• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Multilingual Mastery

Multilingual Mastery

Online language learning coaching & education

  • About
  • Get 1:1 support
  • App search

Italian

uTalk review: tons of vocab in tons of languages

January 11, 2022 by Jamie Leave a Comment

uTalk is a vocab app that brings languages to us that can be hard to find elsewhere; so whether you’re learning something common like Spanish or not-so-common like Cebuano, uTalk pretty much as you covered.

With 140+ languages, there are plenty of options to choose from. But that’s not all you should be thinking about when it comes to your language learning strategy! In this uTalk review, let’s discuss the pros and cons of using this app to learn a language.

uTalk review: languages

One of the best reasons to use uTalk to learn a language is that there are so many languages available that you can’t find anywhere else. uTalk currently supports 140+ different languages to learn, with new languages being added all the time.

You can use uTalk to learn:

  • Afrikaans
  • Albanian
  • Amharic
  • Arabic (Egyptian)
  • Arabic (Gulf)
  • Arabic (Lebanese)
  • Arabic (Modern Standard)
  • Arabic (Moroccan)
  • Armenian (Eastern)
  • Assamese
  • Azerbaijani
  • Basque
  • Belarusian
  • Bengali
  • Bosnian
  • Bulgarian
  • Burmese
  • Cantonese
  • Catalan
  • Cebuano
  • Chibemba
  • Chichewa
  • Chinese (Hakka)
  • Chinese (Mandarin)
  • Corsican
  • Croatian
  • Czech
  • Danish
  • Dutch
  • Dzongkha
  • English (American)
  • English (Australian)
  • English (British)
  • English (Canadian)
  • English (Cockney)
  • English (Indian)
  • English (Scottish)
  • Esperanto
  • Estonian
  • Fijian
  • Filipino (Tagalog)
  • Finnish
  • Flemish
  • French
  • French (Canadian)
  • Galician
  • Georgian
  • German (Swiss)
  • Greek
  • Greek (Ancient)
  • Greenlandic
  • Gujarati
  • Haitian Creole
  • Hausa
  • Hawaiian
  • Hebrew
  • Hindi
  • Hungarian
  • Icelandic
  • Igbo
  • Ilocano
  • Indonesian
  • Irish
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Javanese
  • Kachchi
  • Kannada
  • Kazakh
  • Khmer
  • Kinyarwanda
  • Korean
  • Kurdish (Kurmanji)
  • Kurdish (Sorani)
  • Kyrgyz
  • Macedonian
  • Malagasy
  • Malay
  • Malayalam
  • Maltese
  • Manx
  • Maori
  • Marathi
  • Mongolian
  • Neapolitan
  • Nepali
  • Norwegian
  • Oriya
  • Oromo
  • Papiamentu
  • Pashto
  • Persian (Dari)
  • Persian (Farsi)
  • Persian (Tajiki)
  • Pidgin (Nigerian)
  • Polish
  • Portuguese
  • Portuguese (Brazilian)
  • Punjabi (Indian)
  • Punjabi (Pakistani)
  • Romanian
  • Russian
  • Saami (Southern)
  • Samoan
  • Sardinian
  • Scots
  • Scottish Gaelic
  • Serbian
  • Shona
  • Sicilian
  • Sindhi
  • Sinhala
  • Slovak
  • Slovenian
  • Somali
  • Spanish (Spanish)
  • Spanish (Argentinian)
  • Spanish (Latin American)
  • Swahili
  • Swedish
  • Tamil
  • Telugu
  • Thai
  • Tibetan
  • Tigrinya
  • Tok Pisin

Suffice to say…it’s a lot (151, to be precise). So many different languages, including different accents! Now let’s talk about what uTalk does with them.

uTalk walkthrough

When you first open up the uTalk app, you’ll be shown this screen, featuring every single one of those 140+ languages, with your most recent language at the top.

As you can see, it’s pretty straightforward! No fancy tutorials or overwhelm, really. This can be nice for those who don’t need the complicated AI features or techy chatbots; uTalk keeps it simple.

  1. Select your language
  2. Select your category
  3. Go!

Each category of phrases is provided with the following exercises.

Phrase practice

    Your first exercise introduces these phrases to you. There are quite a bit of them, honestly, so you may want to take a few tries to get through them.

    https://vimeo.com/1045387465/7d524a7bbc?ts=0&share=copy

    And if this is too difficult for you, go back to the prior “first words” lessons.

    Study each of these phrases by listening to the audio, understanding the phrase (try to depend just on the image to figure it out! It may be difficult, but I promise it’ll be worth it), and repeating it until you get the pronunciation down.

    This is the last time you’ll see the English translations – for the rest of these quizzes, you’ll be identifying each vocab word by either its picture or its audio.

    And it’s self-correcting, as well, so you can decide if your understanding is “good enough”. Like I said, no AI or speech recognition to complicate things!

    Easy game

    If you’re not sure if you studied the first exercise well enough, the next exercise will immediately tell you. Easy game takes your knowledge of the phrases a step further and gives you some multiple choice selections of the audio clips and imagery.

    https://vimeo.com/1045390342/14c6123301?ts=0&share=copy

    In this way, uTalk is very similar to Rosetta Stone: teaching you the language by letting your brain “figure it out”. As I said, this is more difficult in the short term, but much more effective in the long-term. If you’ve ever struggled with getting stuck translating in your head when you’re trying to communicate, this approach will circumvent that entire step.

    And don’t worry: even if you don’t understand every single word at this point, that is totally normal. This sort of game trains your brain to differentiate between different inflections, vocab words, etc., not necessarily to have “correct” grammar or vocabulary.

    Speaking game

    In this activity…well, you can see for yourself how I tricked myself by trying to trick uTalk! Basically, it’s time for you to prove if you’re pronouncing the phrases correctly enough to understand yourself compared to the native audio.

    This can technically be helpful for pronunciation (though I recommend Speechling more for that), but I’d say this would be more helpful for retaining the vocabulary into your memory.

    1. Easy game
    2. Speaking game
    3. Hard game
    4. Memory game
    5. Recall game

    Hard Game

    The Hard Game is where you start testing to see how effectively you’re learning, and whether or not you need to study more. This is active use of your memory.

    You get a number of images and an audio track. Your job is to select the image that belongs to that audio track. No more text, no more translations. Now it’s up to you to know which words mean what.

    Once you get to this point, you should have a decent idea of if you need more practice or not. By now you’ll be tested on whether or not you kind of have a hang on this or not.

    Memory Game

    Memory Game takes it a step further by cutting your time shorter. With the Hard Game, you get plenty of time to process and think, and then make your choice.

    With Memory Game, you’re flashed with images for a couple of seconds, and they’re instantly covered back up. Then audio plays, and you have to select which image (remembering which image is where) goes with the audio clip you’re hearing.

    This is where uTalk gets intense! You only get to see these images for like 3 seconds before they’re covered up. When you tap on one card, only that one card flips back over, so there’s no getting around it!

    Recall Game

    Last but not least we have Recall Game! In this final exercise, you’ll be tested on this vocab with every skill you’ve been practicing: you get the English word/phrase and the image, and your job is to record yourself saying the correct foreign phrase.

    Just like with the Speaking Game, there’s no attempt at speech recognition – you’re trusted to know for yourself whether or not you’ve got it. Once you make your recording and the English is translated, you have the option to:

    • replay your own recorded audio
    • play uTalk’s native audio
    • report that you got it wrong
    • report that you got it right

    I love that it’s totally up to you to say how well you did on your own speaking portion, and whether or not you got the phrase right. Self-reporting is where it’s at!

    uTalk review: prices

    uTalk’s payment model is super interesting! uTalk gives you the option to earn more time, earn more information. Or, to make things simpler, you can just pay to play.

    Click here for uTalk’s updated pricing.

    For one, uCoins gives you the option not only to work your way through (earning uCoins as you play uTalk’s games) but also to only pay for a little at a time.

    If 60+ different topics spanning 140+ different languages is too much for you (’cause that is definitely a lot), just pay for the topics that are actually beneficial to you.

    uTalk review: who it’s for

    I do genuinely love uTalk, both because it’s an excellent way to learn a new language, but also because of their ethics, and their commitment to making endangered and less common languages more accessible.

    As for actually using uTalk to learn a language, this uTalk review proves that it’s a great app for those who are looking for a quick route to effective use and understanding of the language in very specific situations, without the hullabaloo of fancy add-ons or confusing features.

    uTalk is simple, direct, and effective.

    If that’s your way to learn languages, similar alternatives to uTalk include Rosetta Stone and Speechling; both are just as simple and focus on speaking, but Rosetta Stone is more modern while Speechling isn’t as effective for teaching the language as it is promoting your pronunciation.

    Alternatively, if you need heavier gamification to keep you interested and engaged long-term, I might recommend something like Polygloss or Speakly.

    Suffice to say, uTalk is a great option for language learners looking for resources to support lesser-known languages that aren’t available elsewhere. Click here to get 20% off uTalk!

    Filed Under: Afrikaans, Albanian, Amharic, Arabic, Armenian, Assamese, Azerbaijani, Basque, Beginner, Belarusian, Bengali, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Burmese, Cantonese, Catalan, Cebuano, Chibemba, Chichewa, Chinese (Hakka), Chinese (Mandarin), Corsican, Creole, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Dzongkha, English, Esperanto, Estonian, Fijian, Finnish, Flemish, French, Galician, Georgian, German, Greek, Greenlandic, Gujarati, Hausa, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Icelandic, Igbo, Ilocano, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Javanese, Kachchi, Kannada, Kazakh, Khmer, Kinyarwanda, Korean, Kurdish, Kyrgyz, Language app reviews, Language Skill, Level, Listening, Macedonian, Malagasy, Malay, Malayalam, Maltese, Manx, Maori, Marathi, Mongolian, Neapolitan, Nepali, Norwegian, Oriya, Oromo, Papiamentu, Pashto, Persian, Pidgin (Nigerian), Polish, Portuguese, Punjabi, Romanian, Russian, Saami, Samoan, Sardinian, Scots, Scottish Gaelic, Serbian, Shona, Sicilian, Sindhi, Sinhala, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Spanish, Speaking, Swahili, Swedish, Tagalog, Tamil, Target Language, Telugu, Thai, Tibetan, Tigrinya, Tok Pisin, Vocabulary

    Conjuguemos Review

    January 11, 2022 by Jamie 2 Comments

    Conjuguemos is a study tool used to learn verbs, vocab, and grammar in a handful of languages. The vision behind it is a way to make learning these things fun for the classroom – it’s not a fancy app, but that also means it’s totally free to use (for individual students, at least).

    So amongst all the other resources and apps out there for language learners, who is Conjuguemos for? What does it do right, and what does it need to work on? In this Conjuguemos review, I’ll discuss just that!

    Conjuguemos languages

    As always, let’s start this Conjuguemos review with the languages available themselves. Conjuguemos supports a handful of very popular foreign languages, including:

    • French
    • German
    • Italian
    • Korean
    • Latin
    • Portuguese
    • Spanish

    However, not all these languages are totally complete – it looks like the more popular languages (Spanish) have significantly more material than less popular languages (Latin).

    conjuguemos

    It’s kind of like Duolingo in that it’s totally free, but…you get what you get, ya know?

    As an experienced Spanish language learner and considering Spanish is the most evolved language on Conjuguemos, let’s buckle up and focus there!

    Conjuguemos review: verbs

    Once you select a language, all the materials available in said language are shown to you in a pretty well-organized way. And, I gotta say, if this is supplemental to the tools you’re already using, there’s nothing better!

    conjuguemos

    As an independent language learner who’s full up on vocab and really just needs to brush up on the past tense and subjunctive sometimes, I stick to the first section.

    Under this section, all your options for studying these verbs are laid out for you by subcategory. You can practice all of your Spanish conjugations, or you can narrow it down by something as vague as Indicative/Subjunctive/Imperative moods, or as specific as stem-changing Preterite tense verbs.

    conjuguemos

    You can chew up all these grammatical differences any way you choose, whichever way works for you and your grammatical weaknesses.

    My past tense isn’t nearly as good as it should be, so I’m gonna go with the Preterite tense, regular verbs only.

    conjuguemos

    Don’t know this tense at all, or very little? That drop-down menu on the right links you to all the learning materials you could ever need: conjugation charts, worksheets, flashcards, everything.

    While you can get that information in so many different places online, it’s handy to have links right here to review before testing yourself. I won’t go too in-depth, though, ’cause that’s not where Conjuguemos shines!

    Let’s start with Graded Practice.

    conjuguemos

    This bit is simple but effective! For 5 minutes (or however long you set your timer for – I’ve found 5 minutes to be plenty to both get my practice in and also not exhaust myself) you conjugate your verbs.

    If you need a hint, click “Show Hints” on the bottom right. If you just want to guess (like I do), try your best and you’ll be corrected and won’t be moved on until you get it right, correct accents and all! Conjuguemos also keeps track of what you struggle with and will show you those terms a couple more times.

    Not quite an SRS algorithm, but more like common-sense practice!

    Plus, if you have an account, you can opt to record your results and keep track of your improvements over time.

    Next up, we have flashcards!

    conjuguemos

    On the front you get the English verb – on the back you get the translation and all the conjugations you need.

    Personally not my favorite method (I like translating on the fly MUCH more than this rote memorization), but I do appreciate the self-reporting, like Anki and Rocket Languages also do very well.

    Last but not least (in this section), we have games!

    conjuguemos

    If you’re not using Conjuguemos under a teacher (I’ll talk about what that means in a bit) you, unfortunately, can’t play those first 3 multiplayer games, but you still have plenty of options!

    They’re all very simple and fun – here are some shots from Frog Game, Crossword, Wordsearch, and Memory:

    conjuguemos
    conjuguemos
    conjuguemos
    conjuguemos

    Yeah, I know, not the fanciest looking. I mean if you’re into the whole 80s/90s video game vibe (I’m not sure that was intentional, but it’s the impression I get) the aesthetics are great!

    But we’re talking about learning languages, so aesthetics aren’t necessarily the priority anyways.

    Suffice to say, Conjuguemos offers a ton of methods for us to learn and practice our verbs. And that’s just the one section! Let’s move on to vocabulary.

    Conjuguemos review: vocabulary

    Conjuguemos takes an interesting approach to vocab. Because it’s primarily meant to supplement formal classes, we get two options: vocab by textbook and vocab by theme.

    Under “vocab by textbook”, Conjuguemos has a list of what I’m assuming are popular Spanish textbooks in a variety of levels. If you’re using one of these textbooks, Conjuguemos has vocab separated by textbook and chapter, so you (or your teacher) can use it to help you through!

    Selecting any of these individual chapters within these textbooks will send you to that same activity page with Graded Practice, Flashcards, and Games options.

    The idea is that your teacher uses Conjuguemos to keep track of how you’re doing in these chapters, as well as provide you with a more entertaining way to do homework! Not bad at all!

    Or, if you’re not using Conjuguemos for a class, you can also just sort vocabulary by theme and learn them that way. It appears to be the same words that you’ll study in any textbook (food, clothing, colors, etc.).

    Spanish grammar

    Next, let’s take a look at the Conjuguemos approach to grammar! While yes, verb conjugations are a part of grammar, Conjuguemos gives them their own independent sections, and rightly so.

    Under grammar, we get concepts like Gustar, Por vs Para, and more. Each of these concepts sends you to a Graded Practice, which is basically a digital worksheet to use to practice your use of said concepts.

    And just like in all the other sections, accents matter! If you don’t use accents, you will be marked as wrong. It’s tough, but it’s true.

    Listening activities

    Finally, we have some listening activities. These don’t really seem to relate to any subject in particular but are great for working on listening comprehension in a couple of ways.

    All the listening activities are organized into Themes, Grammar, and Cultural Topics. They’re also in a variety of different accents, which is noted right on the activity page.

    These videos are great snippets of real Spanish-speakers talking at native speed, though with easy vocab that relates to their themes.

    For example, this exercise is a boy named Dani being “interviewed” about basic information: where he’s from, how old he is, etc.

    It’s not the slow, crystal clear speech that you’d expect from beginner audio, so be prepared to not understand a lot of it. This is some serious comprehension practice!

    From here you have two options to test yourself: the comprehension quiz and the listening quiz. Here’s the comprehension quiz, answering the same basic questions that Dani is answering.

    For more of a challenge, the listening quiz gives you the transcript and asks how many words you want to fill in for yourself. Obviously, the more words you remove, the more difficult the challenge.

    This’ll take some time and some serious thinking! This is a great way to practice listening comprehension, especially considering not only the number of different accents available but they’re also labeled as such so you can easily broaden the number of accents you can understand.

    In other words, this is hella supplemental study content!

    Conjuguemos review: pricing

    The pricing plans here are interesting and are clearly different from most other resources in that it’s built specifically as supplemental content for more formal classes.

    Independent language learners don’t pay a dime! This pricing is more for teachers and educational institutions who can use Conjuguemos to help communicate their students’ individual needs.

    And independent language learners also aren’t missing out on a whole lot! The only glaringly obvious thing you’ll be missing if you’re joining without a teacher is that you can’t play the multiplayer games, since those are based on playing against other classmates.

    Otherwise, teachers or institutions who opt for a paid plan for their students can use Conjuguemos for a very reasonable price.

    Who should use Conjuguemos?

    I love using Conjuguemos for one-off grammar practice as shown in this Conjuguemos review. Just five minutes here and there remembering my past tenses or other various grammar concepts gives me a little instant gratification.

    I love the Graded Practice, that it’s just a simple but effective way to practice grammar rules in context. That bit’s my favorite.

    Unfortunately, while Conjuguemos technically supports a handful of languages, many of them (namely Latin and Korean), this Conjuguemos review shows that they just don’t have enough content (yet) to make it worthwhile. If you’re learning any of the other languages, though, and need some basic grammar practice, Conjuguemos is gold!

    Especially if you’re taking a formal course using a textbook that’s supported, this is an amazing supplemental resource! Or, if you’re a teacher looking for easy, convenient help for your students, see what Conjuguemos can do for you!

    Filed Under: Advanced, Beginner, French, German, Grammar, Intermediate, Italian, Korean, Language app reviews, Language Skill, Latin, Level, Listening, Portuguese, Spanish, Target Language, Vocabulary

    OkyDoky Review: very fun way to get useful vocab

    January 11, 2022 by Jamie Leave a Comment

    Note: this review is currently being updated. Some information may be outdated.

    OkyDoky (formerly Hey! Lingo) is a new resource for foreign language vocab that offers language learners a ton of languages. What it lacks in history it makes up for in diversity (both in languages and in the ways you can learn the vocab in them).

    In this OkyDoky review, I’ll explain all the ways in which you can learn all this vocab, and what kind of language learner OkyDoky is best for.

    OkyDoky languages

    OkyDoky is for learners of 38 different languages, including:

    • Albanian
    • Bosnian
    • Bulgarian
    • Chinese (Mandarin)
    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Danish
    • Dutch
    • Estonian
    • Filipino (Tagalog)
    • Finnish
    • French
    • German
    • Greek
    • Hungarian
    • Icelandic
    • Indonesian
    • Italian
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Latvian
    • Lithuanian
    • Macedonian
    • Norwegian
    • Polish
    • Portuguese
    • Romanian
    • Russian
    • Serbian
    • Slovak
    • Slovenian
    • Spanish
    • Swedish
    • Thai
    • Turkish
    • Ukrainian
    • Vietnamese

    Bonus! Just like Mondly, OkyDoky is great for language laddering: any language you can learn with OkyDoky can used to be learned any of their other languages as well.

    Using OkyDoky

    Once you create an account, you’ll immediately be walked through a tutorial of the app so that you’re aware of both how to use it, and what options are available to you to learn a language.

    https://vimeo.com/1044386409/527c5bd612?ts=0&share=copy

    At first glance, this seems like a completely reasonable way to approach learning a language, as long as you already have some beginner knowledge behind you. This tutorial assumes you know beginner vocabulary and verbs, which is worth noting.

    Also worth noting? Just from this first glance, all I see is AI. I’m hoping that it’s just the tutorial and the cover art that is AI, and the rest is human made (let’s not take a lesson from Duolingo, please!).

    1. Your path to 3000+ words (which leaves you a solid-sized vocabulary to practice actually speaking)
    2. Courses (start with frequently used words & end speaking long sentences)
    3. Vocabulary (learn useful words related to a single theme)

    You can choose to learn vocabulary with either of these two paths, whichever one is more useful or interesting to you. For example, if you want to be conversationally fluent as quickly as possible, you’d go by way of courses; if you want to be able to talk about specific things, you’d go by vocabulary.

    This right here is already a pretty good indication of the flexibility language learners can get from OkyDoky! This not only offers us a specific road map to achieve a specific goal, but it also includes several ways to get there.

    And, no matter which path you choose, you can pick up whichever course you like, whenever you like. This allows us the flexibility to be spontaneous and creative in what we’re learning, while still working towards the same long-term goal of 300 words.

    OkyDoky review: flashcard types

    I’m a big fan of resources that allow us to switch up how we’re consuming our flashcards. There’s Anki, which has several different options that we can mix and match however we please. There’s uTalk which takes us through a predictable pattern to build our skills in multiple ways. How does OkyDoky do it?

    Hey! lingo review

    Here’s what I got when I selected a French course. There’s a lot here, so let’s dissect it.

    • How many cards in the course, depending on if you’re a plus member or not (more on that later)
    • Different tabs to go through as you make your way through these cards: “Study”, “Review”, “Difficult”, and “Pinned” cards. These are great tools for keeping track of the terms that are more difficult for you
    • “Timer Speed”, which you can use to speed things up or slow them down if your comprehension is higher/lower than average. You can also turn this off if it’s putting too much pressure on you
    • Card types

    Card types is the biggun’ here! We’ve got “Translate”, “Listen”, “Build”, “Switch”, and “Blank” (I told you, OkyDoky is all about options and flexibility!).

    Here’s what some of the different card types looked like when I just selected “all”.

    Hey! lingo review
    Hey! lingo review
    Hey! lingo review
    Hey! lingo review

    There’s a couple of things I really liked about how this session went. First of all, even though I left myself open to all the card types, it started easier and slowly got a little harder (i.e. “Build”).

    Second, if you like all the fun little sound effects and graphics of Duolingo, you’ll love OkyDoky. With the little clicking sounds and the “success” sound effect, plus a big giant reward star that pops up every time you get 5 or 10 in a row right…OkyDoky’s got the gamification thing down pat. This will absolutely keep you interested in language learning.

    Oh, and for the sake of building your comprehension, the term is repeated multiple times, whether it’s a “Listen” card or not.

    If you get it wrong? No worries, it’ll show you the answer for you to review, and make a note of it to test you on again later.

    And that’s pretty much it for the cards themselves! While you’re not going to get any grammar lessons or explanations, this can make for an excellent way to pick up grammar in context. Simple, yet very fun and effective.

    Looking for more information? Scroll down to see a list of all the flashcards you’ve been working on.

    Seriously, OkyDoky’s graphics are on point! The whole website gives off a great fun/easy-going/perky feel.

    You can see a visual representation of how well you know each phrase, the translation (and transliteration for languages with non-Latin alphabets), two different audio recordings of said phrase, a little emoji describing the phrase, and a link to a forum to discuss (again, much like Duolingo).

    Because OkyDoky is still so new, there’s not much in terms of discussion. However, just like Kwiziq was when they first expanded to Spanish, you’ll get a response pretty quickly.

    Fair warning: if you head on over to the Discussions sections, you’ll find a lot of users correcting OkyDoky’s content and complaining that there shouldn’t be so many errors.

    They make a fair point, but I can’t say how their content is created, and they consistently heed the advice and make the corrections. So, you know, take that bit as you will. A brand new website isn’t going to have all the kinks fixed just yet.

    OkyDoky’s chat courses

    Recently, OkyDoky has released 80+ new language courses in a new feature called chats! To access them, make sure you have the most recent version of the app (or just use the website on desktop) and click on the brown speech bubble courses.

    With these chats, OkyDoky switches it up a little bit and goes from kind of random phrases to phrases that you’ll use in an actual conversation. You don’t have all the options of the other courses, but it is a good option for connecting the information you’re taking in into some more realistic “conversational” practice (you’re not actively having the conversations, i.e. speaking, but you’re still creating those connections between random words/phrases and getting used to real-life chats).

    It’s pretty simple: you’re given a phrase, a few fill-in-the-blank options, and a timer. Your job is to make it make sense.

    As you can see, your correct answers are in green speech bubbles, and incorrect ones are in red. In the end, you get your stats, which let you know how you did in that particular session.

    And, per the rest of the app/website, you can replay the chat just with the phrases that you struggled with to really dive deep into the more difficult stuff. So it’s a challenge because you’re essentially throwing yourself into the conversation, but it’s not a challenge because you’re still not actually speaking.

    OkyDoky’s other tools

    Besides the main show, the flashcards, OkyDoky has a few other tricks to help us stay motivated, consistent, and interested in our language learning.

    First we have the Leaderboard. As OkyDoky continues to improve I can see this as a really helpful motivation tool to keep us learning!

    At the moment there are two versions of the site-wide Leaderboard: one by language, and one for all OkyDoky users put together. It’s pretty easy to rank at the moment because there aren’t that many users, but I hope once enough language learners join you’ll be able to compete just against those in a particular course.

    I would love to see this develop into something along the lines of Duolingo’s leagues, where you’re pit against a certain amount of members every week. But, as of right now, they’re working with what they’ve got (i.e. not too many members).

    Another option, if you have friends who are also using OkyDoky, is groups! Create a group and give your 4-digit group code to anybody you like in order to compete with your friends (a much easier and personal competition than everyone learning a certain language).

    You can create a group with as many languages as you like, and edit which languages are counted at any time.

    Next up we have daily goals! Go into your account page and see some simple statistics for your study habits.

    Unfortunately, these aren’t really front-and-center – it took me a minute of exploring the website to find this. However, I do really like the calendar view. Some may want some more in-depth stats (especially for paid members), but at the moment this section is pretty simple.

    Besides the fact that I really need to focus on one course at a time, you can see the percentage of the words I’ve learned, when I’ve studied, and how long I’ve studied for (excellent fodder for PolyLogger!).

    Underneath, you also have the option to set a daily study goal and set a daily reminder, either via email or via the mobile app.

    OkyDoky prices

    Even for a paid language resource, OkyDoky keeps it pretty accessible. They don’t block out entire courses but instead give you a little bit of everything. Just in the French course I reviewed for this post, it included 38 free words and 329 extra for paid users.

    So what does it take to get those extra words? Well, not much!

    OkyDoky is very accessible. I recommend getting that membership now; like I said, it’s a pretty new resource, so these prices may very well increase over time.

    And keep in mind, OkyDoky currently covers the most often-used vocab of 26 different languages, and we get access to every single one of them with an account. The sky’s the limit folks!

    Who should use OkyDoky

    That’s the end of this OkyDoky review. Do I like it? Yes. Is it perfect? Absolutely not. Because it’s still in its beginning stages, there are a lot of errors that need fixing. While it’s easy enough to report errors and get them fixed, this does mean we need to take these flashcards with a grain of salt sometimes.

    OkyDoky really shines in its use of gamification, giving us those little endorphin rushes whenever we click around the site. It also mixes up the flashcards really well and gives us the power to choose what kind of learning we want to be doing.

    And, of course, I love the visualization of the OkyDoky goal. With that specific goal in mind, language learners who are looking to bulk up on phrases in a variety of different languages in a fun way are gonna love this!

    It’s a lot like Duolingo, but strictly for vocab and phrases. Like I said, you’re also not going to get any explanations behind grammar rules or anything like that, so if you can’t figure out these phrases via context, you’ll need to go somewhere else for backup.

    Filed Under: Albanian, Beginner, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Chinese (Mandarin), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Intermediate, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Language app reviews, Language Skill, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Tagalog, Target Language, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vocabulary

    MosaLingua review: more theory than active language practice

    January 11, 2022 by Jamie Leave a Comment

    MosaLingua is a combination website/mobile app that boasts its own unique method of learning a language, called The MOSA Learning Method. What is this method, what does it teach you, and how effective is MosaLingua for learning a language?

    In this MosaLingua review, let’s find out.

    MosaLingua review: languages

    MosaLingua is an international company, and it’s pretty clear right from the get-go that they’re not English-centric in their communications. Currently, you can use MosaLingua to learn:

    • English
    • Business English
    • English TOEIC
    • English TOEFL
    • Medical English
    • Business Spanish
    • Arabic
    • Chinese
    • French
    • German
    • Italian
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Portuguese
    • Russian
    • Spanish

    Let’s talk about what MosaLingua’s method actually is; the last time I saw a resource so proud of their strategy was Pimsleur, which can be effective for the right learner, but generally (in my opinion) is a bit overrated.

    MosaLingua review: the method

    As this MosaLingua review goes on, you’ll see why this part is so important. Apparently based on “several cognitive science and psychology concepts”, the MosaLingua method includes:

    • Spaced repetition (my fave!)
    • Active recall
    • Metacognition
    • The Pareto principle
    • Learner motivation and psychology

    Those are a lot of fancy terms. What do they actually mean for us? I’ll take these concepts and explain them in not-so-formal terms that we can understand pretty easily.

    1. Spaced repetition: this one isn’t new to the language learning world at all, and it’s most popularly used with Anki. But you review words more or less depending on how difficult they are for you; you’ll also be shown old words just before you forget them. Very efficient.
    2. Active recall: multiple-choice questions aren’t the best because it’s easy enough to get them right without thinking. It’s like choosing the correct sentence between 5 sentences, you hear the word for “school”, and you pick the only sentence that has “school” in it. So MosaLingua doesn’t do that.
    3. Metacognition: once you answer right or wrong, report back on how easy or difficult it was for you. Again, something that Anki does very well.
    4. The Pareto principle: something like 80% of the conversations you’ll have in a language will use only 20% of the vocabulary. Learn high-frequency words first to learn more efficiently.
    5. Learner motivation and psychology: this is the concept that half of the struggle with learning a language is the barriers that we have in our minds. Defeat those to learn your language!

    All that said, this method seems to be pretty much common sense.

    MosaLingua review: getting started

    Once you log in to MosaLingua, you’ll first be directed to take a 20-30 minute long test. I have never seen such a time-intensive start to learning a language, and especially not one that begins from such an advanced level.

    I won’t put you through my whole test, but here’s how it started.

    Feel free to take breaks when necessary (I certainly did), especially when switching sections. You’ll be tested on your use of all the language skills, and it’s tough even if it is multiple choice.

    I do have to say it’s pretty accurate – MosaLingua judged my Spanish comprehension at a B2, and my grammar at an A2. At the end, you can submit your email to get these results in your email, but I don’t see any glaringly obvious “start here!” signs anywhere.

    MosaDiscovery

    Honestly, I spent about a week trying to find the meat of MosaLingua and I think I found it with their Chrome extension. It’s not clearly advertised within the online platform (or even the app, really), but MosaLingua’s strength starts with MosaDiscovery, the Chrome extension.

    Find the link to download the Chrome extension within the “Premium” section of the app, as this is a premium feature.

    Download MosaLingua’s MosaDiscovery Chrome extension, and collect new terms wherever on the internet you’re using the language! Just right-click, select “Add to MosaLingua”, edit the terms if you see fit, and then add them to your account.

    Now you’ll have to download the MosaLingua app; be aware that there is a different app for each language, so pay attention and make sure you’re downloading the right one.

    When you open the MosaLingua app, you’ll be directed to review these terms using the context in which they were found.

    The app has you learn your new foreign language vocab using these strategies:

    1. Listen & repeat (AKA shadowing)
    2. Memorize
    3. Write
    4. Self-evaluate

    It’s a perfectly decent approach, though not executed nearly as well as some other alternatives (which I’ll mention at the end of this MosaLingua review).

    The best part of this whole strategy, though, is the process of collecting these words from the internet. This makes vocab collection easy and meaningful.

    MosaLingua challenges

    Next, on MosaLingua’s homepage (dashboard? The first page you land on when you log in) you’ll first see the option to choose a challenge after (or before, it’s up to you) you take the aforementioned test.

    There’s no “challenges” section within the app. So basically, the idea behind these challenges is more of a mental note than anything else. When you select your challenge, you’ll get a few pointers for learning a language with books or music or whichever challenge you choose, but there’s no content or accountability provided.

    MosaLingua’s courses

    This is very confusing because MosaLingua labels these courses as optional, but they’re the only real content you can see if you’re on desktop. To access all the aforementioned vocabulary collection and review, you have to be on the app.

    And no, MosaLingua won’t tell you this itself if you’re on desktop. I had to spend a significant amount of time figuring this out.

    MosaLingua’s optional courses include MosaSeries, MosaSpeak, and MosaTraining.

    MosaSeries

    MosaSeries is a series of audio sessions that help you improve your listening comprehension, mostly. It’s targeted at beginners who are learning how to listen to and understand a new language.

    There’s lots of words to read to guide you in a step-by-step for testing and improving your listening.

    For the first lesson, for example, the image below the audio helps you gauge your abilities (as opposed to just a black-and-white “either you understand or you don’t” approach).

    Then you’ll listen to a short, 2-minute audio clip starting the story of a man who wakes up with amnesia.

    Lesson 2 is key vocab words in case you didn’t catch them, and lesson 3 is repeating lesson 1 again.

    Finally, MosaSeries introduces the text (with the same audio) to help you build your comprehension.


    To be totally honest, it’s nothing special. MosaSeries in particular is best if you want to practice building your listening comprehension with stories, but alternatives like StoryLearning and LingQ don’t quite do it for you.

    You’ll quickly run out of these stories, but it can be helpful for nailing down how to use this particular strategy to learn a language.

    MosaSpeak

    MosaSpeak is more aptly named because its focus is on speaking the language. Though to be fair, a vast majority of this mini-course is texts upon texts upon texts explaining all sorts of aspects of speaking the language, not so much actually practicing.

    To illustrate this concept, this lesson was several lessons into the first module. This is a legitimate approach called shadowing, but the app is so clunky it drove me bananas!

    Trying to find the next lesson with active use of the language was so difficult because these courses aren’t the primary function of the app; to get here, you have to go more > Premium Courses > and then choose the course you’re working on.

    With the amount of effort it takes to use a simple shadowing exercise that’s completely bookended by essays of text, I would just go to another app that does shadowing really well.


    This isn’t to say that any of these strategies are wrong, but MosaSpeak is a mini-course, generally sold separately (hence the Premium), but it’s basically just a bunch of blog posts copied & pasted into an app.

    MosaTraining

    MosaLingua’s final major course, “MosaTraining”, is the priciest. Instead of focusing on one subject or one language skill, MosaTraining is more conceptual and teaches you “absolutely everything you need to know to successfully learn a new language”.

    This is accomplished in 12 modules:

    1. Introduction and prep
    2. Immersion
    3. Improving listening comprehension
    4. Learning vocabulary quickly
    5. Improving pronunciation
    6. Learning how to learn
    1. Common mistakes and preparing for your first conversation
    2. Speaking
    3. Grammar
    4. Improving reading skills
    5. Improving written skills
    6. Continued language improvement

    And just like MosaSpeak, it seems to be more of a book than anything else; in fact, I think MosaTraining would be easier to consume if it was a PDF, ebook, or audio book. Yeah, there are a few videos sprinkled in here and there, but it’s largely text-based.

    While I agree with everything shared within MosaTraining’s lessons, I wouldn’t say it’s absolutely everything. Compared to The Method, MosaTraining lightly scratches the surface of some key elements of how to learn a language. You’ll get lots and lots of theory, but no execution of it.

    MosaLingua Premium prices

    MosaLingua is a paid service, and unfortunately the payment structure is just as complicated and clunky as the app and website.

    I’ve mentioned quite a few different options in this MosaLingua review, and unfortunately they’re all separate payments. And between the monthly/biannual/annual/one-off payment options, it’s enough to go cross-eyed.

    Here are the details:

    • MosaLingua Web: the all-in-one platform that hosts your vocab and whatnot: $4.99/month or $59.90/year; included for free if it’s necessary for another course you’ve purchased
    • MosaSeries: the audio series about a man who wakes up in the hospital with amnesia: $9.98/month or $58.80/six months
    • MosaSpeak: speaking practice recommended for levels A2-B2, and only available in Spanish, French, Italian, and German: $99
    • MosaTraining: teaches you how to learn a language quickly and efficiently, very conceptual: $130 for Premium, $180 for Premium+MosaWeb, $330 for Deluxe+MosaWeb

    For the courses that do not come with that 15-day trial, MosaLingua does offer a 30-day money-back guarantee.

    MosaLingua review and alternatives

    I’ll be honest, this language app was not easy to review; I’m a tech-savvy millennial, and even I struggled to understand what I was supposed to be doing and where I was supposed to go. If ease-of-use is important for you, MosaLingua will not help you learn a language.

    Regardless, MosaLingua does have its perks. My favorite is the Chrome extension, MosaDiscovery. This is a decently effective way to immerse yourself in the language while online, and save terms for later. I just wish the app to study said vocab terms was nicer, like Lingvist (much easier to use, and similar functionality).

    I also like the concept behind MosaSpeak, though I wish there was more actual speaking practice than mountains and mountains of text. Pronunciation practice is important, though, even if I do prefer how Speechling and Fluent Forever actually accomplish it.

    MosaSeries is also good idea, I just wish it were more fleshed out considering it’s a paid program. I wouldn’t be against starting out with MosaSeries, but eventually you may want to move on to something like Trancy or Kwiziq.

    At the end of the day, I can absolutely see the value of MosaLingua web; it’s very well-priced and could be the exact thing that you need to connect to the language. Despite my qualms with how hard it is to maneuver, now that I *get it*, MosaLingua may be just what you need to learn a language.

    Click here to try MosaLingua for yourself!

    Filed Under: $1-9, $50-100, Android app, Annual subscription, Arabic, Beginner, Chrome Extension, Curated flashcards, Device, DIY flashcards, English, French, German, Intermediate, iOS app, Italian, Language app reviews, Language Skill, Level, Monthly subscription, Non-English base language, Portuguese, Pricing type, Russian, Spanish, Target Language, Vocabulary

    Memrise Review for language learners

    January 11, 2022 by Jamie 6 Comments

    Memrise is a flashcard platform for language learners (plus a variety of other subjects). They’ve been upping their game over the past year or so, too: a completely new website, new native content, and some extra features popping up on what used to be just your average online flashcard resource.

    So how can Memrise help you, a language learner? Is it a resource that’s worth your consideration? What will you get, and what do you have to put into it? This Memrise review will help you decide.

    Memrise Pro: what is it?

    Memrise is a flashcard website that’s popular with lots of independent language learners out there. It’s pretty nice to look at, comes with its own app, and has both free and paid versions.

    There’s close to unlimited content on it, too; some of it was created by the folks at Memrise themselves, and some of it’s from the users of Memrise. This means Memrise’s content is effectively unlimited.

    I always say to take user-generated content with a grain of salt, because you don’t know if you’re actually learning the right stuff. It can definitely be helpful, though, since Memrise’s own content might not quite do it for you (more on that in a sec).

    Memrise courses

    Okay, so Memrise courses are the official content created by the Memrise team. There are plenty of options when it comes to Memrise courses, especially for the more well-known languages. I went looking for Afrikaans help, and Memrise itself doesn’t have any. That isn’t a make-or-break thing, since Afrikaans is not a popular language to learn, but I was personally disappointed just a smidgen.

    That isn’t to say you can only learn the most common romance languages, though. Memrise courses are available in the following languages:

    • Arabic
    • Chinese (Mandarin)
    • Danish
    • Dutch
    • English
    • French
    • German
    • Icelandic
    • Italian
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Mongolian
    • Norwegian
    • Polish
    • Portuguese
    • Russian
    • Slovenian
    • Spanish
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • Yoruba

    20 languages is not bad at all! The next question, and arguably the more important one: what exactly does Memrise offer in all these 20 languages?

    Memrise review: is experience important?

    To start my own Memrise review, I decided to start with Spanish. I’ve found that this is a pretty good way to gauge how much of a challenge different resources will put you to, especially when this was the first thing Memrise showed me when I signed up.

    Memrise Pro

    As a language learner, the impression I get when this is the first screen is that your level in that language is important (ie. they cover more than just beginner content, so they ask you if you’re more experienced so you don’t waste your time). The same thing happened when I reviewed Mondly for Spanish and Afrikaans.

    And, unfortunately, just like with Mondly, this assumption left me completely disappointed. This is the first lesson Memrise Pro gave me after telling them I was an advanced Spanish learner.

    Memrise Pro

    This was a video of a Spanish man saying “emocionante”. In fact, all of Memrise’s content starts out with a video of everyday Spanish speakers saying the word or phrase. This feels a lot more intimate than a robot voice or someone in front of a white screen, so I’m a fan!

    While I wouldn’t consider this word advanced (more intermediate), I’m glad that Memrise didn’t ask me what my level was and then throw me into beginner stuff anyways. You might have to do some searching to find the right content for your level (there’s no assessment or anything like that) but it is there.

    Memrise review: the Memrise process

    Now that we know what Memrise can teach us, how do they go about teaching it? With a touch of SRS, a smattering of repetition, and a bucket of gamification.

    Memrise follows the metaphor of a plant: first, you plant the seeds (see the word/phrase for the first time), and then you water those seeds (review the word/phrase) a bunch of times in a few different ways until you have yourself a plant (and have learned the word/phrase). Check the icon in the upper right-hand corner to see how far you are in the word/phrase.

    First, they’ll start by showing you the word/phrase. If you’re a Memrise Pro user, this involves that video that I was talking about. After it gives you a couple more, it’ll throw it all together and give you a few multiple-choice & fill-in-the-blank drills.

    Memrise Pro

    There are a couple of things that I really like about how Memrise approaches these lessons. The first is that they show you the literal translation of what you’re learning. This is something that I do a lot when I’m learning something new because it helps me understand it in the way that I understand language. Kudos, Memrise!

    Second: in that bottom-left lesson, there are no capital letters to denote the beginning of the sentence! I love this because I find myself cheating a lot with these kinds of things by looking for the capital letters to start a sentence. This way, you actually have to figure it out.

    It’s the little things, right?

    Memrise review: mems

    There’s one more aspect of Memrise that is (as far as I know) unique to them. They call it “mems”, and it’s a way to help you remember new words if you just can’t seem to get it. You may refer to this strategy as a mnemonic device.

    A lot of you may already be familiar with this, but since Memrise seems to be geared towards beginners, good for them for informing their users about this strategy! Many words and phrases have these “mems” already submitted by other users, but you can make up your own if you want.

    Memrise’s TikTok function: Immerse

    If you spend a lot of time on TikTok (guilty!), then you’ll probably like Memrise’s new Immerse section! I can’t say for sure which languages this is available in just yet, but it’s real fun.

    Literally, tap on the button on the bottom right, and find short, fun little TikTok-esque clips meant to entertain and up your listening and reading comprehension. As you can see from the videos below, you can have the subtitles in either English or the language you’re studying.

    Super fun, amiright?! I love this totally low-key, low-effort practice. All these videos I’ve seen are really relatable and very enjoyable to watch. There’s no easy way to save words for later, or get more in-depth lessons on anything said, but who knows what Memrise will do with this as time goes on?

    Memrise review: accountability

    Another helpful detail that Memrise offers is its reminders to study. If you go into the settings of your account, you can turn on notifications for your device, as well as stipulate when you get those notifications – certain days of the week, a specific time, etc.

    This is a fairly new addition to the app, so it’s nice to see language learning apps growing with the times and giving us more tools to keep us moving forward.

    Speaking of accountability tools, Memrise also features (much like Duolingo) a daily goal/streak function, based on the daily goal you set for each individual course you’re learning.

    You can also just opt in to study your “difficult words”, which are the terms that you seem to be having a more difficult time with (considering you’ve gotten them wrong). It’s not self-reporting so if your finger slips you may have “el sofá” in your list, but it’s one step closer to an Anki-level of SRS.

    Memrise Pro statistics

    If you choose to go the paid Memrise Pro route, you’ll have access to some statistics on how you’re learning, which may be helpful to you.

    For some language learners, this might be super motivating. I know it can be hard to realize how much you’re learning, so being able to see it in a graph like this is awesome (ignore the fact that there’s nothing on this particular graph!).

    If that’s not helpful for you, Memrise Pro does dive in a little deeper when it comes to your learning statistics. Seriously, for those analytical minds out there, this could get pretty exciting. Take a look!

    This is a super interesting take on language learning that nobody else does, only available to Memrise Pro users.

    Memrise Pro review: what you get

    On the topic of these statistics, let’s talk about the difference between Memrise free and Memrise Pro. Is Memrise free? Well, certain parts are, and they might just be enough for you.

    A lot of the things I’ve been talking about so far are only available to Memrise Pro users. The video clips of native speakers, for example, are only on Memrise Pro. Just like those statistics, as well as the Difficult Words section (that SRS bit I was talking about).

    It’s not like Memrise Pro is unreasonably priced, either! $9 per month is pretty cheap, especially compared to some of our other language learning options.

    Memrise review: who it’s for

    At the end of the day, I think Memrise Pro is doing a pretty okay job. They’re targeting a similar audience to Duolingo: language learners who want to dabble in a few languages but don’t feel particularly inclined to dive deeper into more intermediate grammar or vocab.

    The thing that sets Memrise Pro apart from everybody else is definitely the analytics of your study habits. What you’re studying, how often you’re studying, when you’re studying it, and how successful you are at studying it. You may be surprised to find what your patterns look like, and you may also find this information helpful for creating new, more productive patterns, too!

    If you don’t want to (or can’t) pay for Pro, Memrise can still be hugely helpful for creating your own flashcards in a more engaging way, even without all the bells and whistles. In that case, you may also consider Quizlet!

    Filed Under: Arabic, Beginner, Chinese (Mandarin), Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Icelandic, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Language app reviews, Language Skill, Level, Listening, Mongolian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Target Language, Turkish, Vocabulary, Yoruba

    Lingopie Review: the best foreign language subtitles

    January 11, 2022 by Jamie 3 Comments

    Lingopie is a platform created by and for language learners who enjoy learning foreign languages by watching TV. The idea behind this Lingopie review is that you’ll be so motivated to keep watching good shows, motivation will be easy peasy.

    That said, how do you know if Lingopie is the right language learning resource for you? In this Lingopie review, we’ll discuss its benefits, limitations, and Lingopie alternatives.

    Getting started watching foreign language TV

    You can use Lingopie to learn 10 languages:

    • Chinese
    • English
    • French
    • German
    • Italian
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Portuguese
    • Russian
    • Spanish

    Your Lingopie account grants you access to all 10 languages at any time. There’s no effort in switching languages either, which we’ll see in a second.

    Lingopie review: watching and learning

    You’ll see a Netflix-like page with all the shows Lingopie has to offer, separated by genre and, more importantly: every show and movie has an icon, front and center, of the country the media is from, which makes it easy to find the most relevant content for your language learning.

    This dashboard/TV catalog is truly beautiful and genuinely motivating to start expanding into all sorts of languages. It’s easy to see that using Lingopie to learn a language requires minimal effort, especially if you’re in the habit of watching TV for hours on end once you’re hooked (guilty as charged).

    I have one qualm about the search function: I like how you can search for different accents and genres (a la Yabla) but there is no option to search accents AND genre AND length, which is very basic functionality.

    Because of this limited searchability, I stuck to Castilian Spanish content and chose something that looked interesting.

    Roll over the show you want to watch to get a very brief synopsis of the plot, as well as how long that content is. The show I chose was only 3 minutes long, which surprised me. Usually we think of shows to be anywhere from 20 minutes to over an hour long, which can be overwhelming when it’s in a different language.

    These short little clips are more like YouTube videos than anything else, if you don’t want to make the time commitment.

    Before the show starts, you get a preview of the important vocab on the righthand side. While it’s labeled “Vocab for your level”, it’s mostly just an indication of the level that show is at – if you’re comfortable with these words, you’ll mostly understand the show.

    For what it’s worth, that’s all you’ll need to know if you need to go up or down in difficulty. You don’t need to know all of the exact definitions of all of the words, nor do you need to know which context each word should be used, or all of its conjugations. These are the details that you’ll learn as you immerse yourself in the shows you’re watching.

    Then, as soon as I pressed play, I got a “grammar coach” pop up. Judging by the answer I got, this is basic AI. Obviously with my first attempt the grammar is very simple, so I tried it again with a sentence with more complex grammar.

    It’s not amazing, but it is a start. As of this latest update, AI is still pretty new so we’ll see how this develops. I hope that it’ll go from just naming the verb tenses (which is undoubtedly better than nothing) to explaining the concepts and/or linking to helpful content.

    After clicking out of the grammar coach, here are Lingopie’s basic features in action.

    Lingopie’s platform allows you to easily:

    • read the transcript while watching the show
    • translate any word or phrase in real time
    • listen to any word or phrase independently
    • save vocab to review later
    • practice shadowing (listening to native audio and repeating)
    • loop lines from the transcript
    • change the speed of the show
    • add/remove the native/target language subtitles

    Lots of handy tools that are intuitively placed within the platform itself, and very aesthetically pleasing! These two features help Lingopie to stand out in the world of streaming foreign language content.

    Reviewing vocab with Lingopie

    After watching for some time, you’ll want to review the vocabulary you’ve collected. Lingopie offers a couple of ways to do this, all of which are slightly different and depend on your goals for any particular study session.

    Let’s take a look at all 3 options.

    Pop Quiz

    The first type of vocab review is right within whatever you’re watching. Just click over to the “My Vocab” tab after collecting a few words and try the Pop Quiz.

    This is a very simple way to connect the vocabulary you’re learning with the meaning in which you learned it – review the vocab with the exact video clip you found it in. This is a 10/10 execution of this concept, and blows the competition out of the water (looking at you, Trancy).

    The pop quiz function is the easiest way to review a particular piece of media, especially right after seeing the terms for the first time. You don’t have all of your terms from all of your shows all in one quiz, so you can easily get this fresh vocab into your brain.

    Flashcards

    If you want to review all of your terms from all of your media in one study session, you’ll have to click over to the “Review & Practice” section.

    Just like with the pop quiz, the flashcards section reviews your terms paired with their content. There’s slightly more functionality here though: click the card to flip between the word and its translation, and then tell Lingopie how well you know the term: know it, not sure, or no idea.

    Lingopie also keeps track of your progress for you, including where you got the term, how many times you’ve reviewed it, when it was last seen, and the option to listen to it again or remove it from the list.

    As you can see, if you want the actual native audio, it has to be in one of the features where the term is shown with the video clip. Otherwise, you’ll be listening to the robot recording.

    Word Master

    Lingopie’s third method for helping you review the vocabulary it teaches you is via Word Master. This vocab game is the only one that does not use the original video content to help you remember the words.

    I’m not blown away by this option. The thing that makes Lingopie special is using the video content to connect the vocab words to their meaning.

    If this featured another more active activity – typing in the words, for example – it might be more useful, but otherwise this isn’t much different from creating your own flashcards yourself.

    Lingopie’s Chrome extension vs Language Reactor

    While Language Reactor has essentially cornered the market for using Netflix to learn a language, Lingopie now has a similar Chrome extension that you can use with your normal Lingopie account.

    With the Chrome extension you can see which Netflix shows Lingopie has translated for you, giving you that many more options to learn your target language.

    As I said, this puts Lingopie in direct competition with Language Reactor, so let talk about some pros and cons, Lingopie vs Language Reactor.

    Quantity of content

    Language Reactor is a free Chrome extension that helps language learners use YouTube and Netflix to learn a language by pulling out the subtitles that already exist (most of which are automatically generated by YouTube) and make it easier for us to use them.

    This means that Language Reactor’s content is essentially limitless; as long as there are new shows on Netflix and new videos on YouTube, there will be new content to learn a language.

    Lingopie, however, is limited by the content they have available on their platform.

    Quality of subtitles

    Because Language Reactor tends to use automatically generated subtitles, they’re not always totally precise. And while this may not be a make-it-or-break-it kind of thing for many language learners, it can lead to confusion.

    For example, it can be very difficult to recognize if it’s a particular vocab word that’s new, or if it’s a new phrase, or if it’s region-specific slang. This can require significant research that some language learners would rather not do.

    Lingopie’s subtitles are not automatic. So if you want to just be told what a word or phrase means, there’s no competition.

    Vocabulary review

    As we’ve discussed in this Lingopie review, this platform makes it very easy and enjoyable to review the vocab you learn within its original context. You don’t have to do any other work, besides clicking over to a different section.

    Language Reactor, however, takes some elbow grease. If you already have a flashcard system that you enjoy, like plugging new vocab words into Anki for example, then this may not be an issue. However, if you’re looking for a new approach for learning new vocab by watching videos, Lingopie makes all that much easier.

    Lingopie review: pricing

    Due to Lingopie’s high quality platform and subtitles, it is a paid resource. However, if the ease of use is what you need to learn a language consistently, then it is absolutely worth it. Plus, Lingopie offers a 7-day free trial to try everything out.

    Click here for Lingopie’s updated pricing.

    Lingopie review: alternatives

    While I believe Lingopie is the most beautiful and user-friendly, it’s not the only way to learn a language by watching TV.

    If you enjoy the curated content but want some more flexibility in how you’re studying the language, FluentU may be a good Lingopie alternative for you. As I mentioned, it’s not nearly as pretty as Lingopie, but what it lacks in design it makes up for in study strategy.

    A similar alternative to both Lingopie and FluentU is Yabla. Again, not very pretty, but it can be fun to play around with.

    Finally, if you’re willing to do some behind the scenes tech and macgyver your language learning just a little bit, Language Reactor paired with an Anki or Memrise deck is a budget-friendly alternative that could work just as well.

    Should you use Lingopie to learn a language?

    Lingopie is an excellent way to learn a language with TV and subtitles. In fact, it’s the best in the market in 2 ways:

    • teaching you new foreign language vocab with the context of video, and
    • providing top tier, easy-to-use subtitles.

    Especially for that first bullet point, context is key when learning new vocabulary, so if you’re looking for a way to pair new vocab with a TV show you enjoy, I would recommend giving Lingopie a try.

    However, it’s important to keep in mind that regardless of what they say, you do need to be at a certain level of listening comprehension to make the most out of a resource like Lingopie. Even in the beginner level video at the beginning of this Lingopie review, it uses intermediate-level grammar.

    If you’re a total beginner, I’d recommend you start out with basic vocab first.

    Want to use Lingopie’s 7-day free trial? Click here to get started.

    Filed Under: $1-9, $50-100, Advanced, Android app, Annual subscription, Audiobooks & video, Captions and subtitles, Chinese (Mandarin), Chrome Extension, Curated flashcards, Device, English, French, German, Intermediate, iOS app, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Language app reviews, Language Skill, Level, Lifetime access available, Listening, Monthly subscription, Portuguese, Pricing type, Reading, Russian, Shadowing, Spanish, Speaking, Target Language, Vocabulary, Website, Words/phrases, Words/phrases

    • « Go to Previous Page
    • Page 1
    • Interim pages omitted …
    • Page 6
    • Page 7
    • Page 8
    • Page 9
    • Go to Next Page »

    Primary Sidebar

    Meet your language coach

    Hi! I'm Jamie (she/her), and I help you learn exactly what you need to do to learn a foreign language. Click my face above to learn more about me and how I can help.


    We strive to offer equitable access to language learning for all, regardless of ethnicity, gender identity, ability, or sexual orientation.
    Copyright © 2025 · Multilingual Mastery · Privacy Policy

    • About
    • Get 1:1 support
    • App search