Khmer has the largest alphabet in the world (74 letters). Assimil throws you into the deep end. By lesson 5, you are reading full sentences. If you haven’t already spent 2 weeks drilling the alphabet, you will drown. Pro tip: Learn the consonants and vowels before starting Assimil.

The book was written decades ago. You will learn how to say “The postman is arriving,” but you won’t learn “WiFi” or “Smartphone” until the appendix. The cultural references are a bit... French colonial nostalgia.

First, manage your expectations. Assimil Khmer is not Duolingo. There are no gamified leaderboards or push notifications.

The lessons are short—about 15 minutes. You read a dialogue, listen to it, and glance at the notes. It doesn’t feel like homework. Over time, the patterns of the language just start to sink in, especially the tricky verb structures (or lack thereof).

Assimil promises you will reach a B2 level (conversational). You won’t. With Khmer specifically, the gap between understanding a sentence and producing it is huge. The active phase is necessary, but it feels like hitting a brick wall because Khmer grammar is so alien to English speakers.

That’s where the old-school French method, , comes in. Famous for its “Le Khmer Sans Peine” (Khmer Without Toil) course, Assimil has been a go-to for decades. But in 2024, is it worth your time? Or is it just a dusty book with cassette tapes?

Most language apps sound like robots reading a script. Assimil uses real Cambodian speakers. They speak at natural speed (sometimes too fast, actually). This is crucial because Khmer is a tonal language and has a massive disconnect between the written word and the spoken slang.