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Mongolian: Lonely Planet Phrasebook | 
enlarge | Authors: Alan J. K. Sanders, J. Bat-ireedui, Lonely Planet Phrasebooks Publisher: Lonely Planet Category: Book
List Price: $8.99 Buy New: $4.07 You Save: $4.92 (55%)
New (22) Used (1) from $4.07
Avg. Customer Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 154583
Media: Paperback Edition: 2 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 210 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1 Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 3.6 x 0.7
ISBN: 1740591860 Dewey Decimal Number: 494.2383421 EAN: 9781740591867 ASIN: 1740591860
Publication Date: March 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New and Factory Sealed Item Fast Shipping
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Product Description As the traveler at a neighboring table struggles with the menu, you're glad you came equipped with your phrasebook. Not only did you order your meal with ease, you're also sure of what's coming. You smile as the waiter brings your dish and say en minii zakhialsan khool bish... Travel with confidence, using language as your guide.
Our phrasebooks give you a comprehensive mix of practical and social words and phrases in more than 120 languages. Chat with the locals and discover their culture - a guaranteed way to enrich your travel experience.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
Buy the older version / Lonley Planet Mongolia April 4, 2008 I Just got this book and it is page for page exactly the same is the older version. I was expecting something new from this as it was pulbished in 2008 / same - save yourself a few bucks and get the older one. If your going to Mongolia a phrase book is a must have , I lived there 1 year with my wife and learned to speak mgl w/o a phrase book. There are no english to mgl phrase books in Ulaan Baatar , only cyrillic mgl to english . So if your going , I would reccomend buying either one .
not so great, useful however September 9, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I agree with the previous reviewers: the phonetic pronounciations given in the book are quite rough. However, as I had no idea of Mongolian language, showing the written cyrillic text was helpful and a basis for learning from natives during my trip.
The Only Way to Communicate August 3, 2007 This book is worth its weight and more in gold. I depended on this book so much during my 2 month trip to Mongolia, traveling the road less travelled. Don't go to Mongolia without this.
Disappointing July 9, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
In the past year I have spent 6 months in rural Mongolia. I had the Lonely Planet Guide to Mongolia and The Lonely Planet Mongolian Phrasebook. First off, the Guide to Mongolia is excellent, my copy is basically falling to pieces I used it so much. I was less pleased with the Phrasebook. I have some concerns about the pronunciation guide as given by other reviewers. The use of the "schwa" in Mongolian could be better described. I found the section on restaurants very poor. In the area where I was menus were in Mongolian only and the phrasebook was useless trying to decipher the menu.The phrasebook would be enhanced if the vocabulary list included a Mongolian-English section. If you come across a Mongolian word that you want to understand the phrasebook is not much use. In its favour, the book is cheap, portable and is written in an easy style.
THIS BOOK IS JUST PLAIN WRONG! June 18, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I went to Mongolia twice in the past year, and I live with a Mongolian woman full time who is a well educated journalist. If one had to rely on this book, one would be in serious trouble. First off, the phrase "sain bainuu?" which is used as "hello", if you pronounced it the way this book says, you would be way off, and no one would be able to understand you. I hear the phrase every day, spoken by native Mongolians, and it sounds more like "sen benno". The book says to say "sayn baynoo". What's up with that? And then the pronunciations for the Mongolian cyrillic that it gives are not correct. So you'd be trying to read something and thinking you were smart with your little book, and when you tried to say it, you'd never be right. So as far as translating a few basic, written words, this book could be helpful. But don't attempt to pronounce anything the way they have it written. I can't believe this is the "best" book out there on this subject! They need to rewrite the pronunciation section with the supervision of an actual Mongolian speaker!
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