Whether your child is learning English or Polish, Oxford First Polish Words gives your child a head start in learning another language by taking a picture-book journey through a day, with familiar settings, everyday things, and cute little dinosaurs. There is a bird's eye view of getting ready for school in the morning, the journey to school, inside the classroom, a birthday party, and even a trip to the seaside. As a first picture word book, this is perfect for children and their language teacher, or native speaker, to share together picking out the familiar items, playing the matching game, recognizing numbers, shapes and time words. It is ideal for supporting the language skills children are learning in school, language clubs, and for those learning English as a 2nd language. Over 400 Polish words and their English translations are given next to their illustrations, on every page. There is also an expertly-levelled supplementary section at the back - a picture/word matching game, counting the ladybirds up to twenty, shapes, opposites, weather, time, and a comprehensive index. The David Melling (The Kiss that Missed, Fidget and Quilly) illustrations make this an adorable first bilingual word book.
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Whether your child is learning English or Polish, Oxford First Polish Words gives your child a head start in learning another language by taking a picture-book journey through a day, with familiar settings, and everyday things. Over 400 Polish words and their English translations are given next to their illustrations, on every page.
Read more
Oxford's First Polish Words is a thematic bilingual picture book, illustrated by David Melling, with over 400 first words in Polish and English.

Product details

ISBN
9780199117154
Published
2009
Publisher
Oxford University Press; Oxford University Press
Weight
203 gr
Height
276 mm
Width
219 mm
Thickness
4 mm
Age
02, JC
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
48

Illustrated by

Biographical note


David Melling began illustrating in 1986. For the past ten years he has been concentrating on children's books, working mainly on reference and picture books. He was a finalist for the Smarties prize in 1994, and the Kate Greenaway Award in 2003.