Learn Chinese Bundle: The Complete Beginner to Advanced Course (Levels 1-5)
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Für 82,95 € kaufen
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ChineseClass101
Über diesen Titel
Want to learn and speak Chinese?
And go from zero and all the way up to conversational fluency?
The bad news? No single audiobook will get you to fluency.
The good news? A bundle of audiobooks will.
Introducing: Learn Chinese Bundle—The Complete Beginner to Advanced Course (Levels 1-5).
This complete Audiobook bundle is a fast, fun, and easy way to pick up Chinese—regardless of your age or learning experience.
- Learn Chinese through everyday Chinese conversations
- Get the conversations explained in simple English
- 5-minute lessons—perfect for busy learners
- All lessons made by native Chinese teachers & voice actors
- Immerse yourself in Chinese conversations anywhere, anytime
- Over 57 hours—from Absolute Beginner to Advanced
- Read along & never miss a word with a companion PDF
- Aligned to the CEFR & HSK
While most apps just teach you words...Learn Chinese Bundle—The Complete Beginner to Advanced Course (Levels 1-5) teaches Chinese through useful, everyday conversations...so you can have those same conversations in fluent Chinese.
Just imagine...
Chatting about the weekend with your Chinese friends...
Ordering food at a restaurant in confident Chinese...
Or simply asking for directions on your next trip to China.
And getting there is easier than you think.
Here's how this Audiobook bundle makes learning fast, fun, and easy...
1. Fast—You start speaking minutes into your first lesson.
You speak in minutes because lessons are around 5 minutes long. No need to study for months or years. You'll be speaking the same exact Chinese phrases you've heard in the lesson dialogues.
2. Fun—You learn from real conversations between real native speakers.
Want to impress native speakers and crack jokes in fluent Chinese? When you're learning from real native speakers, you get to do just that. You'll pick up cultural nuances and phrases that only native speakers know—just by listening along.
Oh—and no grammar drills, memorization, or fake AI voices.
3. Easy—The easiest way to pick up Chinese is...to listen!
And that's how you learn here. Just press play and listen—on your commute, on a walk, or at home. In each lesson, you hear an everyday conversation. Then, our teachers translate and explain every word. You'll absorb real Chinese effortlessly.
About Learn Chinese Bundle—The Complete Beginner to Advanced Course (Levels 1-5)
- Contains 16 ChineseClass101 Audiobooks
- 5-minute audio lessons from Absolute Beginner to Advanced
- Over 57 hours of lessons and dialogues total
- Includes a companion PDF for reading along
So, if you're looking for the best way to learn and speak Chinese...from Absolute Beginner to Advanced...Grab this Audiobook bundle right now.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
©2025 Innovative Language Learning, LLC (P)2025 Innovative Language Learning, LLCThe dialogues remain very short and basic throughout, whereas in JapanesePod101 some dialogues are over a page long. It often feels as if there was little to no editing. Hosts sometimes repeat an entire sentence after saying “again,” simply because they made a mistake that was never cut out. Sometimes, you can even hear JP101’s Jessy saying “practice with the review track,” which suggests they reused audio instead of recording a proper version for this bundle. One season is called “Gengo-Chinese,” which may mean something to those familiar with JP101, but for only Mandarin learners, the title is essentially meaningless.
Some topics are covered up to four times, but not in a structured, pedagogical way. It doesn’t feel like deliberate reinforcement to save you from checking the PDF again. Instead, it seems as if the hosts aren’t fully aware that they are producing an audiobook series and have lost track of what previous lessons contained. This becomes especially clear in the vocabulary sections. In a language course, you would expect vocabulary to build progressively — with clarity about which words have already been introduced and which ones are new. Here, important words from the dialogue are sometimes missing from the vocabulary list, while other words are repeated excessively.
In Japanese, it’s crucial to keep track of formality levels. In this Chinese course, however, every episode states that “the dialogue — as always — uses casual Mandarin,” which feels like a copied formula from JP101 rather than something genuinely adapted to Mandarin.
The dialogues are not only short, but often of poor quality. Many include very low-level humor that doesn’t add much value. This is unfortunate because the real strength of these ILL audiobooks is not in systematically teaching the language (despite what the advertising claims), but in offering small tips and tricks that help you sound more natural and less “textbook-like.”
A recurring issue is the translation. Sometimes it is so vague that the specific word being highlighted doesn’t even appear clearly in the English version. While this might encourage learners to think about meaning, it doesn’t help much when you are trying to understand precisely how a word is used.
The example sentences are also weaker compared to JP101. At times they highlight something extremely basic, such as a verb like “don’t…” or a noun phrase like “I am a…,” which contrasts sharply with JP101’s often more complex and context-rich examples that genuinely help you see how a word functions in different situations.
Although the audiobook helps with recognizing spoken Mandarin, much of the grammar — especially more complex topics — is barely covered. I would definitely not feel prepared to take an HSK exam after completing this course. As in JP101, each lesson features a Chinese instructor and an English-speaking co-host. Most of the time, the Chinese instructor is a woman named Echo. However, in two seasons in the middle of the course, a different instructor explains grammar entirely in Chinese without translation from the co-host. There is no preparation for this sudden shift, and afterward Echo returns with slower explanations and translations. As a result, I relied heavily on the PDF during those two seasons.
Speaking of the PDF, in JP101 I was slightly disappointed that Japanese culture — which is very rich — was only occasionally addressed in a section called “Cultural Insight.” In this Chinese bundle, that section appears after every lesson. However, it sometimes feels more like a personal blog from someone who moved to China rather than a structured cultural overview, and it still doesn’t feel comprehensive.
Echo’s co-host does a good job overall, speaking clearly and in a structured manner. There is also a newer format called “Audio Review,” similar to the “review track,” but instead of just listing vocabulary, it provides additional example sentences for most words, which is a welcome improvement.
Doesn't replace your textbook
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