🌟 Elevate Your Travel Game with Mandarin Mastery!
Mandarin Flash Cards by Travelflips offer a comprehensive introduction to basic Chinese vocabulary and phrases, featuring phonetic pronunciation and English translations. Designed for learners of all ages, these high-quality, durable cards come in a stylish portable box, making them the perfect gift for travelers and language enthusiasts alike.
E**S
Easily Covers The Basics
When you move into a new language, you will need the vocabulary tools which allow you to negotiate that new cultural environment. These cards address that; the who, how, when, what, where, and how much of things. I have been taking an online language course for over a month, now. All of the necessary conversational basics have been covered in that course but with all the new things being taught, I needed something to refresh and reinforce the basics. These cards do that nicely. They also include the correct pronunciations, which can get rusty fast if you don't live in that country. These cards can fit easily in a pocket or purse. If you do visit that country, you can pull them out when you forget or get stuck. Of course, there is always a lot more to learn with any language, but these are a great start and I highly recommend them for beginners. 🍃
N**Y
Learn words.
Flash cards teach you the words that you need to know.
A**N
Great for pre-travel refresher
The basics in a box. Great trip prep
T**E
Bien
Muy bien pero menos cantidad de lo esperado
C**Z
Great companion to use with otherLanguage Apps/programs
First; yes, the box is nice and the cards are decently sturdy.Currently I am trying to learn German, and currently using two apps: In 24 Hours Learn German (24 lessons), and the Nemo German app both are very good.The Flash cards are really great. They are laid out the same way I was trying to create mine, just much nicer/neater.Example: Wie Viel? underneath the word they give a phonetically spelled word, (Vee Feel) and then on the back is what the word says/means in English.Also, there is one word per-card. This way you can layout each card to create your own sentences. Also I find it great to match up the words with the lessons in my apps. This way once I have heard how something is suppose to be pronounced I can put the cards in the order of the lesson and then shuffle them up to change the order.My one issue is, I thought for the price the box would have been BIGGER and that there would have been more cards.There are only 65 cards in the box. I have seen other language Flashcards boxes for the same price, but with much more cards in them.Now what would be Großartig Awesome is if you could contact the company and have them make specific cards for you.
C**R
Amazing product and company
I've read many reviews on how the packaging of the product resulted being damaged by shipping. Regardless, I ordered the cards due to the customers saying they would prefer to replace the product due to the apparent quality, and shipping handlers clearly mishandled the shipment. In addition the reviews also stated that the company will fix the shipping damage through replacement. The flash card holder is simple and friendly. The flash cards are of good paper stock and have a nice glossy finish and a nice texture feel in your hands. Makes separating the cards easy with your finger tips or shuffling them. This is a classy way to trivia friends on their knowledge of world languages. As well as improve your own knowledge. I am ordering Chinese next.
C**B
Great!
This is a really great set of introductory words and phrases.
M**S
Very odd choice in romanization
I'm studying Japanese and suck at making flash cards to study new vocab. I thought this might be a good middle-of-the-road solution: some vocab, some phrases.The packaging was very nice, the cards on the other hand were a bit thin and flimsy.What I really didn't like though was the style of romanization on the backs of the cards for the words used. Each word is written out phonetically to the point that I had to read through a few of them several times out loud to get what they were intended to say. It was like one of those weird picture puzzles that form words.Add to that many of the words they used were less common in every day Japanese speech (even my instructor said to ignore many of them), and I don't think these will be seeing any use from me.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 months ago