bettyandbob Posted November 2, 2008 Share Posted November 2, 2008 I have one. It was published in Canada many years ago. The book I have seems to be geared toward mid or upper elementary students studying French. It has a 2 - 4 paragraph reading selection on each page. New vocabulary is in a section at the bottom of the page with a picture glossary. No English. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Heather in VA Posted November 2, 2008 Share Posted November 2, 2008 I don't know but just remember, Canadian French and France French aren't the same - so if you are learning France French, make sure the readers you get are the same French. Heather Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Blessedfamily Posted November 2, 2008 Share Posted November 2, 2008 I'm not Canadian, but do you mean these? http://www.amazon.com/perdida-Missing-Aventuras-Adventures-Nicholas/dp/9812468234/ref=ed_oe_h ...or these? http://www.amazon.com/Easy-French-Storybook-Goldilocks-Mcgraw-Hills/dp/0071461736/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1225647056&sr=1-1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
C_l_e_0..Q_c Posted November 2, 2008 Share Posted November 2, 2008 Canadian French and France French aren't the same - so if you are learning France French, make sure the readers you get are the same French. There isn't that much of a difference in the written word. Some expressions, but that's it. Same grammar rules, same sentence structure. It's still French. Orally, it's different, yes. And slang will vary wildly, just as in English. But the written word is governed by the Académie de la Langue Française, so all written French throughout the world is the same. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mooooom Posted November 2, 2008 Share Posted November 2, 2008 http://www.amscopub.com/frameset.htm If the link doesn't work, just find the french section. They have some readers mixed in with their tiexts, listed for levels - for instance easy ones are in present tense only. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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