend. Next time I'll bring a pocket dictionary. Hope this helped.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: don't go to Thailand without it
Review: My husband and I found this small book to be a huge help as we attempted communication in the marketplaces of Thailand. I prefer to use books like this as a reference, pointing to the Thai phrase next to the English phrase I want to communicate. Conversely, my husband actually studied the book from the beginning. He was able to learn to pronounce and understand many useful phrases in addition to numbers (which came in very handy while bargaining). We enjoyed this book so much that I am already ordering the Mandarin version for our trip to China in 2005.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: don't go to Thailand without it
Review: My husband and I found this small book to be a huge help as we attempted communication in the marketplaces of Thailand. I prefer to use books like this as a reference, pointing to the Thai phrase next to the English phrase I want to communicate. Conversely, my husband actually studied the book from the beginning. He was able to learn to pronounce and understand many useful phrases in addition to numbers (which came in very handy while bargaining). We enjoyed this book so much that I am already ordering the Mandarin version for our trip to China in 2005.


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