1. Learn Cantonese is an easy to use mobile Cantonese Phrasebook that will give visitors to Hong Kong and those who are interested in learning Cantonese a good start in the language.
1. Also after I listen to the audio one time: there is 2 voices giving it a kind of weird reverb delay of like 0.1ms when playing is every time after.. Beside that it is proving semi-helpful.It's alright however it doesn't explain stroke order or any form of tonal explanation, the voice is very robotic and unrealistic and lessons are short, they don't even teach you expecting you to self learn.App only works for one test, doesn't teach you characters.
2. Which number designates that the tone is rising (/), falling (\), flat (--), up-down (/\), down-up (\/), etc?? The app has common phrases with audio and is easy to understand.Good and bad.
3. This is disrespectful to the Cantonese language.I have only just begun to use it but it is simple enough that I can already count and say a couple words of greeting which must attest to its usefulness because I am not particularly good at learning new thingsOne point to make, when spoken the Cantonese.
4. The recordings of the words sounds like they were done without professional equipment- some sound further away or with echo, and some of the words were duplicated for 2 different meanings i.e. they use "sing kei" for both month and week.
5. Completely unnecessaryGreat experience so far so good 👍Expects you to already know Chinese characters, what they sound like, what tones sound like, what pingying is, etc.
6. Joe meh yeah example I write it as, joe is ok to sound then may then ya or " joe may ya"Useful though the app requires access to all photos and files on your phone.
7. However when she speaks to the app, she gets 1 star for some of the phrases which is almost mind numbing as she speaks better than some of the audio phrases on the app.
8. The written to equal how the word is to sound in some cases do not match.
9. Delete.Please clarify which intonation corresponds to each number in the phonetic pronunciation.
10. For example, the translation for "What's your name?" is: nei5 giu3 me1 ming4.
11. Just right off the bat noticed there wasn't any structure to the lessons, no progression.