Practice makes perfect mcgraw hill english
The audio is also playable on a laptop or desktop but a bit of an irritant is that I need to pretend that I'm using a touchscreen.
I'm an old geezer who's not interested in adding junk on my phone. no downloading) available through an app for Android or iOS to be used on Chrome or Safari. McGraw-Hill in comparison seems to have broken ranks and wants to reinforce our reliance on smartphones by presenting its audio supplements as streamable files (i.e. Lesser-known examples of such freely-downloadable audio come from Cornelsen for German adaptations/translations (the "Lextra" series) of the current generation of "Teach Yourself" language courses (at minimum the recordings of the dialogues in a "Lextra" course for a given language are nearly the same (if not the same) as those in the corresponding "Teach Yourself" course), and Darakwon for most of its textbooks and workbooks, all of which focus on Korean for foreigners. The ideal arrangement is what you get from Routledge or Tuttle which offer course audio as downloadable. It seems that publishers are warming to the idea of offering audio supplements of their textbooks, workbooks or graded readers on-line for free.
The stuff that's available is dominated by supplements for FIGS (surprise, surprise), but there is stuff available for a few other books such as Read and Speak Arabic and Practice Makes Pefect Basic Japanese.
#PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT MCGRAW HILL ENGLISH HOW TO#
As I've been reviewing my German using "Practice Makes Perfect German Vocabulary", I ended up poking around the publisher's website and figured out how to get access to the supplements (including streamed audio) for the newer edition of several of its language books.