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WordLang Study American Spanish Talking Picture Dictionary GameA talking dictionary designed for children who wish to learn basic American Spanish.
Study American Spanish Talking Picture Dictionary with Native Speaking Pronounciation for Kids. Include Animals, Numbers, Colors, Shapes, Food, Nature and Home. Great toy and learning tool for very young children. An appealing and colorful visual representation with a word or two on each spread, along with a simple illustration and native sound pronunciation.
The series is designed for children who wish to learn concrete vocabulary and basic structures of the American Spanish language. Will be great resource same as for Beginners Intermediate and Advanced levels.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary 11th EditionNew edition of the world famous Concise Oxford English Dictionary provides an authoritative description of the English language. With instant access to over 240,000 words, phrases, and definitions, this program is ideal for anyone needing an up-to-date dictionary of current English on their PC for study, work, or home.
The eleventh edition of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary has been fully revised, updated, and redesigned, as is appropriate for the first Concise of the 21st century. The dictionary contains more than 240,000 words, phrases, and meanings, of which almost 2,000 are new to this edition.
The new entries give us a snapshot of life in 2004. The news is filled with talk of gangmasters, the congestion charge, sky marshals, and health tourism; pole dancing, bookcrossing, and speed dating are the things that entertain us; football matches can end in handbags, and bumsters are popular with middle youth and metrosexuals. And, of course, if we want to make something seem more interesting we sex it up.
The Concise also says croeso (welcome) to some Welsh words with bore da (good morning) and iechyd da (good health) joining thousands of words from all around the English-speaking world: dicky (car boot) and batchmate (classmate) from India, spinny (mad, crazy) from Canada, and bloviate (talk at length in an inflated or empty way) from America.