Teach Your Baby Italian Audio CD and simple teaching Guide
Brand New (still shrink wrapped):
1 CD
This CD has been uniquely designed to teach babies a foreign language in a natural and effective way.
Set against a soothing musical background, it teaches counting, colours, body parts, animals and articles of clothing and much more, focusing on concepts and objects which infants can comprehend. It also includes short, common phrases that a parent would say to a baby such as, "Mummy loves you" and "Let's change that nappy". This allows you to interact with your baby in the same way as any Italian-speaking parent would.
Teach Your Baby helps your child to learn more than one language during the most crucial window of opportunity - the first three years of life. Children learn multiple language more easily and quickly before age three than at any other time in life because their brains are still rapidly developing. Take advantage of this opportunity and give your child a head start in life!
Includes a simple teaching guide with word list.
This product is suitable for use by a parent and baby with no previous knowledge of Italian.
Audio CD (25 mins) + Teaching Guide
About the Italian Language
Italian is a Romance language spoken by about 63 million people, primarily in Italy. In Switzerland, Italian is one of four official languages. It is also the official language of San Marino and Vatican City. Standard Italian, adopted by the state after the unification of Italy, is based on Tuscan dialect and is somewhat intermediate between Italo-Dalmatian languages of the South and Northern Italian dialects of the North.
Unlike most other Romance languages, Italian has retained the contrast between short and long consonants which existed in Latin. As in most Romance languages, stress is distinctive. Of the Romance languages, Italian is considered to be one of the closest resembling Latin in terms of vocabulary, though Romanian most closely preserves the noun declension system of Classical Latin, and Spanish the verb conjugation system , while Sardinian is the most conservative in terms of phonology. |