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Rocket Languages review: scripts from 0-fluent

February 6, 2022 by Jamie Leave a Comment

Rocket Languages is a genuinely well-rounded way to learn languages that has the potential to help language learners achieve many different kinds of goals. In this Rocket Languages review, we’ll walk through some lessons and talk about what Rocket Languages does well, not so well, and if it’s a resource you should consider.

Language options

You can use Rocket Languages to learn:

  • American Sign Language
  • Arabic
  • Chinese (Mandarin)
  • English (American)
  • French
  • German
  • Hindi
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Korean
  • Portuguese (Brazilian)
  • Russian
  • Spanish

For this Rocket Languages review, let’s test Rocket Languages Spanish.

Rocket Languages review: level 1 interactive audio

Rocket Languages has its material organized into 3 levels (as well as some other courses for practice, depending on the language), and each of those levels has its own dashboard. Starting with the very first lesson in the very first dashboard, you’ll learn the very first phrases you’ll ever need: how to say ‘hello’.

First, you’ll get an audio file introducing you to everything, all in English (which makes sense, considering if you’re starting at level 1, you probably don’t understand much Spanish). It’ll introduce you to that first conversation.

Or, as I did in the video below, simply skip past the English introduction and jump right into the audio itself.

I do love the modernized interface – you have complete control over the speed of the audio, which part of the audio you’re listening to, and have a clickable transcript for us visual learners. You can also download the mp3 for independent practice without having to go back into the course itself.

I still don’t like how much if it is in English (that’s my main issue with the Pod101 series, too), but it is easy enough to skip past it and get right into the goods.

Regardless, this script is very slow – excellent for beginners, but not for you if you have experience with the language (at least, not level 1). But you’ll go through a normal greeting conversation with some helpful tips: how native speakers speak, any important cultural knowledge, etc.

If this is too slow for you (and you’ve already purchased the course), you can jump right to the lessons at your level. There is no need to complete any lessons – move around Rocket Languages as you please.

Next, you’ll take that same conversations and break it down even more for you to act out both sides of the dialogue.

In this first lesson, you get an incredibly simplistic conversation, and a ton of options for digesting said conversation:

  • Play the conversation
  • Play Mauricio’s side of the conversation (for you to role-play as Amy)
  • Play Amy’s side of the conversation (for you to role-play as Mauricio)
  • Play each individual piece of dialogue independently
  • Record yourself saying each individual piece of dialogue independently

This offers fresh new beginners plenty of opportunities to learn the way that they need to learn. And if it’s too easy for you (which is totally understandable – this is at a snail’s pace), click the gear at the upper right-hand corner to manage the settings.

With these extra settings either checked or unchecked, you can give yourself more of a challenge by:

  • Blurring the English translation (practice thinking in the language)
  • Blurring the Spanish text (practice listening comprehension)
  • Removing a word or character for a fill-in-the-blank
  • Having Rocket Languages grade your recording

In these sections, Rocket Languages uses speech recognition to grade your pronunciation. I generally don’t like to rely on this tech, but I do like being able to see what it thinks I’m saying.

After this “extra vocabulary” section – vocab that is relevant to this conversation but doesn’t actually appear in it – it’s time to “make it stick with Rocket reinforcement”! Using the same conversation, you’ll continue to:

  • flashcards
  • more speech recognition
  • transcription (type the statements)
  • verbal translation (see the English words, say them in the target language)
  • multiple choice quiz

In all these reinforcement tools, Rocket Languages also prompts you to report how easy or difficult any given term is! This is my absolute favorite and I wish I saw it more.

It keeps track of what you’re learning, kind of like Anki and LingoDeer do – literally just tell Rocket Languages how well you know the term. Then, once you’re through with those flashcards, you have the option to just study the more difficult ones again.

It’s important to notice that the transcription exercise corrects you if you don’t use appropriate accents. Always write the language correctly – the accents are more than just annoying pronunciation marks.

But, at the same time, whether you got it right is completely self-reporting. So technically you could just not make an effort to use the accents, but they did their due diligence to tell you. If you don’t have an accurate understanding of the language, that’s on you.

Language & culture lessons

On the dashboard, under the “interactive audio” lessons, you’ll find “language & culture” lessons. These lessons are here to give you some key background information of the language, including pronunciation tips, grammatical patterns, and more.

Basically, this is where Rocket Languages takes important knowledge that can be dry (and therefore normally avoided), and applies it to their methodology to make it a bit more intriguing.

For example, the first lesson explains the difference between the B and V sound in Spanish – it’s not a make or break kind of thing, but definitely helpful for pronunciation.

This is honestly great – most resources don’t explain things like the alphabet from the get go, as most resources (as well as most learners) don’t tend to find these things important.

Interactive audio level 3

As we’ve already seen, level 1 is very, very slow and simple, great for total beginners. Rocket Languages is broken up into 3 levels, so how advanced does level 3 get?

Honestly, more advanced than I’d expected!

This particular conversation is around an upper-intermediate level. Considering how slow and simple the first level was, I’m pleasantly surprised by the content here. It’s played at a decent speed as well, and very clearly.

If you want a more native-level speed, you’ll have to find native content.

If you want to challenge yourself more (which I highly recommend if it’s not too much of a stretch for you), go into the gear icon and turn off the English translations. At this level, your comprehension likely can take a bit more pushing – do it if you can.

My only issue is that “cheesy” clarity. For some it may be beneficial, as it’s easier to understand, but it’s almost unrealistic unless you’re in an elementary school classroom.

However, this doesn’t reflect on the approach as a whole, which I tend to agree with. For example:

Grammar isn’t crucial to being able to make yourself understood in a conversation.

I mean, it’s true. If conversing fluently is your goal, you don’t have to be too concerned over grammar. Which is probably why they don’t formally address grammar at all. It’s nodded at in contextual examples, but that’s about it.

Nonetheless, I don’t see you ever running out of conversational practices. Once you’re done with all 3 levels, you can click on to “Travelogues” for even more conversational practice: 20-30 minutes of advanced-level conversation, where you need to actively go to the English version if you want the translation.

Rocket Languages review: pricing

I can honestly say that Rocket Languages is a high quality resource, which means it comes at a high quality price. You can spend a couple of hundred dollars for all 3 levels, or if you don’t plan on needing every level, you can lower the price by purchasing courses individually.

Click here to see up-to-date prices.

Buying Rocket Languages includes access to only 1 language.

If this Rocket Languages review shows you that this may very well be the best language learning resource for you, that price tag may make you a bit nervous. Keep in mind that not only does that price include lifetime access to all updates, but you can also always trial the first few lessons of any course for free (this review is based on those very same trial lessons).

rocket languages review

The first free lessons, at every level, are available to you forever. No obligation, no nothing.

Who can benefit most from Rocket Languages?

Rocket Languages is a very well-rounded resource that can take you from day 0 of your language to a pretty advanced level for one program. It presents a variety of different ways to study, based on what’s engaging and important to you, with no obligation to use any of them if you don’t want to.

However, if you need fun sounds, bright colors, and heavy gamification, Rocket Languages’ clear, lightweight activities won’t keep you interested.

Same for those who want a thorough knowledge of grammar – you’ll get a basic idea/feel for grammar, but you’re mostly left to pick up patterns implicitly without drills or grandiose explanations.

Otherwise, if you have a bit of cash to invest in your language learning and want to engage almost all the senses no matter where you are in your journey, click here to give Rocket Languages a try.

Filed Under: Advanced, American Sign Language, Arabic, Beginner, Chinese (Mandarin), English, French, German, Hindi, Intermediate, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Language app reviews, Level, Listening, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Speaking, Target Language, Vocabulary, Writing

Mango Languages review: 70+ beginner languages

February 5, 2022 by Jamie 2 Comments

Mango Languages is a crowd favorite for language learners because it’s engaging, offers real-world education, and can be accessed for free through institutions everywhere. In this Mango Languages review, learn everything you need to know about this resource for your own language goals: what it does well, what it doesn’t, and who should use it.

And if you fall under the category of language learners who won’t really benefit, this Mango Languages review ends with a couple of other recommendations, based on Mango Languages’ biggest flaws.

Mango Languages available

To start, Mango Languages offers plenty of languages, plus quite a few different dialects/accents within those languages, including:

  • Arabic (Egyptian)
  • Arabic (Iraqi)
  • Arabic (Levantine)
  • Arabic (MS)*
  • Aramaic (Chaldean)
  • Armenian
  • Azerbaijani
  • Bengali
  • Cantonese
  • Cherokee
  • Chinese (Mandarin)*
  • Creole (Haitian)
  • Croatian
  • Czech
  • Danish
  • Dutch
  • Dzongkha
  • English
  • English (Shakespeare)
  • Filipino (Tagalog)
  • Finnish
  • French*
  • French (Canadian)
  • German*
  • Greek
  • Greek (Ancient)
  • Greek (Koine)
  • Hawaiian
  • Hebrew
  • Hebrew (Biblical)
  • Hindi
  • Hungarian
  • Icelandic
  • Igbo
  • Indonesian
  • Irish*
  • Italian*
  • Japanese*
  • Javanese
  • Kazakh
  • Korean*
  • Latin
  • Malay
  • Malayalam
  • Norwegian
  • Pashto
  • Pirate
  • Polish
  • Portuguese (Brazil)*
  • Persian (Dari)
  • Persian (Farsi)
  • Potawatomi
  • Punjabi (Pakistani)
  • Romanian
  • Russian*
  • Scottish Gaelic
  • Serbian
  • Shangainese
  • Slovak
  • Spanish (Castilian)*
  • Spanish (LAm)*
  • Swahili
  • Swedish
  • Tamil
  • Telugu
  • Thai
  • Turkish
  • Tuvan
  • Ukrainian
  • Urdu
  • Uzbek
  • Vietnamese
  • Yiddish

The languages marked with an asterisk(*) also include a variety of different cultural courses, from etiquette to business to superstitions and beyond.

These courses mean that you can also use Mango Languages to learn professional phrases, or even just fun ones (Like St Patrick’s Day Irish, for example). If you’re looking for a clear-cut, specific path in your target language, this is a great, unique approach.

Fun vocabulary options are a great way to make sure you’re enjoying the language learning process! Even if you don’t *need* St Patrick’s Day vocabulary, it still qualifies as legitimate exposure to the language. These fun sections are not reliable across languages, though, so check what’s available before assuming you can use it to learn professional Uzbek, for example.

Mango Languages: an overview

Mango Language’s courses are laid out in a very simple, modern way – no advertising, no outside podcasts or blog posts, nothing – so you can focus on the language and nothing else. It’s been completely redone within the past couple of years, and these updates have made massive improvements to the platform’s usability.

These courses are broken up into units and chapters. Once you start whichever chapter you like (there are no requirements for going through any prior lessons or units, just pick and choose whichever lessons suit your fancy), you’ll see that each chapter is one conversation that you’ll be dissecting. You’ll get a collection of phrases/sentences for a real-life conversation, and break them down bit by bit.

Specifically, you’ll learn to have these conversations by learning the individual words, phrases, and then sentences, with some nice little cultural facts thrown in. You’ll then learn to piece together all of this information yourself, with the option for plenty of help along the way.

As you continue on through these lessons, you’ll learn and understand each individual word and phrase in a variety of different ways. And each of these ways will be repeated many times.

When I say Mango Languages takes sentences bit by bit, I mean bit by bit. The first thing you learn isn’t the entire phrase included in the first piece of dialogue, but just the first word. Mango Languages crawls. Excellent for beginners, but painful for everyone else.

Nope, can’t fast-forward the speed, either.

For each and every little bit, you’ll get:

  • the word you’re learning
  • its translation
  • an audio recording (you can repeat as many times as you like)
  • the option to record yourself saying it (to compare with their audio)
  • the pronunciation

Think you’ve got it? The next step is a chance for you to translate it independently.

These sections are giving you the tools that you need to use the language, it’s up to you to piece the tools together correctly using critical thinking. Using the examples, grammar notes, and cultural notes, you’re led to rise to the challenge of forming foreign language sentences.

Did you notice the color coding? As a visual learner, I do love this part. It makes it easier for me to create the link in my brain between the two phrases and helps me to pick apart what each individual word means, and how the words come together in a way that makes sense.

As you learn new languages, you learn that sometimes the most difficult part is that sentences aren’t built the same across different languages. Words are all out of order, some words don’t even exist in other languages, and some languages need 10 words to say something that another language says in one.

Then, each phrase is repeated consistently while you continue to learn more, which is very helpful in turning that short-term memory into long-term memory if you need to take it slow. Later on in this post, we’ll take a look at Daily Review, which helps even more with building long-term memory.

Note: I completely forgot to turn off the narrator’s voice up until now in this Mango Languages review! From here on out, you’ll hear limited English and mostly Spanish. This is easily configured in the settings, in the upper right-hand corner.

Once you have the meaning down, Mango Languages has you actually practice the words and sounds.

So, if you’re an ultimate beginner in the language and have never studied any language before, Mango Languages definitely has a few decent options to offer!

And a lot of simple repetitions. This is, again, excellent for beginners. A lot of the time, there’s no easy way to learn something except seeing or hearing it as many times as it takes for your brain to catch on. Consistency is key, especially when it seems like a word is never going to stick!

Daily Review

Recently, Mango Languages has also included more tools to help baby language learners form a habit. With the mobile app, you can add and customize study reminders by day of the week and the time of day you want to receive your reminder. Very handy for even the busiest or most distractible language learners.

And even if you’re not using the mobile app, desktop users can access the review section at any time. Instead of going through the initial lessons over and over again, you can basically review the flashcards automatically created based on your past lessons.

Click the button, and you get those same options for self-study:

  • switch between “literal” and “understood” translation
  • listen to the audio
  • record yourself saying it

PLUS, unique to this section is the self-reporting buttons on the bottom and the option to take a card out of the deck in cases where you know that card like the back of your hand, so you don’t waste your time.

Self-reporting flashcards are my absolute favorite! They make it easier to get an accurate understanding of what you’re learning, instead of a resource assuming that you know any given term better or worse than you actually do.

I also love the power language learners have over what they need to review. Some language learning resources are much stricter about this, so it’s good to see this level of customization. There’s nothing more irritating than being forced to review terms that you already know.

Plus, it’s such an attractive interface! The only other resource that does this as well is Rocket Languages.

Mango Languages review: pricing and access

While Mango Languages is a paid resource, there’s a good chance you can find your way to free access through local institutions. They partner with public libraries, corporations, schools, and other public entities all over to provide free, unlimited access to all 70+ of their language learning courses at any time.

If you can’t find access through an institution, however, you can always opt for a paid subscription yourself. Fortunately, paid subscriptions are still very reasonably priced at less than $10/ month. Click here for updated pricing.

Who Mango Languages is for

For one, this Mango Languages review makes it clear that beginner language learners would benefit the most. As you grow in your language learning, the speed and repetition become unbearable, but it’s a very generous start for those who process slowly or are simply brand new to the language. This is also true concerning the content itself – it’s just for beginners.

It’s also pretty surface-level, meaning you’re not going to be able to find clear, tangible grammatical explanations to study. I mean, there are some tossed into individual chapters, of course, but it doesn’t suit grammar- and rule-focused learners. You’ll get a general feel of the grammar that you need to understand one particular phrase, and that’s it.

At the end of the day, if you want a simple, modern design with hand-holding through a collection of pretty simple phrases, as well as some cultural education (depending on the language) in a frankly huge variety of languages, I recommend you give Mango Languages a shot.

But for many language learners, Mango Languages will be much too slow. If this is the case, I might suggest uTalk for support in the less commonly learned languages or Glossika for a more advanced approach.

Filed Under: $10-15, $101-200, Android app, Annual subscription, Arabic, Aramaic, Armenian, Azerbaijani, Beginner, Bengali, Cantonese, Cherokee, Chinese (Mandarin), Creole, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Device, Dutch, Dzongkha, English, Finnish, Free, French, Gamification, German, Grammar, Greek, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Icelandic, Igbo, Implicit, Indonesian, iOS app, Irish, Italian, Japanese, Javanese, Kazakh, Korean, Language app reviews, Language Skill, Latin, Level, Listening, Malay, Malayalam, Monthly subscription, Norwegian, Notifications, Other Features, Pashto, Persian, Portuguese, Potawatomi, Pricing type, Punjabi, Romanian, Russian, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian, Shadowing, Shangainese, Slovak, Spanish, Speaking, Swahili, Swedish, Tagalog, Tamil, Target Language, Telugu, Thai, Turkish, Tuvan, Ukrainian, Urdu, Uzbek, Vietnamese, Website, Words/phrases, Yiddish

Clozemaster review: customizable, engaging, and simple

February 4, 2022 by Jamie Leave a Comment

Clozemaster is a retro-themed website & app with a huge collection of sentences for intermediate+ language students to practice their vocabulary and grammar. These sentences are grouped into tons of categories, with the option for users to create their own categories, so the sky is the limit with this Clozemaster review.

In this Clozemaster review, you’ll learn where Clozemaster shines, its flaws, and whether Clozemaster is best for your language learning needs. And, if it’s not, keep reading for the Clozemaster alternative for you.

Clozemaster review: languages

While Clozemaster is not for beginners, it is for learners of a ton of languages:

  • Afrikaans
  • Amharic
  • Arabic
  • Armenian
  • Basque
  • Belarusian
  • Breton
  • Bulgarian
  • Cantonese
  • Catalan
  • Chinese (Mandarin)
  • Chinese (Mandarin)(Traditional)
  • Croatian
  • Czech
  • Danish
  • Dutch
  • Esperanto
  • Estonian
  • Filipino (Tagalog)
  • Finnish
  • French
  • Galician
  • Georgian
  • German
  • Greek
  • Guaraní
  • Hebrew
  • Hindi
  • Hungarian
  • Icelandic
  • Indonesian
  • Irish
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Kazakh
  • Korean
  • Latin
  • Latvian
  • Lithuanian
  • Macedonian
  • Norwegian (Bokmål)
  • Occitan
  • Persian (Farsi)
  • Piedmontese
  • Polish
  • Portuguese
  • Romanian
  • Russian
  • Scottish Gaelic
  • Serbian
  • Slovak
  • Slovenian
  • Spanish
  • Swedish
  • Turkish
  • Ukrainian
  • Vietnamese
  • Welsh
  • Yiddish

Because Clozemaster sources their sentences from an external website (more on that later), it is clearly accessible to a huge variety of foreign languages.

It is worth noting, however, that the options and opportunities are not equal across all languages. After deciding if Clozemater is a language learning app that you’re interested in using, you’ll then need to take a look at your target language and see the variety of content you’ll have to work with.

But what is Clozemaster?

The name “Clozemaster” wasn’t created out of thin air; if you’re not familiar with “clozes”, they’re a type of activity that’s very common in language learning, basically a fill-in-the-blank deal. Specifically, a “cloze” is defined by them as:


Of, relating to, or being a test of reading comprehension that involves having the person being tested supply words that have been systematically deleted from a text.


Thus, Clozemaster is the master of clozes.

It’s worth mentioning that Clozemaster isn’t the only resource that offers clozes, but clozes are all that Clozemaster offers. And I do have to say, Clozemaster is absolutely the master when it comes to learning a language online with clozes.

Clozemaster review: a walk-through

After creating an account on Clozemaster and selecting a few different options, you’re spat out onto the dashboard. It’s a retro-themed view (with retro sounds, too) that adds a touch more fun to the process, since you feel like it’s more of a game than anything else.

At first glance, Clozemaster isn’t very user-friendly. You’re presented with a ton of different options without any obvious indication as to which option to take or what you’re supposed to do. It’s a little bit better than LingQ’s lack of usability, but it can still take a minute to get your bearings.

Across all languages, you get some form of “beginner” content, like:

  • Most Common Words
  • Fluency Fast Track
  • Cloze-Collections

The third one is your own collection of sentences.

You would think that these would be beginner-friendly, but they are definitely not! Clozemaster requires at least an intermediate understanding of the language, and it’ll be abundantly clear if your language skills are up to snuff the second you try using Clozemaster.

While those “beginner” collections are free for all, premium subscribers also get Grammar Challenges, which are collections of sentences that are meant to help you master traditionally difficult grammatical concepts. These are different in every language, as every language has different grammar concepts.

But again, the concept is simple: fill-in-the-blank sentences.

Depending on the language, you also get a few settings to decide how you want to play:

  • vocabulary
  • listening
  • speaking

Not all languages feature all skills, so make sure you take a look at your target language before you commit. For example, audio recordings are only available in a fraction of these languages. Expect them in more commonly learned languages, not-so-much in others.

You can also choose how many sentences you’re shown per round: 5-∞ (yes, the site really says that). Then, either multiple choice or text input. Choose text to really challenge yourself! You’ll also earn 2x the points.

If I’m already at an intermediate level in a language (or at any point, personally), I prefer to manually type in the answer. This helps cement words and conjugations into your brain, as you’re forcing yourself to spell correctly as opposed to going off a general idea of what the correct word looks like.

This is the difference between vaguely recognizing a word and truly learning it.

I also love that Clozemaster holds you accountable for appropriate accents (including offering the letters if you don’t have your keyboard set up for that yet), and encourages you to try, one letter at a time. That can make the difference between making an educated guess and just giving up.

Clozemaster also approaches languages less from an academic standpoint and more from a colloquial one. In the lesson above, you learn phrases that are actually used every day in Spanish, and not necessarily the ones you’ll learn in a textbook.

And then, at the end of all that, you’ll level up with a super fun GIF. Doesn’t quite match up with the retro theme, but I’m willing to let it slide 😉

Creating flashcards with Clozemaster

Clozemaster’s premade collections can do a lot of good (my favorite being the grammar stuff), but some language learners may have specific goals, or find these general and unpredictable collections boring.

No worries – using the Clozemaster system, you can create all the collections you want! You can either create them manually, or you can search through already-created cloze sentences and organize them as you like.

When using these options, it is totally possible to use Clozemaster for beginner content; however, it does take some extra work and is probably not great if you’re not a seasoned language learner.

Experienced language learner starting a new language? Sure. New language learner just trying to figure everything out? Not ideal.

Speaking of options, you also get the freedom to dictate how you’re learning the language every single time you press play. These settings take Clozemaster’s sentences and create entirely different exercises based just on the skills you want to practice.

(Again, not all languages will necessarily have all these options.)

How Clozemaster gets its sentences

Clozemaster has access to so many sentences because they’re sourced straight from Tatoeba.org, which is an open collection of sentences and translations. Anybody can hop onto the website, search for a word, and find sentences to give their words some context.

While it is an amazing use of an open-source website, it has limitations.

For one, it’s not unusual to get sentences like these.

No need to read too into it – they’re just sentences that someone in the world uploaded in Spanish/English, and maybe they’ll pop up as you study. At any time, you also have the option to remove these sentences from your collections.

Besides that, Clozemaster provides not only sentences with a single cloze, but you can also use it for a whole passage!

This is an option to vary up your studies and keep you on your toes, as well as throw some reading comprehension into the mix.

Okay, clearly it’s not perfect, but it is an option. Once you apply the right settings, this could be great for reading comprehension and finding new vocabulary, which you can easily add to any cloze collection at any time.

Clozemaster review: should you go pro?

Let’s talk about becoming a Clozemaster subscriber. Certain aspects of Clozemaster are always free, i.e. the “Fluency Fast Track” and all the reading practice.

Honestly, though, Clozemaster Pro opens up a ton of doors when it comes to both reading and listening practice.

Pro subscribers get access to all of these lessons, both as reading and listening, all as fill-in-the-blank, contextual questions. It’s a lot of simple yet very useful content and considering Clozemaster themselves don’t “create” anything per se, Clozemaster Pro is very reasonably priced: $8 a month, and even cheaper as an annual subscription.

Honestly, if Clozemaster is something that keeps your interests and matches your language goals, I’d spring for Pro. For $8/month, you’ll get a step more of a holistic language education. If you enjoy Clozemaster free, I’d recommend Clozemaster Pro for pretty much any kind of language learner and their goals.

Clozemaster review: who’s it for?

Clozemaster is an excellent resource for intermediate-advanced level learners looking to build their vocabulary and drill some of the more difficult grammar concepts they face. It’s also excellent for language learners looking for more context in general: just search for a term and Clozemaster will bring you all the sentences you need from Tatoeba for you to create a collection.

Easy as pie.

However, beginner language learners should definitely be looking elsewhere, maybe at something like Lingvist (a bit more pricey, but provides similar context) or maybe Anki (much less user-friendly, but great for clozes).

If you need more direct, clear-cut grammar lessons, go somewhere else (maybe Busuu or Babbel?), because Clozemaster assumes that you know the basic idea of these concepts, and you only need practice and repetition.

Or, if you’d rather apply clozes to texts you’re already reading, VocabBoost may be for you.

That said, repetition is important for any language learner, and Clozemaster is an excellent option!

Filed Under: $1-9, $50-100, Advanced, Afrikaans, Amharic, Android app, Annual subscription, Arabic, Armenian, Basque, Belarusian, Breton, Bulgarian, Cantonese, Catalan, Chinese (Mandarin), Croatian, Curated flashcards, Czech, Daily streaks, Danish, Device, DIY flashcards, Dutch, Esperanto, Estonian, Finnish, Free, French, Galician, Gamification, Georgian, German, Grammar, Greek, Guaraní, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Icelandic, Implicit, Indonesian, Intermediate, iOS app, Irish, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Korean, Language app reviews, Language Skill, Latin, Latvian, Lifetime access available, Listening, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Monthly subscription, Norwegian, Notifications, Occitan, Offline use, Other Features, Persian, Piedmontese, Polish, Portuguese, Pricing type, Reading, Romanian, Russian, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Spelling, Swedish, Tagalog, Target Language, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese, Vocabulary, Website, Welsh, Words/phrases, Words/phrases, Writing, Yiddish

Mondly vs Duolingo: how to start a language

January 21, 2022 by Jamie Leave a Comment

Many language learners tend to compare Mondly vs Duolingo, and for good reason! They’re very similar with gamification, tons of languages, and beginner content. So which should you go for, Mondly or Duolingo?

In this Mondly vs Duolingo review, we’ll see the core differences between the two language apps so you can decide which one you should use to start your language learning journey.

Mondly vs Duolingo: how they’re similar

Both platforms function mostly as mobile phone apps but are also available on desktop. They’re both meant for beginners with no or next-to-no knowledge of the language they want to learn. And they both support the following languages:

  • Arabic
  • Chinese (Mandarin)
  • Czech
  • Danish
  • Dutch
  • Finnish
  • French
  • German
  • Greek
  • Hebrew
  • Hindi
  • Hungarian
  • Indonesian
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Korean
  • Latin
  • Norwegian
  • Polish
  • Portuguese
  • Romanian
  • Spanish
  • Swedish
  • Turkish
  • Ukrainian
  • Vietnamese

Both Mondly and Duolingo teach you via short, 5-minute lessons, and also remind you to study every day. Both apps keep track of how many days in a row you’ve studied to help you keep up your motivation, and give you a little map by your username so you can show off how many languages you’re learning.

Both resources also have free and paid options and can be highly addictive.

So, as you can see, both Duolingo and Mondly are very, very similar in a lot of ways. However, this is just about where they each branch off into their own methods of bringing language learning to their audience.

Mondly vs Duolingo: the differences

To start, Mondly also supports the following languages:

  • Afrikaans
  • Bengali
  • Bulgarian
  • Catalan
  • Croatian
  • English (American)
  • English (British)
  • Filipino (Tagalog)
  • Latvian
  • Lithuanian
  • Persian
  • Slovak
  • Urdu

Duolingo does not cover those languages, however, you can use it to learn:

  • Esperanto
  • Hawaiian
  • High Valyrian
  • Klingon
  • Navajo
  • Russian
  • Swahli
  • Welsh

Using a base language other than English

Besides being able to learn some different languages depending on the app you’re using, there’s a difference in the language you’re learning from as well, which is great for those whose native language is something other than English!

Mondly really excels in this, by offering every language course in each of its 41 languages, which is amazing! You can use Mondly in Hebrew, for example, to learn French, and vice versa. This is not only great for language learners of all backgrounds but is helpful for learning more than one language, as it allows you to immerse yourself in one language while studying another.

Duolingo does offer a similar approach, but not nearly as well. Go to the Duolingo website and select your native language (or the language you want to learn from) and you’ll see which languages are available to you. It’s usually not much, honestly.

Learning foreign language concepts

While Mondly and Duolingo are both primarily a way to get new vocab into your brain, they both teach new vocab by presenting sentences, and you can’t make sentences without grammar! Grammar, though, is another concept entirely that language learners have to set aside time to figure out. Grammar is like the math of language learning.

Duolingo does this pretty well by having forums. Whenever you answer a question, if you get it wrong, you can easily click through to the comment thread on that particular question. There you’ll see all the questions other users have asked, as well as any answers that have been provided.

If your question isn’t answered, ask away! You’ll also find other users sharing resources outside of Duolingo that might be helpful for you, so this is also a good way to expand your tools and find help outside of the app.

Mondly…doesn’t. At least not as well. As you go through your Mondly quizzes, you sometimes have the option to tap a word that you might not understand, and the app will translate it or present you with a conjugation table.

But that’s about as far as Mondly goes. It’s helpful, don’t get me wrong, but I do prefer seeing the conversations that other people have had about sentences on Duolingo. I also like the community aspect of the Duolingo forums. You have other language learners right there with you, trying to figure out the same things that you’re struggling with, as opposed to being all alone.

Syncing between mobile and desktop

Both Mondly and Duolingo are more commonly used as mobile apps, but their content can be accessed on a desktop, too. I know that 99% of you are going to stick to mobile, but I thought I’d touch on this, just for the sake of being thorough.

Going to Duolingo on desktop is pretty much the same thing as mobile, but there are a couple of other features that you won’t find on the app. We’ll talk about those perks in a sec, but for now, just know that you can’t get to them via mobile.

Other than that, your accounts and all your languages will sync seamlessly between desktop and mobile, so you can use whichever device at whatever time you want to work on your Duolingo.

Mondly is also accessible via desktop, and the switch is pretty seamless. However, many of the more special Mondly features, like Augmented Reality, are not available on desktop, for obvious reasons.

Free & paid options

Both Mondly and Duolingo provide you the option to give them your money (surprise, surprise!), but for two completely different reasons.

Duolingo advertises itself as free forever, which is true (technically…there’s a strong theory that Duolingo’s getting money-hungry with the new hearts system). Everything I’m talking about here and what I talked about in my Duolingo review is accessible to everybody for absolutely free.

Fairly recently, Duolingo also introduced a $10-15/month subscription (depending on your commitment) service, called Duolingo Plus, which allows paid users an ad-free experience as well as offline access. There are some other perks as well, but no new content.

Duolingo vs Rosetta Stone: Duolingo is always free

Mondly, on the other hand, is a completely different animal. You can use Mondly for free, but you won’t get a whole lot. You basically get a preview of the app so you can give it a trial run before you invest. It’s definitely not a huge investment – over the long-term, it’s actually cheaper than Duolingo!

Free Mondly members get a few lessons, a few chatbots, and the streak function. After that, you can opt to pay monthly, annually, or just once for life. Plus, you can use my link to get 20% off!

In this context, I’m gonna have to side with the angry Duolingo users who believe Duolingo is using tricky tactics to get everybody to pay. Not to say that I’m getting behind this theory, but in using both Duolingo and Mondly…I’m more of a fan of Mondly being upfront about charging.

Daily reminders

The fact that each app provides daily push notifications to get you practicing your language every day was already mentioned, but they’re not quite equal. If you’re one of the literally millions of language learners that have already used Duolingo, you know you get a quick notification every day to prompt you to open the app and study.

If that works for you, that’s awesome! It never did anything for me, though. Plus, if you just ignore it enough, it gives up on you. Literally. The little Duolingo owl basically says “well, you’re clearly not coming back, so I’m going to stop wasting my time on you”. Ouch! That hurts the ego and is also not very productive to inspire people to get back on the horse.

Mondly is a little different. Yes, it gives you the same kind of reminder, HOWEVER. While Duolingo tells you to do something, anything, Mondly has new lessons every day for you to work on. They might not be new content for you, but you do get a monthly calendar to keep track of every lesson every day.

Once you’ve completed that day’s lesson, you’ll get a little green circle on that day on the calendar. If you complete all the lessons for the week, you get a new weekly quiz. If you complete all the daily and weekly lessons, you’ll also get a new monthly quiz. That is definitely more motivating than a generic message to get back to Duolingo.

Language skill development

While Mondly vs Duolingo have very similar approaches, the meat of the lessons is actually pretty different! Primarily, Duolingo teaches grammar the way we learn languages in school (but more fun, to be fair); Mondly teaches vocabulary and speaking.

Both apps do have other features besides their main lessons to help expand on their users’ educations. For example, Duolingo Stories are very short stories combining reading, listening, a touch of vocab, and even some comprehension questions.

Duolingo vs Rosetta Stone: Duolingo Stories are great for language skills

While Duolingo keeps the approach pretty passive, Mondly is much more effective for your speaking skills. Not only do they offer both chatbots and AR conversations, but you can also opt to say the answers in some of the normal lessons. It’s not a real conversation, but honestly? It’s pretty close.

With the chatbots and the AR (and soon-to-be VR) experiences, it’s really hard to beat Mondly’s approach to conversations with a robot!

Yes, Duolingo does have a speech recognition function in their lessons, but it’s really buggy. It’s totally normal for speech recognition to straight up not work, which is fine, but on Duolingo, you’ll get stuck until it gives up on you. With Mondly, you can just tell it to move on.

With their own directions, I don’t think it reasonable to expect Duolingo to catch up to Mondly; there’s a huge difference between repeating a phrase back once, and contributing to a real conversation!

Besides having conversations in your language with real human beings, I do believe this is the best you can get. The tech isn’t quite 100% just yet (the AR lady isn’t particularly life-like, for example, and the phrases are said by a different robot entirely), but I’m excited to see how Mondly continues to improve on this.

Accessibility

As a language learner (and a human who cares about the ethics and privilege that goes into learning foreign languages), the accessibility of learning a language is an important subject for me.

And when I say accessibility, I don’t mean that free apps are good and expensive apps are bad. Let’s use Mondly and Duolingo as an example.

As I’ve mentioned, while Duolingo is technically free, they are slowly but surely putting all of their users on the heart system. More on this here, but the basic idea is that you’re actively punished for getting questions wrong; if you don’t want that punishment, pay for Plus.

If you’re a Duolingo Plus user (if you pay), you get unlimited hearts and you can focus on learning, without the added pressure of losing hearts (including in the middle of a lesson, at which point you lose your progress and you start over).

Meanwhile, though Mondly is a paid app, it can be cheaper than Duolingo. No trickery, no nothin’.

And don’t even get me started on the non-English base languages: Duolingo offers the ability to learn some languages from non-English languages (though the options aren’t consistent and the content isn’t complete), while Mondly offers the ability to learn all of its languages from all of its languages.

And remember: with Mondly, you can pay for lifetime access once. With Duolingo, the best they can do is annual.

Mondly vs Duolingo: which one is for you?

Whether Duolingo vs Mondly is your preferred app at the moment is a totally personal decision. In my personal opinion, I do think they’re both great starting points for learning languages, though as time goes on Duolingo is getting more restrictive and Mondly is constantly improving.

I’ve used both for long periods of time for different reasons; Duolingo because it’s clearly structured from beginner to intermediate, and Mondly because of the languages available.

Personally? Experiencing both Mondly and Duolingo over the long term, I’d go for Mondly any day (especially considering my 20% off discount!). For one, I’m excited to see their AR blossom and grow into the future tech that all language learners need (while Duolingo seems to consistently become less and less usable without paying).

At the end of the day, I’d recommend you try both out and see what they do for you. Honestly, they both utilize slightly different strategies and methods.

Click here to try Duolingo, or click here for Mondly (including 20% off)!

Filed Under: Android app, Arabic, Beginner, Chinese (Mandarin), Czech, Daily streaks, Danish, Device, Dutch, Finnish, French, Gamification, German, Grammar, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Implicit, Indonesian, iOS app, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Language app reviews, Language Skill, Latin, Level, Listening, Norwegian, Other Features, Polish, Portuguese, Reading, Romanian, Spanish, Speaking, Speech recognition, Swedish, Target Language, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese, Vocabulary, Website, Words/phrases, Words/phrases

Mondly Review: a fancy beginner’s app

January 20, 2022 by Jamie 3 Comments

Mondly is a super fun, super easy language app that has earned itself a plethora of awards for its tech including Augmented Reality and chatbots. Is Mondly the language app for you? In this Mondly review, you’ll learn where Mondly shines, its flaws, and what exactly you can expect from it.

Mondly Languages review

One of my favorite things about Mondly is its selection of languages; not only does it support a ton of them, but each language in this list can be learned through any of the other languages in this list. That’s no small feat!

You can use Mondly to learn/learn from:

  • Afrikaans
  • Arabic
  • Bengali
  • Bulgarian
  • Catalan
  • Chinese (Mandarin)
  • Croatian
  • Czech
  • Danish
  • Dutch
  • English (American)
  • English (British)
  • Filipino (Tagalog)
  • Finnish
  • French
  • German
  • Greek
  • Hebrew
  • Hindi
  • Hungarian
  • Indonesian
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Korean
  • Latin
  • Latvian
  • Lithuanian
  • Norwegian
  • Persian
  • Polish
  • Portuguese (Brazilian)
  • Portuguese (European)
  • Romanian
  • Russian
  • Slovak
  • Spanish
  • Swedish
  • Thai
  • Turkish
  • Ukrainian
  • Urdu
  • Vietnamese

I love this because Mondly has made language learning super accessible to not only those interested in laddering (learning a third language through a second language) but also native speakers of languages besides English!

Mondly’s website boasts “it’s faster to learn from your native language” and they’re absolutely right.

For this Mondly review, I decided to learn a bit of Afrikaans to see if the content is consistent across languages (unlike Duolingo, where there is a clear preference for more commonly-learned languages).

Mondly review: the good

Let’s get started with this Mondly review. This is how all the Mondly languages are set up: collections of lessons (generally 6 or 8 apiece) organized by category and presented in an artistic version of a map.

These lessons are very simple multiple-choice, so it’s a great option for quick, low-key practice. All of the content presented in the language you’re learning is accompanied by native audio, not a robot voice, so Mondly also does a very solid job of training your ear to recognize the words you’re learning.

Mondly hits all the senses

Another thing I love about Mondly is how it caters to all the senses and, therefore, all different types of learners. This game isn’t difficult, but it does change up the format of the questions (while always supplying audio), so it pokes at all the senses just right.

Now, if you’ve ever tried using Duolingo before, you know that a lot of the sentences you end up translating are sentences that don’t make any sense, and therefore you’ll never use them. If you’re not a fan of “implicit learning” like that, Mondly may be a good alternative for you, as you learn with everyday sentences.

Mondly’s Chatbot

While the above quizzes are pretty passive learning, Mondly also helps you to practice speaking the language in a couple of different, fun ways. Let’s start with the chatbot.

Mondly’s chatbot is available both on desktop and via the app and can be found inside a category (select the lessons labeled “Conversation”). There you’ll find a pre-written conversation for you to mimic and practice speaking the language with.

While many chatbots depend on speech recognition (which is iffy technology and can keep you stuck on a phrase even with perfect pronunciation) Mondly guides you through a conversation while letting you be the judge of your speaking!

These conversations are one of the last lessons in any given category, so you’ll learn the vocabulary before you’re led to use it in a conversation. As you can see, here’s how your first conversations go:

  1. read and listen to the first phrase
  2. record yourself repeating the phrase
  3. compare your audio to the original, trying again if necessary
  4. continue to the next phrase and repeat

You’ll respond to both sides of the conversations for double the practice.

I’m really glad Mondly’s going in this direction (in the past they’ve relied on speech recognition and other kinds of confusing features)! Chatbots aren’t unique to Mondly, but you know what is? Augmented Reality.

Mondly’s Augmented Reality

The big perk that helps the Mondly language app stand out from all the other apps is its Augmented Reality, or “AR”. The concept is really awesome: as long as you have an AR-capable device, Mondly can help you procure images of things that don’t exist through your phone’s camera! Because of this feature, Mondly advertises itself as the future of language learning. Only time will tell!

To access the AR, you’ll need to download another app that’s included with all Mondly Premium accounts (we’ll discuss free vs premium later). It looks like most if not all languages are available for AR experiences, but not all languages have all lessons/conversations.

P.S. Mondly also has a very new VR feature…looks really buggy for now, but I’m excited to see what comes of it!

AR lessons

The first feature of Mondly’s AR is lessons. It’s a cool option and I’m excited to see how it develops over time, but for now, it’s almost more like a party trick than anything else.

It’s a very engaging way to learn beginner vocab, but most of it isn’t actually in the target language. That’s a personal preference though, and may not be a big deal to you. AR is a new science, so be wary of your expectations; Mondly’s AR still relies on speech recognition, and the vocabulary words themselves are spoken by a robot voice (a different robot voice than the AR lady’s robot voice). I wish they could at least use the same audio clip that they use for the regular lessons!

You may notice at the end that the video just…stops. This is a great feature but it is prone to crash.

I’m also not sure if it was Mondly or my device that muted the audio, but it was mostly robotic English.

While I would rather stick to Mondly’s normal lessons over the AR, I think the AR conversations are awesome!

AR conversations

Just like the AR lessons are a fancier version of Mondly’s regular lessons, AR conversations are a fancier version of the chatbots. The conversations have the potential to go a lot more smoothly because instead of recording every phrase every step of the way, you’re relying on speech recognition to accurately understand your side of the conversation.

Speech recognition is faulty in general, but Mondly does offer the option to skip any particular part of the dialogue for those times when you’re saying it right but it’s just not taking it.

As you can tell, this feels much more like a real conversation, which is awesome practice for the real deal!

…if you could hear it. You’re just going to have to trust me!

Daily, weekly, & monthly practice

If you like using the daily streak feature of popular language apps to keep you consistent and accountable, you’ll love Mondly’s version of the daily streak!

Many language learners get burned out by this feature because they find themselves coming back to their app every day out of guilt over the potential of losing their streak and therefore their motivation. This feature changes that.

Instead of just a reminder to do something, or even a reminder to do a particular activity, Mondly triples down on this motivation tactic with not only a daily streak but lessons every week and month that are only accessible if you complete all the lessons of that week and month, respectively.

They’re bite-sized, and they might not be new content, but it’s a great way to poke at your new language consistently every day. Even if you’re not necessarily learning something new, it keeps the language fresh in your mind to prevent forgetting anything

If you’re worried about these little snippets not being enough, don’t. If there’s one thing I learned from the Fluent in 3 Months Challenge, it’s that the important thing is that you’re working on your language consistently. It doesn’t have to be a whole lot, but as long as you’re using it, your skill will keep growing.

Mondly review: the not-so-good

While I love the unique direction Mondly is taking language learning, it’s not for everyone. For example, Mondly is beginner content only, and really best for starting a language from scratch.

Mondly can also be kind of inconsistent between different languages, features, and categories. Not every category has chatbot conversations, not every language has the same categories, etc. You’ll have to check your target language in particular to see your options.

Finally, Mondly’s statistics. Clearly, it’s a beautiful feature that can make you feel good about the time you’ve spent on a language, how many words and phrases you’ve seen and your daily streak. These statistics pop up after every lesson.

This isn’t any worse than most apps’ statistics feature, but I’d love to see some sort of SRS or even how well you know different terms. For example, I love the Memrise feature that shows your knowledge of a term going from short-term memory to long-term (theoretically, obviously, but I still like it).

Mondly Premium: worth the splurge?

With Mondly free, you get access to:

  • daily lessons (for daily streak lovers)
  • fun quizzes
  • chatbot conversations

Mondly’s free features are a great way to get to know the app and see if it’s right for you without any commitment. If you do love it, Mondly Premium includes features like:

  • full access to all 41 language courses (1,320 language combinations!)
  • vocab organized into practical categories (including business categories)
  • over 50 real and stimulated native conversations
  • grammar lessons
  • access to all daily, weekly, and monthly quizzes created since 2015
  • access to Mondly AR and the Mondly Kids app

And the Mondly app is updated consistently over time, which makes lifetime access to all languages and updates a steal if it suits your language learning goals.

Or, if you’re enjoying the app but still commitment-phobic, you can always spring for a monthly membership and upgrade later.

Mondly review: who it’s for

From this Mondly review alone you can see the sheer amount of potential there is in this app, and I love seeing it develop over time!

I hate to use the word “polyglot”, but honestly, Mondly is a great investment for language learners who want a super fun, engaging way to access over 1,000 different language courses for native speakers of different languages.

It’s a great resource for getting beginner vocab as well as ease into conversations. The AR lessons need some work, but it’s still new tech and Mondly is at the front of the line with this stuff.

But if you’ve got your basic vocab covered and you’d rather stick to conversations with real human beings, Mondly isn’t going to be for you. Same for those who aren’t particularly into gamification or features like daily streaks.

Wanna give Mondly a shot? Use my link to get 20% off!

Filed Under: Afrikaans, Arabic, Beginner, Bengali, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese (Mandarin), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Language app reviews, Latin, Latvian, Level, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Persian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Spanish, Speaking, Swedish, Tagalog, Target Language, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Vietnamese, Vocabulary

Duolingo Review: how to use Duolingo in 2023

January 19, 2022 by Jamie 2 Comments

Ah, Duolingo. The internet’s most famous place to study foreign languages. It’s cute, it’s bite-sized, and it makes you feel good. All that surface-level stuff aside, does Duolingo work? Is Duolingo good for all types of language learners? We’ll discuss in this Duolingo review.

And if Duolingo is the answer for you, how do you take advantage of everything that it has to offer (which is a lot)? That’s where this Duolingo review comes in.

How to use Duolingo

The first question for this Duolingo review: is Duolingo effective? It can be, as long as you understand what it’s used for. What I mean by that is Duolingo does not offer conversational practice, any independent speaking, reading, or writing. There’s a teeny tiny bit of listening when you’re learning the words, but that’s about it.

1. Overview of Duolingo
2. Lingots
3. Duolingo’s learning path
4. Other features
5. Duolingo Leagues
6. Duolingo Achievements
7. Super Duolingo
8. Duolingo alternatives

That being said, the question of “how effective is Duolingo” is…a mixed bag. For what it does, it can be very effective! Because of the tools it provides (i.e. reminders, gamification, competition), Duolingo is effective for:

  • Learning beginner vocab and beginner-intermediate grammar (in some languages)
  • Forming a daily habit
  • Making language learning fun
  • Creating competition

And, most importantly, making language learning free and accessible to all.

You’re not going to get conversational using just Duolingo, but you can easily get a very solid base in the language, with which you can search elsewhere in the world for more advanced concepts and actually practice your fluency.

Duolingo can be a great start for your language learning in a variety of languages. The languages you can find on Duolingo include:

  • Arabic
  • Chinese
  • Creole
  • Czech
  • Danish
  • Dutch
  • Esperanto
  • Finnish
  • French
  • German
  • Greek
  • Hawaiian
  • Hebrew
  • Hindi
  • Hungarian
  • Indonesian
  • Irish
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Korean
  • Latin
  • Navajo
  • Norwegian
  • Polish
  • Portuguese
  • Romanian
  • Russian
  • Scottish Gaelic
  • Spanish
  • Swahili
  • Swedish
  • Turkish
  • Ukrainian
  • Vietnamese
  • Welsh
  • Yiddish

Duolingo also offers fantasy languages, like Klingon and High Valyrian; suffice to say, you’re more than covered for language learning inspo.

How does Duolingo work?

Duolingo works by providing you with a bunch of little, incremental lessons that are easy to consume, and constantly giving you positive reinforcement via adorable sound effects, awards, and notifications. It absolutely is addicting, and that’s their MO. They get you addicted to coming back and spending even just 5 minutes with them.

On top of that, with Leagues and XP, you can use Duolingo to find motivation via competition against other language learners regardless of target language, goals, and skill level. I’ll go more in-depth about this later.

Lingots

“Lingots”(pronounced ling-guhts) are Duolingo’s currency. You earn lingots by:

  • earning crowns in any skill
  • finishing any skill
  • practicing
  • continuing a streak for a specific number of days
  • finishing a League in 1st, 2nd, or 3rd place

When you only have to study on Duolingo for 5 minutes a day, it’s really not hard to see why you’d keep coming back. This is why Duolingo depends heavily on Lingots to keep Duolingo users hooked.

With these lingots, you can buy:

  • streak freezes (if you forget to come back one day, you won’t lose your current streak) (
  • double or nothing (double your wager if you maintain a 7-day streak)
  • extra minutes in timed practices
  • hearts (AKA more practice)

In the past, lingots could be used to buy several other things as well, like outfits for Duo the owl. However, today your options are limited, and this is one of the many updates to Duolingo that users are not happy about.

For free Duolingo users, “hearts” also play a major part in the Duolingo experience; you automatically get 5 hearts; whenever you get a question wrong, you lose a heart.

You can keep learning until you get 5 wrong, and lose all 5 hearts. Once you lose all your hearts, you have three options:

  • quit playing and wait to get 1 heart every 5 hours
  • buy more hearts with lingots
  • earn 1 heart by practicing old skills
  • get Duolingo plus (to be explained later)

Duolingo review: the learning path

Duolingo teaches languages by way of a learning path. These learning paths are made up of bite-sized lessons collected together and organized by skill. Because Duolingo is as gamified as it is, and these lessons are so easy to swallow, it’s not hard to push yourself to learn more and more; not only that, but Duolingo has so many adorable little achievements and reminders that it’s easy to stay in the habit, which is awesome.

Unfortunately, even though these lessons are based on grammatical concepts, they’re not named specifically based on that. For example, the “City” skill doesn’t teach you the name of cities, but words like “store”, “small”, “school”, etc. Kind of confusing. I wish they took the LingoDeer approach of having lesson titles match up with the actual lessons.

Here you can see a lesson about “changes” under the unit about places being…neither of those.

These skills are organized by level, and for the more extensive languages (namely Spanish and French), Duolingo will ease you into a more and more advanced understanding of the language.

For the more extensive languages, there are 5 crowns per skill (on mobile you may have 6 crowns per skill, the last crown, “Legendary”, being a review worth 40 XP). Each of these crowns is broken up into 5 levels, and each of those levels has 10 questions each.

One of the things to keep in mind with Duolingo is that even though there are a ton of languages to learn, not all of them are as complete as some of the more common foreign languages.

That said, more commonly learned languages like Spanish have a significantly longer learning path than something like Finnish.

Regardless of the language, Duolingo is best for language learners with little to no experience in a given language. If you’re an intermediate learner of the more commonly-learned languages, you may also find Duolingo valuable.

This is because of the “Checkpoint” feature of Duolingo. If you’re not a total beginner of the language, you can take and pass Checkpoint Challenges to show Duolingo what you know, and get to the lessons that’ll actually be beneficial to you.

Again, this does depend on the language you’re learning, as well as your abilities. These Checkpoint Challenges are not easy – simple mistakes make a big difference.

Otherwise, Duolingo’s learning path guides you one lesson at a time. Many users complain that they’d like more choices as to what they’re learning at any given time; if you don’t want to take that particular lesson, you’re stuck.

There are other things to do in Duolingo that are not connected to the learning path to give you something else to do, like separate speaking/listening exercises.

Duolingo review: other options

In the past, Duolingo offered users more options: which skills to learn, when to learn them, and how many repetitions they want. With the new learning path, those options are totally gone; users must take the next lesson, or else they can’t move on.

For Super Duolingo users (i.e. paid members) on mobile devices, there are a couple of other options. Timed practice, for example, has users review vocab at breakneck speeds to earn more XP and get to the top of the League leaderboards.

Users might also find timed practice with more advanced content, like translating to transcription (listen to an audio clip and write down what they’re saying).

Suffice to say, Duolingo truly changes things up (albeit inconsistently – they’re known for their A/B testing, so it may take a while for updated exercises to hit your account).

Here’s a tip for you if you want to use Duolingo: try to focus on these kinds of comprehension questions, if you can:

These are excellent because they lead users to use their language skills together with their critical thinking skills to check for understanding.

Simple, brainless, matching exercises will only take you so far, so I’m glad to see these more complex exercises.

As you continue through Duolingo’s learning path, you’ll also work through Duolingo Stories; again, this is one of their better features for genuinely building comprehension skills in an engaging way.

It is worth mentioning that you can commonly get questions wrong because of a typo that isn’t relevant to the actual thing you’re being tested on. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve gotten questions wrong because the sentence started with “Julie” and my phone auto-corrected to “Julia”. Super frustrating.

PRO TIP: add the language you’re learning to the keyboard on your phone! This’ll reduce the number of silly autocorrect mistakes.

Duolingo Leagues

Let’s talk about the competition aspect of Duolingo: Duolingo’s leagues exist as yet another level of gamification to keep you coming back to the app.

Everything that you do in Duolingo earns you at least 10 XP. You can earn more by not making any mistakes, reviewing your mistakes, or doing separate speaking/listening exercises (Super Duolingo users only).

This XP is used to pit users in competition with each other for the next week, based on when they started the week.

The purpose of Duolingo’s leagues is to motivate you to practice enough to get to the Diamond League.

Every week, you get pitted against 25 other Duolingo learners (regardless of language, skill level, etc.) who started their Duolingo week at the same time as you. You move forward, backward, or stay in one of 10 leagues from week to week:

  • Bronze
  • Silver
  • Gold
  • Sapphire
  • Ruby
  • Emerald
  • Amethyst
  • Pearl
  • Obsidian
  • Diamond*

Each of these leagues is a week long, which means it’ll take you at least 10 weeks to get to Diamond League. Competing against 25 other language learners, you have a week to:

  • graduate to the next league by finishing in the top 10 (plus earning lingots if you finish in the top 3)
  • stay in your current league by finishing in spots 11-20
  • get demoted to the prior league by finishing in the bottom 5

If you get to the Diamond League, there’s one more challenge for you: stay in that league for 3 weeks to earn all 3 pieces of the Diamond. It won’t be easy, though, especially at the very end. Some users use illegal bots to earn thousands of XP points just to earn the coveted award.

Achievements

As you continue on through Duolingo, you’ll get cute little achievements here and there. Things like following 3 friends, adding a profile picture, maintaining your streak for a varying number of days, etc.

There is one important achievement that really raises the stakes, especially in the Diamond League. This achievement is the Legendary award.

The only way to achieve this is to finish the Diamond League in the #1 position. This means that the Diamond League can get FIERCE! Not to mention stressful.

Sometimes the Diamond League is pretty chill and the winner only had 2,000 XP or so, and sometimes the top 2 players are fighting till the death, and the #1 finishes with something like 10,000 XP.

So yeah, it can get crazy.

How does one land this extra special achievement? I have a couple of tips (that don’t involve the bots that some people absolutely use to cheat) just for this Duolingo review.

  1. Don’t start the league until the last minute
    Leagues are events that restart every week, but timing can be a big deal. Think of others who are lazy or busy, and can’t maintain their streak until the last minute. Try waiting until the very last minute to join the league – you can even use a streak freeze to really put it off and still maintain your streak!
  2. Check out the competition before you get too crazy
    I’ve been in leagues where players have used bots to earn 8,000 XP in the first hour of the league. There’s no point in competing against that. If you find you’re in a league with players who are too competitive, maybe wait til next week.
  3. Work through old lessons or a language you already know
    If your goal is to get as much XP as possible, don’t worry about learning new things. Go through beginner lessons in your language, or if you’re already at an advanced level of another language, go through that tree. Remember, the specific language you’re studying has no weight in Leagues.
  4. Take advantage of your free Duolingo Plus trial
    Duolingo Plus means no ads. Take advantage of the time saved! When you ditch the ads, you save a few seconds each lesson, and that can really add up (or at the very least remove the frustrations of ads when you’re already stressing your XP).

Super Duolingo review

Duolingo’s thing is free education forever. There are no gimmicks, no surprise “if you want to keep learning, pay us!”, nothing, which is great, especially for a large, publicly traded company.

But as time goes on, more and more users have a bad taste in their mouths with Duolingo and believe that they’re trying to focus more on monetizing the site than focusing on providing a great, accessible language learning app.

Whether that’s true or not is not for me to say. With the free app, the only disturbance you’ll get to your language learning is ads. With the hearts system, you’ll also be disrupted if you get 5 questions wrong.

If you really care to get rid of the ads (as well as get a couple of perks), you can opt for Super Duoilingo. If you want to try it out, every account gets free access to Super Duolingo for 14 days. You’ll get to try out:

  • no ads
  • unlimited hearts (i.e. unlimited learning)
  • mistake practice (any exercises you get wrong)
  • unlimited Legendary (do an exercise and your final lesson turns purple)

In my opinion, sticking to the free Duolingo won’t break your language learning experience; however, if you find yourself using it a lot and would benefit from some extra learning tools, there’s no harm in using your free trial.

You can opt for Super Duolingo either in the app or on desktop.

Duolingo alternatives

If after this Duolingo review you’ve decided it doesn’t quite suit your language goals, what are some Duolingo alternatives?

If you like the heavy gamification (easy to use, great colors, and fun sounds/animations), you may prefer Mondly or Drops which are both great for beginners who want to build their foreign language vocabulary.

Or, if you like the usability but want to learn vocabulary that you’ve found or are more relevant to your own personal interests/goals, I’d recommend Lingvist or Quizlet.

Finally, if you’re learning a language from scratch and want a structured path but can’t deal with Duolingo’s heavy gamification, you can try Rosetta Stone or Babbel (this post compares all 3 resources!).

Duolingo review: who it’s for

If you’ve made it this far into this Duolingo review, it’s the moment of truth: will Duolingo help you learn a language?

Duolingo is appropriate if you:

  • want a simple way to practice a language
  • thrive off reminders and happy sounds
  • are just starting out learning a language for the first time
  • know absolutely nothing in the language

However, steer clear if you:

  • are focused on getting conversationally fluent
  • are looking for a high-quality language education
  • get annoyed by constant reminders
  • want to learn sentences you’ll use in real life
  • want explicit grammar instructions (not “figure it out as you go”)

Sold? Click here to get started with Duolingo!

Filed Under: $1-9, Android app, Arabic, Beginner, Chinese (Mandarin), Conversation, Creole, Czech, Daily streaks, Danish, Device, Dutch, Esperanto, Finnish, Free, French, Gamification, German, Grammar, Greek, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Implicit, Indonesian, iOS app, Irish, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Language app reviews, Language Skill, Latin, Level, Listening, Monthly subscription, Navajo, Non-English base language, Norwegian, Notifications, Other Features, Polish, Portuguese, Pricing type, Reading, Romanian, Russian, Scottish Gaelic, Spanish, Speaking, Speech recognition, Spelling, Stories, Swahili, Swedish, Target Language, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese, Website, Welsh, Words/phrases, Words/phrases, Writing, Yiddish

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