
Esperanto Self-Taught with Phonetic Pronunciation, Volume 3
The dream of a universal language lives in this slim volume. Esperanto was created in 1887 by L.L. Zamenhof as a bridge between peoples, and a century later, William W. Mann designed this self-teaching method to make that dream accessible to anyone with a desire to speak across borders. Volume 3 focuses specifically on conversational phrases - the living language you need when you step off the train in Prague, strike up a conversation in a Berlin cafe, or correspond with a pen pal in Tokyo who shares your interest in world literature. Each phrase appears in Esperanto with clear phonetic pronunciation, so you speak correctly from the first word. Mann's aim was practical: with this book and some groundwork connecting with Esperantists before your journey, travel becomes something richer than tourism - it becomes exchange. This volume gives you the phrases to begin that conversation, and perhaps discover that the world is smaller and more connected than you imagined.





