Also analyzed in: 5 other industries
Analyzed: 2026-04-23
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
71
/ 100
Strong

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
76
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about Busuu without web search.

LLM Authority?
59
/ 100
Present

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
79
/ 100
Category Leader

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Busuu from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
76/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.69
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.72
Top associations for Busuu
language-learning app 4 practice with native speakers 4 native-speaker feedback 3 native speaker feedback community 2 limited for advanced learners 2 strong vocabulary coverage 2 strong grammar coverage 2 repetitive basic lessons 2 inconsistent community corrections 2 structured language practice 2 interactive courses 2 short lessons 2 structured language-learning app 2 online language platform 2 interactive lessons 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
pronunciation exercises 2 language learning app 2 vocabulary drills 1 improve speaking and listening 1 practice grammar 1 interactive practice sessions 1 learner motivation 1 points and levels 1 gamified streaks 1 speaking practice 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Busuu is firmly in the model's "language learning app" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Busuu known for?

Busuu is known for its language-learning app and online courses, offering interactive lessons and practice with native speakers.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Busuu known for?

Busuu is known for its language-learning app and online platform, which helps people learn new languages through lessons, exercises, and practice with native speakers.

Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
59/100
Present
Recall mode (no web)?
57

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
62

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best language learning apps for complete beginners? #3 #3
discovery What language learning apps are best for intermediate learners? #2 #1
discovery What language learning apps work best for advanced learners? #5 #2
discovery What are the best language learning apps for busy adults? #3 #3
discovery What language learning apps are good for students? #3 #3
discovery What are the best language learning apps for kids and teens? #7 #5
discovery What language learning apps are best for speaking practice? not mentioned #3
discovery What are the best language learning apps for vocabulary building? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What language learning apps are good for grammar practice? #3 #2
discovery What are the best language learning apps for reading and listening? #5 #4
discovery What language learning apps are best for pronunciation? not mentioned #4
discovery What are the best language learning apps with spaced repetition? #3 #2
discovery What language learning apps are best for self-paced learning? #3 #3
discovery What are the best language learning apps for travel preparation? #7 #4
discovery What language learning apps are best for business language? #2 #3
discovery What are the best language learning apps for learning multiple languages? #3 #3
discovery What language learning apps are best for daily practice? #3 #3
discovery What are the best language learning apps with offline lessons? #4 #3
discovery What language learning apps are best for immersive learning? #4 not mentioned
discovery What are the best language learning apps for quick progress? #3 #3
comparison What are the best alternatives to the most popular language learning app? #3 #3
comparison How do the top language learning apps compare for beginners? #4 #3
comparison What are the best alternatives to a gamified language app? #2 #2
comparison Which language learning apps are better than a flashcard-based app? #3 #1
comparison What are the best alternatives to a subscription language learning app? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which language learning apps are best for speaking compared with app-based courses? #9 #1
comparison What are the best alternatives to a video-less language learning app? #3 #4
comparison How do language learning apps compare with online tutors? #3 not mentioned
comparison What are the best alternatives to an app that focuses on vocabulary drills? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison Which language learning apps are best for real conversation compared with classroom courses? #6 #4
problem How can I stay consistent with language learning every day? #4 not mentioned
problem How do I build vocabulary faster in a new language? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I improve my pronunciation when learning a language? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I practice speaking when I do not have a partner? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I learn a language on a busy schedule? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I stop forgetting words I learned? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I get better at listening comprehension? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I learn grammar without getting bored? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How can I track my language learning progress? not mentioned not mentioned
problem How do I make language study a daily habit? not mentioned not mentioned
transactional Are there any free language learning apps? #3 #3
transactional What do language learning apps cost per month? #3 not mentioned
transactional Which language learning apps have a free trial? #4 #5
transactional What is the cheapest language learning app? #3 #3
transactional Are premium language learning apps worth it? #2 #3
transactional Which language learning apps offer offline access with a subscription? #4 #2
transactional Do any language learning apps have family plans? #4 #3
transactional Which language learning apps are best value for money? #5 #4
transactional Can I use a language learning app without paying? #3 not mentioned
transactional What language learning apps are worth the subscription price? #2 #4
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best language learning apps for complete beginners? · discovery · recall mode

For complete beginners, the best language-learning apps are:

  1. Duolingo

Best for: getting started fast, daily habit-building Why: very easy to use, gamified, great for absolute beginners

  1. Babbel

Best for: practical conversation and grammar basics Why: more structured than Duolingo, better for learning useful phrases

  1. Busuu

Best for: beginner-to-intermediate progress with feedback Why: includes speaking/writing practice and community corrections

  1. Rosetta Stone

Best for: immersive learning and pronunciation Why: strong for visual learners and building intuition from zero

  1. Mondly

Best for: short, beginner-friendly lessons Why: simple lessons, decent for vocabulary and basic sentences

  1. Pimsleur

Best for: speaking and listening from day one Why: excellent for audio-based learning if you want to talk early

My quick picks:

  • Best overall for total beginners: Duolingo
  • Best if you want to actually converse: Babbel or Pimsleur
  • Best for pronunciation/immersion: Rosetta Stone

If you tell me which language you want to learn, I can recommend the best app for that specific language too.

Prompt: What are the best language learning apps for complete beginners? · discovery · retrieval mode

For complete beginners, my top picks are:

  1. Duolingo — best if you want the easiest, most gamified start, with bite-sized lessons, instant feedback, and lots of beginner-focused content. It’s also free to start. (en.duolingo.com)
  2. Babbel — best if you want a more structured, practical course that gets you speaking real-life phrases, with short lessons and pronunciation practice. Babbel’s newer Babbel Speak feature is aimed specifically at first-time speakers. (babbel.com)
  3. Busuu — best if you want a guided beginner path plus feedback from native speakers. It focuses on beginner-to-advanced courses, short lessons, and community corrections. (help.busuu.com)
  4. Pimsleur — best if your main goal is speaking out loud from day one. Its app emphasizes audio lessons, speaking practice, and progress tracking. (pimsleur.com)
  5. Memrise — best if you want to hear how people actually talk, with native-speaker video, spaced repetition, and AI speaking practice; it explicitly says you can start as a total beginner. (memrise.com)
  6. Mango Languages — best if you want a practical, beginner-friendly app with native recordings and lots of language options, especially if you have access through a library or school. (apps.apple.com)

Quick pick:

  • Most fun: Duolingo
  • Best all-around for beginners: Babbel
  • Best for speaking confidence: Pimsleur
  • Best for native-speaker realism: Memrise

If you want, I can also give you the best app based on your target language or whether you want free vs paid.

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
79/100
Category Leader
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best language learning apps? 22,200 5/5 3, 3, 3, 4, 4
What are the top language learning apps for beginners? 22,200 5/5 4, 3, 3, 3, 3
Which language learning apps are most popular? 70 5/5 4, 4, 5, 4, 4
What are the most recommended language learning apps? 20 5/5 3, 3, 4, 3, 3
What language learning apps are worth trying? 0 5/5 3, 3, 3, 3, 3
What are the best language learning apps for adults? 0 5/5 4, 3, 6, 3, 4
What are the best language learning apps for kids? 170 1/5 9
Which language learning app is the best overall? 3,600 4/5 4, 3, 4, 3
What are the best free language learning apps? 6,600 5/5 6, 3, 6, 6, 3
What are the best paid language learning apps? 30 5/5 4, 2, 2, 3, 2
What are the best language learning apps for Spanish? 10 5/5 3, 3, 3, 3, 3
What are the best language learning apps for English? 0 5/5 3, 3, 3, 3, 3
What are the best language learning apps for travel? 0 4/5 7, 3, 7, 5
What are the best language learning apps with speaking practice? 0 5/5 4, 3, 5, 4, 4
What are the best language learning apps with gamification? 0 5/5 2, 2, 3, 2, 2
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best language learning apps? (no web search)

Here are some of the best language-learning apps, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and habit-building; very easy to stick with.
  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and grammar; more structured than Duolingo.
  • Busuu — best for guided lessons plus native-speaker feedback.
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation.
  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and real-world phrases.
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening; strong if you learn by audio.
  • LingQ — best for reading/listening with lots of content.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for chatting with native speakers.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall for most people: Babbel
  • Best free option: Duolingo
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for real conversation: HelloTalk or Tandem

If you tell me the language you want to learn and your level, I can recommend the best app combo.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What are the best language learning apps? (no web search)

Here are some of the best language-learning apps, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and habit-building; very easy to stick with.
  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and structured lessons.
  • Busuu — great for grammar + native speaker feedback.
  • Rosetta Stone — good for immersive learning and pronunciation.
  • Memrise — strong for vocabulary and real-world video clips.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and listening, especially if you want audio-first learning.
  • LingQ — best for reading/listening with lots of real content.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for chatting with native speakers.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall for most people: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for conversation practice: HelloTalk
  • Best for serious study: Busuu or LingQ

If you tell me the language you want to learn and your budget, I can narrow it down to the best 2–3.

Iteration: 2 of 5

What to do next Recommendations for Busuu

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

Identify and shore up oscillating differentiators

Core TOM is strong. Watch for specific differentiators (slogans, signature products) that appear in only some iterations. Push those into training-data-crawled headlines.

Maintain / refine TOM

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Smoothed geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Authority and TOM are floored at LBA × 0.1 before the geometric mean (the same floor used in the per-metric cards above, so brand cards and the composite tell the same story). Formula: composite = ((LBA + 5)(Authority + 5)(TOM + 5))^(1/3) - 5. The floor keeps brands the model clearly recognises but doesn't yet recommend from collapsing to zero, while a single genuinely weak metric still pulls the composite down. Full methodology.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 23, 2026 at 5:13 AM

All 210 AI responses for Busuu

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6 prompts)

What is Busuu known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is known for its language-learning app and online courses, offering interactive lessons and practice with native speakers.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is known for its language-learning app and online platform, which helps people learn new languages through lessons, exercises, and practice with native speakers.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is known as a language-learning platform/app that offers interactive courses, practice with native speakers, and lessons for learning multiple foreign languages.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is known for its language-learning app and online platform, which offers interactive courses and practice with native speakers.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is known for its language-learning app and platform, which offers courses in multiple languages with interactive lessons and native-speaker practice.

What are Busuu's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu’s main strengths are its structured, beginner-friendly language courses, strong grammar and vocabulary coverage, useful speaking/listening practice, and its community feature where native speakers can correct exercises. It’s also convenient, polished, and good for building a consistent study habit.

Main weaknesses: it’s less effective for reaching advanced fluency, the free version is limited, some content can feel repetitive, and the human-correction/community aspect can be uneven depending on activity. Compared with more immersive methods, it may not give enough real-world speaking practice.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu’s main strengths are its structured, user-friendly language courses, practical vocabulary and grammar lessons, strong speaking/listening focus, and the community feature where learners can get corrections from native speakers. It also offers clear progression, decent personalization, and is often seen as more study-oriented than purely gamified apps.

Its main weaknesses are that it can feel less engaging or addictive than Duolingo-style apps, the content depth varies by language, and advanced learners may find it limited for true fluency. Some features are locked behind a paywall, and the community feedback quality can be inconsistent.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu’s main strengths are its structured language courses, clear beginner-to-intermediate progression, strong grammar coverage, and the community feature that lets learners get feedback from native speakers. It’s also user-friendly and good for short daily study sessions.

Main weaknesses: it’s less comprehensive for advanced learners, speaking practice is limited compared with live tutoring, and the free version is fairly restricted. Some users also find that the app’s depth varies by language, with larger languages getting better coverage than smaller ones.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu’s main strengths are its structured, beginner-friendly lessons, strong focus on practical vocabulary and speaking, and the community feature that lets learners get feedback from native speakers. It also offers clear learning paths and useful grammar support, making it easy to stay organized.

Its main weaknesses are that it can feel less deep than more advanced language programs, especially for reaching high fluency. The social feedback quality can vary, some content is behind a paywall, and it may not be enough on its own for strong speaking fluency or advanced grammar mastery.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu’s main strengths are its structured, CEFR-aligned lessons, good beginner-to-intermediate progression, strong grammar and vocabulary coverage, and the community feature that lets learners get feedback from native speakers. It’s also generally polished, easy to use, and convenient for short daily study.

Its main weaknesses are that it can feel limited for advanced learners, speaking practice is not as immersive as live tutoring, and the full experience is paywalled. Some users also find the community feedback uneven, since quality depends on other learners’ availability and accuracy.

Who should use Busuu? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is a good fit for self-motivated beginners to intermediate learners who want structured, bite-sized language practice, especially for common languages and everyday conversation. It’s also useful for people who like a mix of vocab, grammar, listening, and speaking practice, and for learners who benefit from community feedback from native speakers.

It may not be ideal for advanced learners who need deep, specialized content or heavy conversation practice, people who want a fully live-tutor experience, or learners who need very flexible, highly customized study paths. If you dislike app-based, repetitive practice or don’t plan to study consistently, Busuu may feel less useful.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is best for people who want a structured, self-paced language app with practical lessons, especially beginners to lower-intermediate learners, busy learners, and people who like short daily study sessions and community feedback.

It may be less suitable for people who want deep conversational practice, very advanced language mastery, or a fully immersive classroom-style course. It’s also not ideal for learners who need highly specialized instruction, major pronunciation coaching, or maximum value from long, intensive study.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is a good fit for self-motivated beginners to intermediate learners who want a structured language app, short lessons, speaking practice, and feedback from native speakers. It’s also useful for people who like learning on a schedule or want a supplementary tool alongside classes.

You may want to avoid Busuu if you need deep grammar explanations, very advanced fluency practice, lots of live tutoring, or a fully immersive experience. It’s also less ideal if you don’t like app-based, self-paced learning or if you want one single resource to take you all the way to high-level proficiency.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is best for self-motivated learners who want structured language practice, especially beginners to intermediate users, busy people who like short lessons, and learners who want speaking/writing feedback from native speakers.

It may not be ideal for people who need a very teacher-led classroom, advanced learners looking for deep, highly specialized grammar/content, or anyone who wants the most immersive experience without relying on an app.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is best for self-motivated learners who want a structured language-learning app with short lessons, grammar practice, vocabulary, and native-speaker feedback. It’s a good fit for beginners to intermediate learners, especially if you want to study on your own schedule and like clear progress tracking.

You may want to avoid Busuu if you need deep live tutoring, highly specialized language training, or a fully immersive classroom-style experience. It’s also less ideal if you’re looking for maximum speaking practice without relying on an app.

How does Busuu compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is generally seen as a middle ground between gamified apps like Duolingo and more structured learning platforms like Babbel. Compared with Duolingo, Busuu is usually more grammar- and conversation-focused, with clearer lesson progression and native-speaker feedback, but it has less game-like engagement and a smaller free offering. Compared with Babbel, Busuu is often similar in seriousness and practical vocabulary, but Busuu adds community corrections and a broader social-learning angle, while Babbel is often considered a bit more polished in course design. Versus Rosetta Stone, Busuu is usually cheaper and more flexible, while Rosetta Stone leans more on immersion and brand reputation. Overall, Busuu stands out for combining structured lessons with community feedback, but it’s not as addictive as Duolingo or as deeply established in traditional language instruction as Babbel or Rosetta Stone.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is generally stronger than many casual language apps when it comes to structure and practical learning, but it’s not as broad or as game-like as some big competitors.

Compared with Duolingo, Busuu is usually more focused on grammar, lesson structure, and real-world conversation practice. Duolingo is better for free, bite-sized daily habit building and has a bigger brand presence, but Busuu tends to feel more serious and curriculum-based.

Compared with Babbel, Busuu is quite similar: both are subscription-first and emphasize practical language use. Busuu’s standout feature is its community feedback from native speakers, while Babbel is often seen as a bit more polished in lesson design and especially strong for structured beginner-to-intermediate learning.

Compared with Memrise, Busuu is less about memorization gimmicks and more about guided progression. Memrise is often better for vocabulary exposure and informal practice, while Busuu is stronger for a balanced course experience.

Compared with Rosetta Stone, Busuu is usually more modern, flexible, and affordable. Rosetta Stone has more legacy credibility and immersion-style branding, but Busuu often feels easier to use and more aligned with how people actually learn today.

Overall: Busuu is a good middle ground if you want a structured app with grammar, speaking, and native-speaker corrections. It’s less playful than Duolingo, less famous than Babbel, and less immersion-heavy than Rosetta Stone, but often more practical than the average language app.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu sits between Duolingo and Babbel: it’s more structured and practical than Duolingo, but usually less content-rich and less polished than Babbel. Its biggest strengths are CEFR-aligned lessons, community feedback from native speakers, and a balanced mix of grammar, vocabulary, and speaking practice.

Compared with main competitors:

  • Duolingo: Busuu is more serious and linear; Duolingo is more gamified and free-friendly.
  • Babbel: Busuu is often similar in structure, but Babbel is usually stronger for paid, guided grammar-focused courses.
  • Rosetta Stone: Busuu is generally more modern and flexible; Rosetta Stone is more immersive but can feel repetitive.
  • Memrise: Busuu is better for full-course progression; Memrise is stronger for vocab/memory drills and user-generated style content.

Best fit: learners who want a clear path, real speaking practice, and a more classroom-like experience without going as rigid as Rosetta Stone.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is strongest as a structured, “learn a language with a plan” app. Compared with its main competitors:

  • Duolingo: Busuu is more traditional and grammar-focused, with clearer progression and more practical lessons. Duolingo is more gamified, easier to stick with casually, but usually lighter on depth.
  • Babbel: Very similar audience. Babbel is often seen as slightly stronger for guided grammar and conversation basics; Busuu stands out more for community feedback and a broader mix of self-study plus practice.
  • Rosetta Stone: Busuu is usually cheaper and more flexible. Rosetta Stone is more immersive and brand-recognized, but can feel less explicit about grammar and explanations.
  • Memrise: Memrise is better for vocabulary memorization and quick recall. Busuu is better for a full course structure and balanced skill-building.
  • LingQ: LingQ is more content-immersion oriented and better for advanced learners; Busuu is more beginner-to-intermediate friendly and easier to follow.

Overall: Busuu is a good middle ground—more serious and structured than Duolingo, often more modern and social than Babbel, but less immersive or specialized than some niche competitors.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Busuu is generally seen as a more structured, practical language-learning app than Duolingo, with stronger grammar coverage and native-speaker feedback. Compared with Babbel, Busuu is similar in being course-based, but Busuu tends to stand out for its community correction feature and often feels a bit more social; Babbel is usually considered stronger for polished lesson flow and speaking-focused drills. Against Rosetta Stone, Busuu is more flexible, cheaper, and easier to use, while Rosetta Stone is more immersive but often less efficient for quick progress. Versus Memrise, Busuu is usually better for structured progression and grammar, while Memrise is often preferred for vocabulary and casual learning. Overall, Busuu is a solid middle ground: more serious than Duolingo, often more affordable and social than Babbel, and less immersive than Rosetta Stone.

What do people typically complain about with Busuu?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain that Busuu’s free version is very limited, the subscription feels pricey, some lessons get repetitive, the app can have occasional bugs or syncing issues, and speaking/writing feedback can be inconsistent because it depends on other users. Some also mention cancellation/refund and customer support frustrations.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

People often complain that Busuu’s free version is too limited, that many useful features are behind a paywall, and that the lesson depth can feel shallow for advanced learners. Some also mention occasional app bugs, repetitive exercises, and that community feedback/corrections can be inconsistent.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain that Busuu’s free version is too limited, that many useful features are locked behind a subscription, and that the app can feel repetitive or too basic for advanced learners. Some also mention bugs or syncing issues, occasional awkward lesson flow, and that the community correction feature can be inconsistent depending on who reviews your work.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

People often complain about Busuu’s subscription and billing issues, especially auto-renewal and cancellation hassles. Other common complaints are that the app can be buggy, some lessons feel repetitive or too basic, community corrections can be inconsistent, and speaking/pronunciation practice is limited compared with expectations.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain that Busuu’s free version is limited, the subscription can feel pricey, some lessons get repetitive, speech recognition/feedback isn’t always accurate, and the community correction feature can be inconsistent because it depends on other users. Some also say it’s less effective for advanced learners or for building real conversation skills.

What is a typical language learning app known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical language learning app is known for making language study convenient and interactive, often with short lessons, vocabulary practice, pronunciation help, quizzes, reminders, and gamified progress tracking.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical language learning app is known for interactive lessons, vocabulary drills, listening and speaking practice, and gamified features like streaks, points, and levels to keep learners motivated.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical language learning app is known for helping users build vocabulary, practice grammar, improve speaking/listening, and learn through short interactive lessons, quizzes, and spaced repetition.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical language learning app is known for making vocabulary, grammar, pronunciation, and practice lessons easy and interactive, often with gamified exercises and progress tracking.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical language learning app is known for bite-sized lessons, vocabulary practice, pronunciation exercises, gamified progress tracking, and convenient mobile learning anywhere.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best language learning apps for complete beginners? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For complete beginners, the best language-learning apps are:

  1. Duolingo

Best for: getting started fast, daily habit-building Why: very easy to use, gamified, great for absolute beginners

  1. Babbel

Best for: practical conversation and grammar basics Why: more structured than Duolingo, better for learning useful phrases

  1. Busuu

Best for: beginner-to-intermediate progress with feedback Why: includes speaking/writing practice and community corrections

  1. Rosetta Stone

Best for: immersive learning and pronunciation Why: strong for visual learners and building intuition from zero

  1. Mondly

Best for: short, beginner-friendly lessons Why: simple lessons, decent for vocabulary and basic sentences

  1. Pimsleur

Best for: speaking and listening from day one Why: excellent for audio-based learning if you want to talk early

My quick picks:

  • Best overall for total beginners: Duolingo
  • Best if you want to actually converse: Babbel or Pimsleur
  • Best for pronunciation/immersion: Rosetta Stone

If you tell me which language you want to learn, I can recommend the best app for that specific language too.

retrieval Mentioned

For complete beginners, my top picks are:

  1. Duolingo — best if you want the easiest, most gamified start, with bite-sized lessons, instant feedback, and lots of beginner-focused content. It’s also free to start. (en.duolingo.com)
  2. Babbel — best if you want a more structured, practical course that gets you speaking real-life phrases, with short lessons and pronunciation practice. Babbel’s newer Babbel Speak feature is aimed specifically at first-time speakers. (babbel.com)
  3. Busuu — best if you want a guided beginner path plus feedback from native speakers. It focuses on beginner-to-advanced courses, short lessons, and community corrections. (help.busuu.com)
  4. Pimsleur — best if your main goal is speaking out loud from day one. Its app emphasizes audio lessons, speaking practice, and progress tracking. (pimsleur.com)
  5. Memrise — best if you want to hear how people actually talk, with native-speaker video, spaced repetition, and AI speaking practice; it explicitly says you can start as a total beginner. (memrise.com)
  6. Mango Languages — best if you want a practical, beginner-friendly app with native recordings and lots of language options, especially if you have access through a library or school. (apps.apple.com)

Quick pick:

  • Most fun: Duolingo
  • Best all-around for beginners: Babbel
  • Best for speaking confidence: Pimsleur
  • Best for native-speaker realism: Memrise

If you want, I can also give you the best app based on your target language or whether you want free vs paid.

What language learning apps are best for intermediate learners? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For intermediate learners, the best apps usually give you real input + practice, not just vocabulary drills.

Best picks
  • Babbel — best for structured grammar and practical conversation
  • Busuu — great for feedback from native speakers
  • Duolingo Max — good for daily practice and motivation, but not enough alone
  • LingQ — excellent for reading/listening with real content
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and pronunciation
  • Anki — best for serious vocabulary review with spaced repetition
  • italki — best if you want live 1:1 tutoring
Best by goal
  • Conversation: Pimsleur, italki, Busuu
  • Grammar: Babbel
  • Vocabulary: Anki, LingQ
  • Listening/reading: LingQ
  • Motivation/streaks: Duolingo
My top 3 for most intermediate learners
  1. Babbel
  2. LingQ
  3. italki

If you tell me which language you’re learning, I can narrow this down to the best apps for that specific language.

retrieval Mentioned

For intermediate learners, the best apps are usually the ones that push you into real input + speaking practice, not just beginner drills. My top picks:

  • Busuu — best all-around for structured progress plus speaking feedback. It offers courses up to C1 in some languages, and its community lets you submit exercises for corrections; it also has AI conversation practice. (blog.busuu.com)
  • Babbel — best for grammar + practical conversation. Babbel has courses that reach B1/B2/C1 depending on the language, and its Speak feature focuses on low-pressure speaking practice. (support.babbel.com)
  • LingQ — best for immersion. It’s built around learning from books, podcasts, and other real-world content, and says it works for learners at any level. (lingq.com)
  • Duolingo — best if you want a gamified app that now has more intermediate-friendly content, including mini-units, Stories, DuoRadio, and speaking practice. (blog.duolingo.com)
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking confidence. It’s heavily audio-based and emphasizes speaking from day one, with progress tracking and voice recognition in some languages. (pimsleur.com)
  • Memrise — best for real-world phrasing and listening. It uses local-speaker video clips and also offers chat-based practice with level-tailored rooms. (memrise.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Busuu
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur or Babbel
  • Best for immersion: LingQ
  • Best free/gamified option: Duolingo

If you want, I can also rank them for Spanish, French, Japanese, or German specifically.

What language learning apps work best for advanced learners? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For advanced learners, the best apps are usually the ones that give you real content, speaking practice, and detailed corrections—not just gamified vocab drills.

Best picks
  • LingQ — Best for extensive reading/listening with real content; great if you already know the basics.
  • Anki — Best for serious vocabulary retention with custom flashcards.
  • HelloTalk — Best for chatting with native speakers and getting corrections.
  • italki — Best for live lessons with tutors focused on fluency and nuance.
  • Busuu — Good for structured review and native-speaker feedback.
  • Pimsleur — Strong for speaking/aural practice, especially if you want better recall and pronunciation.
  • Netflix + Language Reactor — Great for advanced listening with subtitles and phrase lookup.
If you want the shortest recommendation
  • Reading/listening: LingQ
  • Speaking: italki + HelloTalk
  • Vocabulary: Anki
  • Listening practice: Pimsleur or Language Reactor

If you tell me the language you’re studying, I can suggest the best app mix for that specific language.

retrieval Mentioned

For advanced learners, the best apps are usually the ones that push real conversation, correction, and authentic input:

  • Preply — best overall if you want 1-on-1 tutoring and a personalized plan; it says tutors adapt lessons from beginner to advanced and the app includes AI-powered practice. (preply.com)
  • Busuu — strong for structured self-study plus feedback; it covers reading, writing, listening, speaking from beginner to advanced, includes a placement test, and lets you get corrections from native speakers. (help.busuu.com)
  • HelloTalk — best for language exchange and real-world chatting; it connects you with native speakers and offers chat rooms, translation, and captions for practice. (apps.apple.com)
  • Memrise — good for natural spoken language; it emphasizes native speaker videos and AI speaking/writing feedback. (memrise.com)
  • Rosetta Stone — solid if you want pronunciation practice and immersion-style learning; it highlights speech recognition and native-speaker stories. (rosettastone.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by best for speaking, writing, or exam prep.

What are the best language learning apps for busy adults? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For busy adults, the best language apps are the ones that fit into 5–15 minute sessions and actually keep you consistent.

Best overall
  • Duolingo — best for daily habit-building and very short lessons.
  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and structured learning.
  • Busuu — great mix of lessons plus feedback from native speakers.
Best for speaking
  • Rosetta Stone — strong for pronunciation and immersion-style learning.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for audio-only learning while commuting, walking, or driving.
Best for vocabulary and review
  • Memrise — good for real-world phrases and spaced repetition.
  • Anki — best if you want full control over flashcards, but it’s less polished.
Best if you want tutoring support
  • italki — not exactly an app course, but one of the best for flexible, affordable live lessons.
My quick picks
  • Most busy adults: Babbel + Duolingo
  • Commute-friendly: Pimsleur
  • Conversation-focused: Busuu + italki
  • Best budget option: Duolingo

If you tell me the language you want to learn and how much time you have per day, I can narrow it to the top 2.

retrieval Mentioned

For busy adults, I’d shortlist these:

  • Babbel — best for structured, practical lessons. Babbel says its lessons are typically 10–15 minutes and include speaking, listening, writing, grammar, and real-life dialogues. (support.babbel.com)
  • Pimsleur — best for commuting and hands-free practice. Pimsleur’s app centers on 30-minute audio lessons and includes AI voice coaching plus offline downloads. (pimsleur.com)
  • Busuu — best if you want speaking practice with feedback. Busuu’s Conversations feature offers real-time speaking practice and personalized feedback. (busuu.com)
  • Duolingo — best for building a daily habit. Duolingo is built around quick, gamelike lessons, and its Max tier adds roleplay and video-call conversation practice. (apps.apple.com)
  • Rosetta Stone — best for bite-sized, immersion-style lessons. Rosetta Stone’s app offers 5–10 minute lessons, speaking-focused practice, and pronunciation feedback. (rosettastone.com)
  • Memrise — best for real-world phrases and conversational confidence. Memrise emphasizes native-speaker content and AI chat practice via MemBot / AI buddies. (memrise.com)

My quick pick:

  • Most adults: Babbel
  • Most travel/commute-friendly: Pimsleur
  • Best free habit-builder: Duolingo

If you want, I can narrow this to your target language and budget.

What language learning apps are good for students? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Good language-learning apps for students:

  • Duolingo — best for daily practice, vocab, and habit-building
  • Babbel — better for grammar and practical conversation
  • Busuu — good because it includes feedback from native speakers
  • Memrise — strong for vocabulary and real-world phrases
  • Rosetta Stone — immersive, good for beginners who want structure
  • Drops — fun, visual vocab practice in short sessions
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — great for chatting with native speakers
  • Quizlet — excellent for making your own vocab flashcards

Best picks by need:

  • Beginner students: Duolingo, Babbel
  • Speaking practice: HelloTalk, Tandem, Busuu
  • Vocabulary: Memrise, Drops, Quizlet
  • Grammar focus: Babbel, Rosetta Stone

If you want, I can also suggest the best free apps or the best apps for Spanish/French/Japanese.

retrieval Mentioned

Yes—good student-friendly picks are:

  • Duolingo — best for daily practice and motivation. It’s free, gamified, and has a Duolingo for Schools setup for teachers/classrooms. (blog.duolingo.com)
  • Babbel — best for more structured lessons. Babbel says it has student pricing for U.S. college/university students and offers student-focused language study. (babbel.com)
  • Busuu — best if you want short lessons plus community practice. Busuu highlights short lessons, speech recognition, and offline learning. (busuu.com)
  • Memrise — best for real-world vocab and listening. Memrise emphasizes native-speaker video clips, spaced repetition, and AI speaking practice. (memrise.com)
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion and pronunciation. It offers contextual lessons, pronunciation feedback, and a schools product for students. (rosettastone.com)

Quick pick:

  • Middle/high school: Duolingo
  • College / serious study: Babbel or Rosetta Stone
  • Speaking practice: Busuu or Memrise (schools-cdn.duolingo.com)

If you want, I can narrow it down by age, language, and budget.

What are the best language learning apps for kids and teens? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps for kids and teens:

Best overall
  • Duolingo — Great for teens; gamified, easy to stick with, huge language selection. Best for building daily habits.
  • Duolingo ABC — Best for younger kids learning reading basics, especially English literacy.
Best for younger kids
  • Lingokids — Strong for ages roughly 2–8. Fun games, songs, and kid-friendly lessons.
  • Mondly Kids — Simple vocabulary practice with voice features and colorful visuals.
  • Muzzy BBC — Good for early learners; stories and cartoons in several languages.
Best for teens
  • Babbel — More structured and practical than Duolingo; best for teens who want real conversation skills.
  • Busuu — Good balance of lessons and practice, plus community feedback.
  • Rosetta Stone — Strong immersion-style learning; good for serious learners and pronunciation.
Best for speaking/pronunciation
  • Speakly — Helps build useful vocabulary and speaking confidence.
  • Pimsleur — Excellent for listening and speaking, especially for older kids/teens with patience for audio lessons.
Best for school support
  • Memrise — Great for vocabulary and phrases; good supplement for classroom learning.
  • Quizlet — Not a full language app, but great for flashcards and test prep.
My quick picks
  • Ages 4–8: Lingokids or Duolingo ABC
  • Ages 9–13: Duolingo or Mondly Kids
  • Teens: Babbel, Busuu, or Duolingo

If you want, I can also give you the best app by language (Spanish, French, Japanese, etc.) or by age group.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the best picks I’d recommend:

  • Best for little kids (3–8): Duolingo ABC — built for early reading/literacy, not full language study. (blog.duolingo.com)
  • Best playful app for young kids (2–8): Lingokids — especially good for English-learning through games, songs, and activities. (lingokids.com)
  • Best all-around for teens: Duolingo — gamified, easy to stick with, and good for daily practice. (duolingo.com)
  • Best for structured learning and pronunciation: Rosetta Stone — strong immersion method with speech feedback. (rosettastone.com)
  • Best for speaking confidence: Busuu — emphasizes real-world language skills and speaking practice. (busuu.com)
  • Best for families/school-style use: Mango Languages — works well for self-paced learning and has child profiles for homeschool/family use. (mangolanguages.com)

Quick note: I wouldn’t choose Babbel for younger kids, since its service is not intended for children under 16. (babbel.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to:

  1. best free apps,
  2. best for Spanish, or
  3. best for ages 5–7 vs 13–17.
What language learning apps are best for speaking practice? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best apps for speaking practice depend on whether you want real conversation, AI conversation, or pronunciation drills:

Best overall for speaking
  • italki — live 1:1 lessons with real tutors and community partners. Best if you want actual speaking time and feedback.
  • Preply — similar to italki; easy to book tutors and focus on conversation.
Best for AI speaking practice
  • Babbel — strong structured speaking exercises, good for beginners/intermediate learners.
  • Duolingo Max — useful for short speaking practice with AI roleplay, though limited depth.
  • Speak — very focused on speaking out loud with AI conversation practice; great for building confidence.
Best for pronunciation
  • ELSA Speak — excellent for pronunciation, accent, and feedback on specific sounds.
  • Rosetta Stone — good for repeating aloud and building speaking habits.
Best for casual conversation
  • HelloTalk — language exchange with real native speakers via voice notes and calls.
  • Tandem — similar to HelloTalk, good for speaking with partners worldwide.
My quick recommendations
  • Best for serious speaking improvement: italki
  • Best AI-only option: Speak
  • Best pronunciation coach: ELSA Speak
  • Best free-ish real conversation: HelloTalk or Tandem

If you tell me the language you’re learning and your level, I can narrow it down to the best 2–3 apps.

retrieval Mentioned

For speaking practice, my top picks are:

  • Tandem — best for real conversation with native speakers. It supports text, voice notes, audio calls, and video calls, so it’s strongest if you want actual back-and-forth speaking. (tandem.net)
  • Babbel — best for guided speaking practice. Babbel’s Speak beta and Guided Conversations give you structured, low-pressure conversation practice with speech recognition and feedback. (babbel.com)
  • Busuu — good for pronunciation practice with feedback. It has speech-recognition exercises in app, and its conversation features are designed to give learners more low-pressure speaking practice. (blog.busuu.com)
  • Duolingo Max — best if you want AI conversation practice. Its Video Call feature lets you practice spontaneous conversations with an AI partner, but it’s part of the paid Max tier. (investors.duolingo.com)
  • Pimsleur — best for starting to speak early. Its app is built around audio lessons and emphasizes speaking from day one. (pimsleur.com)

Quick pick:

  • Real people: Tandem
  • Structured practice: Babbel
  • Pronunciation drills: Busuu
  • AI speaking: Duolingo Max
  • Audio-first learning: Pimsleur (tandem.net)

If you want, I can also give you the best app by language or best free options.

What are the best language learning apps for vocabulary building? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best apps for vocabulary building:

  1. Anki — best for serious memorization
    • Spaced repetition, highly customizable, great for long-term retention.
    • Best if you want to build your own word decks.
  2. Memrise — best for practical vocabulary
    • Uses short videos and spaced repetition.
    • Good for everyday phrases and hearing words in real speech.
  3. Duolingo — best for beginners
    • Easy, gamified, good for starting a language and basic vocab.
    • Less effective for deep vocabulary growth on its own.
  4. Drops — best for visual learners
    • Fast, image-based vocabulary practice.
    • Great for quick daily sessions.
  5. Quizlet — best for custom word lists
    • Good for importing vocab from classes, books, or your own notes.
    • Flashcards, tests, and study modes.
  6. LingQ — best for learning vocab from real content
    • Reads/listens to articles, podcasts, and transcripts while saving new words.
    • Strong for intermediate and advanced learners.

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Anki
  • Best beginner-friendly: Memrise
  • Best fun/easy: Duolingo
  • Best from real reading/listening: LingQ

If you want, I can also rank the best apps by language, budget, or beginner vs advanced.

retrieval Not mentioned

For vocabulary building, my top picks are:

  1. Anki — best if you want maximum memorization power. It’s a flashcard app built around spaced repetition, so it schedules reviews right before you’re likely to forget. (apps.ankiweb.net)
  2. Drops — best for fast daily vocab drills. It focuses on short, game-like sessions and “thousands of new words” in categories, with 5-minute lessons. (languagedrops.com)
  3. Memrise — best for real-world words and phrases. It uses video clips from native/local speakers and immersive content across 34+ languages. (memrise.com)
  4. LingQ — best for learning vocabulary in context. It emphasizes reading/listening to real content and says this leads to “massive vocabulary growth.” (lingq.com)
  5. Quizlet — best if you want a simple, flexible study app for vocab sets and practice tests. (quizlet.com)
  6. Babbel — best for structured vocabulary with review. Its vocab workout uses spaced repetition and custom vocab collections. (support.babbel.com)

Quick recommendation:

  • Best overall for vocab retention: Anki
  • Best beginner-friendly app: Drops
  • Best for real-life usage: LingQ or Memrise

If you want, I can also rank these for beginners, free options, or best for Spanish/French/Japanese.

What language learning apps are good for grammar practice? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Good grammar-practice apps:

  • Duolingo — easy daily drills; best for beginners and light grammar review.
  • Babbel — stronger grammar explanations and structured lessons.
  • Busuu — good grammar exercises plus native-speaker feedback.
  • Memrise — useful for sentence patterns and practical usage.
  • Clozemaster — great for grammar through fill-in-the-blank sentence practice.
  • LingQ — better for advanced learners who want grammar from real reading/listening.
  • Rocket Languages — solid grammar-focused lessons, especially for self-study.

If you want the best pure grammar practice, I’d pick:

  1. Babbel
  2. Busuu
  3. Clozemaster

If you tell me the language you’re learning, I can recommend the best app for that specific language.

retrieval Mentioned

Good options for grammar practice:

  • Babbel — best if you want structured grammar help. It has a dedicated Grammar Guide with bite-sized explanations and examples, and a Practice tab in the app. (support.babbel.com)
  • Busuu — best if you want lots of drills. It offers Grammar exercises, plus personalized grammar review and focused practice by topic. (blog.busuu.com)
  • Lingoda — best if you want grammar plus teacher-led practice. Its lessons explicitly focus on grammar, along with vocabulary and communication, and the mobile app supports review/practice. (lingoda.com)

If you want, I can also rank these by best free options, best for beginners, or best for Spanish/French/German.

What are the best language learning apps for reading and listening? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best apps for reading + listening:

  • LingQ — best overall for learning through real content; strong for both reading and listening with transcripts.
  • Duolingo Max / Duolingo — best for beginners; easy, gamified listening and reading practice.
  • Readlang — best for reading with instant word translation; good for turning articles into study material.
  • Beelinguapp — great for side-by-side bilingual reading and audio.
  • Busuu — solid all-around app with reading/listening lessons and structured paths.
  • Babbel — best for practical, beginner-friendly lessons with good audio/dialogue practice.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for listening and speaking; less reading-focused, but very strong for audio comprehension.
  • Language Reactor — best for watching YouTube/Netflix with subtitles and translation; great for listening + reading in context.

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best free apps,
  2. the best apps by language (Spanish, Japanese, etc.), or
  3. the best app for intermediate/advanced learners.
retrieval Mentioned

For reading + listening, my top picks are:

  1. LingQ — best overall for immersive reading/listening. It’s built around real content like podcasts, books, and videos, with transcripts, translations, and audio together. (lingq.com)
  2. Lingopie — best if you want TV shows, movies, subtitles, and short stories. It uses interactive subtitles and also offers reading practice with transcripts/short stories. (lingopie.com)
  3. Babbel — best structured course app. Babbel includes reading and listening in its courses, plus podcasts with transcripts. (support.babbel.com)
  4. Busuu — best balanced all-rounder. Busuu explicitly covers reading and listening alongside writing and speaking, and it includes native-speaker corrections. (help.busuu.com)
  5. Duolingo — best free starter. Duolingo has Stories and DuoRadio for reading/listening practice, though it’s more gamified than text-heavy. (blog.duolingo.com)
  6. Pimsleur — best if listening is your priority. It’s audio-first and focused on listening and verbal repetition, so it’s weaker for reading than the others. (pimsleur.com)

Quick pick:

  • Serious reading/listening: LingQ
  • Best for shows/subtitles: Lingopie
  • Best polished course: Babbel
  • Best free option: Duolingo

If you want, I can narrow this to the best app for your target language or best free vs paid.

What language learning apps are best for pronunciation? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best apps for pronunciation practice:

  • Elsa Speak — best overall for English pronunciation; very strong AI feedback on individual sounds, stress, and intonation.
  • Rosetta Stone — good for building accent and listening through repeat-after-me speaking drills.
  • Babbel — solid for practical phrase pronunciation, especially for beginners.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking out loud and improving rhythm/fluency.
  • Speak — good for conversation-style pronunciation practice with AI.

If you want the most direct pronunciation correction, pick ELSA Speak. If you want more natural speaking practice, pick Pimsleur.

If you tell me the language you’re learning, I can narrow it to the best app for that language.

retrieval Mentioned

If pronunciation is your main goal, my top picks are:

  1. ELSA Speak — best if you’re learning English and want very granular pronunciation coaching and instant feedback. (elsaspeak.com)
  2. Rosetta Stone — strongest “repeat and refine” style practice, with TruAccent speech recognition and pronunciation feedback built into lessons. (rosettastone.com)
  3. Babbel — good for practical speaking practice; it has speech recognition plus newer AI conversation features, and the feature set is broader across major languages. (support.babbel.com)
  4. Busuu — solid if you want instant pronunciation feedback plus guided speaking practice; it supports several major languages and has newer AI feedback in speaking lessons. (blog.busuu.com)
  5. Duolingo — decent for lightweight pronunciation practice, especially in English, where it now has pronunciation-focused practice tabs and speaking features. (blog.duolingo.com)

Quick rule of thumb:

  • English pronunciation: ELSA Speak
  • All-around speech feedback: Rosetta Stone or Babbel
  • Budget-friendly / casual practice: Duolingo

If you want, I can rank these for your target language and budget.

What are the best language learning apps with spaced repetition? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Top picks for language learning with spaced repetition:

  • Anki — Best overall for pure SRS; highly customizable, especially for vocabulary decks.
  • Memrise — Best all-in-one app for vocab + audio + native-speaker clips, with strong review scheduling.
  • Busuu — Good structured courses plus built-in review system for vocab retention.
  • LingoDeer — Great for grammar-focused learners; includes smart review.
  • LingQ — Best for learning from reading/listening content with spaced review of saved words.
  • Mochi — Clean modern SRS app if you want flashcards without Anki’s complexity.

If you want the simplest recommendation:

  • Anki for serious study
  • Memrise for a polished beginner-friendly app
  • LingQ if you learn best from real content

If you tell me the language you’re learning and your level, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

retrieval Mentioned

Best picks for language learning + spaced repetition:

  1. Anki — best pure SRS. Most flexible, best if you want custom decks and maximum control. Anki’s manual describes active recall + spaced repetition, and it now supports FSRS as an alternative scheduler. (docs.ankiweb.net)
  2. Busuu — best all-in-one app with built-in spaced repetition. Busuu says it uses spaced repetition for vocabulary and grammar, plus “Smart Review” and vocabulary trainer features. (busuu.com)
  3. Memrise — best for vocabulary with real-world audio/video. Memrise says it uses “smart spaced repetition” and native-speaker video clips. (memrise.com)
  4. Pimsleur — best for audio-first speaking practice. Pimsleur says it uses spaced repetition across its features and in flashcard-style review. (pimsleur.com)

Quick recommendation:

  • Serious vocab memorization: Anki
  • Balanced course + SRS: Busuu
  • Fun vocab + native audio: Memrise
  • Speaking/listening first: Pimsleur

If you want, I can also rank the best free options or the best app for Spanish/Japanese/French.

What language learning apps are best for self-paced learning? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For self-paced learning, the best apps are:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and habit-building; very gamified.
  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and structured lessons.
  • Busuu — great mix of lessons + community feedback.
  • Rosetta Stone — good for immersive, intuitive learning.
  • Memrise — strong for vocabulary and real-life phrases.
  • Pimsleur — best for audio-first speaking practice.
  • Mondly — decent all-rounder with speech practice and quick lessons.
  • Drops — best for visual vocabulary learning in short sessions.
  • LingQ — best for reading/listening with real content.
  • Anki — best for custom flashcards and long-term memorization.

If you want the simplest recommendation:

  • Beginner: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Speaking-focused: Pimsleur + Busuu
  • Vocabulary/memorization: Anki + Memrise
  • Real content immersion: LingQ

If you tell me the language and your goal, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 apps.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want self-paced language learning, these are the best bets:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and habit-building. It’s free, bite-sized, game-like, and you can do quick practice on demand. (blog.duolingo.com)
  • Babbel — best for structured, practical conversation. Lessons are expert-made, typically 10–15 minutes, and built around real-life topics. (support.babbel.com)
  • Busuu — best if you want self-study plus feedback. It’s self-led, has short lessons, covers reading/writing/listening/speaking, and includes community corrections. (help.busuu.com)
  • Rosetta Stone — best for pronunciation and immersion-style learning. Its app uses short lessons, speech recognition, and offline downloads. (blog.rosettastone.com)
  • Memrise — best for real-world vocabulary and listening. It syncs across devices and uses local-speaker video clips. (memrise.com)
  • Pimsleur — best for audio-first learners who want to study anywhere at their own pace. Its app includes offline access, voice recognition, quizzes, and interactive exercises. (pimsleur.com)

Quick pick:

  • Free: Duolingo
  • Most structured: Babbel
  • Best feedback: Busuu
  • Best speaking/pronunciation: Rosetta Stone
  • Best audio lessons: Pimsleur

If you want, I can also narrow this down by budget, target language, or your learning style.

What are the best language learning apps for travel preparation? discovery 40/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For travel prep, the best language apps are usually:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit-building
  • Babbel — best for practical travel phrases and clear lessons
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening out loud
  • Memrise — best for useful phrases and native-speaker audio
  • Google Translate — best on the trip for menus, signs, and conversations
  • Drops — best for fast vocabulary building
  • Busuu — best if you want short lessons plus corrections from native speakers

My top picks for travel:

  1. Babbel if you want the most travel-useful structured lessons
  2. Pimsleur if you need to speak quickly and confidently
  3. Google Translate as a must-have companion app

If you tell me the language and your travel style, I can suggest the best 2-app combo.

retrieval Mentioned

Best picks for travel prep:

  • Pimsleur — best if you want to speak out loud fast. It’s built around audio lessons, offers offline access, and emphasizes real-world conversation and pronunciation. (pimsleur.com)
  • Babbel — best for practical travel phrases and short lessons. Babbel has offline mode, 10–15 minute lessons, and Guided Conversations for real-life dialogue practice. (support.babbel.com)
  • Rosetta Stone — best for pronunciation and phrasebook-style travel prep. Its app includes TruAccent speech feedback, Phrasebook for common travel situations, and offline mode. (rosettastone.com)
  • Busuu — best if you want short lessons plus native-speaker/community practice. Busuu supports offline lessons and has conversation-focused features. (busuu.com)
  • Duolingo — best if you want a free, gamified daily habit. It has speaking/listening practice in the Practice tab and AI conversation features for some subscribers, though it’s less travel-specific than Babbel or Pimsleur. (blog.duolingo.com)

My short ranking for travel:

  1. Pimsleur
  2. Babbel
  3. Rosetta Stone
  4. Busuu
  5. Duolingo (pimsleur.com)

If you want, I can also give you:

  • the best free app
  • the best app for a specific language
  • or a best combo for a 2-week trip.
What language learning apps are best for business language? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For business language, the best apps are usually the ones that teach workplace vocabulary, meetings, emails, and speaking practice—not just casual travel phrases.

Best overall
  • Babbel — Best for practical business communication. Good structured lessons, clear grammar, and useful workplace vocabulary.
  • Busuu — Great for business learners who want speaking and writing feedback from native speakers.
  • Mondly — Good for quick business phrases, role-play-style practice, and speech recognition.
Best for speaking
  • italki — Best if you want real business conversation with tutors. You can book lessons for meetings, presentations, interviews, or industry-specific language.
  • Preply — Similar to italki, very strong for personalized business coaching.
Best for vocabulary and flexibility
  • MosaLingua — Strong for business vocabulary and spaced repetition. Good if you want to memorize useful terms fast.
  • LingQ — Good for reading business articles and learning from real content.
Best for serious corporate training
  • Rosetta Stone — Solid foundational learning, though less business-specific.
  • LinkedIn Learning — Not a language app first, but useful for business communication skills in English and professional settings.
My quick picks
  • Best app overall: Babbel
  • Best for live practice: italki
  • Best for feedback: Busuu
  • Best for business vocabulary: MosaLingua

If you tell me which language and your goal—emails, meetings, presentations, or negotiations—I can narrow it to the best 2–3 apps.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want business language specifically, my short list is:

  1. Lingoda — best for live Business English and workplace scenarios like meetings, negotiation, feedback, and interviews. (lingoda.com)
  2. Babbel for Business — best for structured corporate training with business-focused content, reporting, and support. (support.babbel.com)
  3. Busuu for Business — best for team learning, with self-paced lessons, live lessons, and business-oriented language training. (business.busuu.com)
  4. Rosetta Stone Enterprise — good for enterprise teams and industry-specific vocabulary, especially if you want a more formal training platform. (rosettastone.com)

My pick:

  • For solo learning: Babbel
  • For speaking practice: Lingoda
  • For company/team training: Busuu or Babbel for Business

If you want, I can also narrow this down by language (English, Spanish, French, etc.) or by budget.

What are the best language learning apps for learning multiple languages? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are the best language-learning apps for learning multiple languages:

  1. Duolingo — best all-around for breadth
    • Huge language catalog, easy to use, good for daily practice.
    • Best if you want to dabble in several languages at once.
  2. Babbel — best for practical conversation
    • Strong lessons for real-world speaking and grammar.
    • Not as many languages as Duolingo, but higher quality for major ones.
  3. Busuu — best for structured learning + feedback
    • Good course design, and native-speaker corrections are a big plus.
    • Great for learners who want more than gamified drills.
  4. Memrise — best for vocabulary and listening
    • Excellent for word retention and native-speaker video clips.
    • Good companion app if you’re learning multiple languages.
  5. Drops — best for quick vocab sessions
    • Very visual and fast, useful for building basic vocabulary in several languages.
    • Great for short daily practice.
  6. LingQ — best for immersion learners
    • Lets you learn through reading and listening to real content.
    • Strong if you’re serious about multiple languages long-term.

Best pick if you want one app for several languages: Duolingo Best combo for serious multi-language learning: Busuu + Memrise or Babbel + LingQ

If you want, I can also give you the best apps by language (e.g., Spanish, Japanese, Korean, French).

retrieval Mentioned

If you want one app for learning multiple languages, my short list is:

  • Duolingo — best all-around pick for breadth + free access. It now offers 100+ courses across 41 distinct languages, and all courses are free to use. (blog.duolingo.com)
  • Mondly — best if you want the widest language catalog. It says it supports 41 languages and 1,000+ language combinations. (mondly.com)
  • Busuu — best for a more structured, CEFR-based path. It covers 14 languages, and you can study as many of them as you like. (help.busuu.com)
  • Babbel — best for practical, guided study if your target languages are among its set. Babbel offers 13 languages for English speakers. (support.babbel.com)
  • Memrise — best for real-world phrases and listening. It offers 34+ languages in the app, with official courses for 23 languages. (memrise.com)

My pick:

  • Most languages overall: Mondly or Duolingo.
  • Best balance of variety + free: Duolingo.
  • Best for serious progress: Busuu or Babbel.

If you want, I can also rank them for free features, speaking practice, or best app for learning 2+ languages at the same time.

What language learning apps are best for daily practice? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For daily practice, the best language apps are:

  • Duolingo — best for habit-building and quick daily streaks
  • Babbel — best for practical, structured lessons
  • Busuu — great for grammar plus native-speaker feedback
  • Memrise — strong for vocab and real-life audio/video
  • LingQ — best if you want lots of reading/listening immersion
  • Pimsleur — excellent for daily speaking and pronunciation practice

My quick picks:

  • Beginner: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Serious learner: Busuu + LingQ
  • Speaking-focused: Pimsleur

If you want, I can also rank the best free apps or the best app for your target language.

retrieval Mentioned

For daily practice, the best apps are usually:

  • Duolingo — best for building a streak and making practice feel effortless. It’s very habit-friendly and built around daily lessons and streaks. (blog.duolingo.com)
  • Babbel — best for short, structured sessions. Its lessons are typically 10–15 minutes, and it has practice features like audio recap and guided conversations. (support.babbel.com)
  • Busuu — best if you want daily practice plus feedback. It includes speaking practice, community/native-speaker corrections, and AI conversation practice. (busuu.com)
  • Memrise — best for real-world phrases and speaking practice. It uses native-speaker videos, spaced repetition, and an AI coach for speaking. (memrise.com)
  • Pimsleur — best for audio-only daily practice. Its method is built around 30 minutes a day, anywhere, anytime. (pimsleur.com)

If you want the simplest pick: Duolingo for consistency, Babbel for serious short lessons, and Busuu if you want speaking feedback. (blog.duolingo.com)

If you want, I can also recommend the best app by language or by your goal (speaking, travel, or beginner).

What are the best language learning apps with offline lessons? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are the best language-learning apps with offline lessons:

  1. Babbel
    • Best all-around for structured lessons
    • Offline: Yes, download lessons in the app
    • Good for practical speaking, grammar, and travel phrases
  2. Rosetta Stone
    • Best for immersion-style learning
    • Offline: Yes, mobile lessons can be downloaded
    • Strong for pronunciation and building intuition
  3. Pimsleur
    • Best for audio-based learning
    • Offline: Yes, very good offline support for audio lessons
    • Great for commuting and speaking practice
  4. Busuu
    • Best for balanced learning + community feedback
    • Offline: Yes, premium offline mode
    • Includes grammar, vocab, and native-speaker corrections
  5. Mondly
    • Best for quick, easy lessons
    • Offline: Yes, offline packs available
    • Good for beginners and travel language basics
  6. Memrise
    • Best for vocabulary and real-world phrases
    • Offline: Yes, with premium
    • Uses video clips and spaced repetition

Best picks by need:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best for audio/offline commuting: Pimsleur
  • Best immersion: Rosetta Stone
  • Best budget-friendly option: Duolingo (offline is limited and less robust than the others)

If you want, I can also rank them by price, best for beginners, or best for a specific language.

retrieval Mentioned

If offline lessons are the priority, my top picks are:

  1. Babbel — strong all-around app, and its official app/support pages say you can download lessons and use offline mode. (apps.apple.com)
  2. Rosetta Stone — very solid for offline study; official pages say you can download lessons and learn online or off. (apps.apple.com)
  3. Busuu — good structured lessons, with offline mode via downloaded lessons in iOS/Android apps. (help.busuu.com)
  4. Pimsleur — best if you want audio-first speaking practice; official pages say lessons can be used/downloaded offline. (pimsleur.com)

Worth skipping for offline: Memrise’s newer app relies on the cloud, so it requires internet. (memrise.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best speaking/audio: Pimsleur
  • Best “classic” immersive method: Rosetta Stone

If you want, I can also narrow these down by price, best for beginners, or best for travel/offline flights.

What language learning apps are best for immersive learning? discovery
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For immersive language learning, the best apps are usually:

  • Rosetta Stone — best for pure immersion; it teaches with minimal translation.
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening; very audio-based and feels immersive.
  • LingQ — best for immersion through real content like articles, podcasts, and videos.
  • Busuu — good for structured learning plus native-speaker feedback.
  • Babbel — strong for practical conversation, though less immersive than Rosetta Stone/LingQ.
  • Memrise — good for listening to native speakers and everyday phrases.
  • Duolingo — best as a lightweight supplement, not true immersion.

If you want the most immersive experience, I’d pick:

  1. Rosetta Stone
  2. Pimsleur
  3. LingQ

If you want, I can also recommend the best app by language (Spanish, French, Japanese, etc.).

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want immersive language learning, my top picks are:

  • Rosetta Stone — best for “all-target-language” immersion and pronunciation practice from the start, using its Dynamic Immersion method and TruAccent speech recognition. (resources.rosettastone.com)
  • LingQ — best for immersion through real content like podcasts, books, articles, TV, and imported media. Great if you want lots of listening/reading input. (lingq.com)
  • Memrise — best for hearing native speakers, real-world accents, and quick speaking practice with an AI coach. (memrise.com)
  • Duolingo Max — best for gamified immersion, with AI Roleplay and Video Call conversation practice. (blog.duolingo.com)
  • Babbel — best for structured speaking practice, with guided conversations and speech-focused features. (support.babbel.com)
  • Pimsleur — best for audio-first immersion and speaking/listening habit-building, with voice-coach feedback and “speak from the first lesson” style learning. (pimsleur.com)

Quick pick:

  • Most immersive overall: Rosetta Stone
  • Best for real-world input: LingQ
  • Best for speaking confidence: Pimsleur or Babbel
  • Best all-around gamified option: Duolingo Max

If you want, I can also rank these by beginner-friendly, best for Spanish/French/Japanese, or best value.

What are the best language learning apps for quick progress? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For quick progress, the best apps are usually:

  1. Pimsleur — best for speaking fast
    • Great for pronunciation, listening, and everyday conversation.
    • Best if you want to talk sooner, not just memorize words.
  2. Babbel — best all-around for practical progress
    • Strong structured lessons and useful grammar.
    • Better than many apps for actually building usable language skills.
  3. Busuu — best for feedback
    • Has community corrections from native speakers.
    • Good if you want to improve writing and sentence accuracy quickly.
  4. Duolingo — best for habit-building
    • Easy to stick with, but slower for real speaking ability.
    • Good as a supplement, not the main tool.
  5. LingQ — best for reading/listening immersion
    • Great once you know the basics and want fast exposure to real content.
My quick recommendation
  • Want to speak quickly?Pimsleur
  • Want the best overall app?Babbel
  • Want corrections from natives?Busuu
  • Want a free daily habit?Duolingo

If you tell me which language you’re learning, I can rank the best apps specifically for that language.

retrieval Mentioned

For quick progress, I’d rank them like this:

  1. Pimsleur — best for getting you speaking fast. It’s audio-first, focuses on listening and speaking, and pushes you into conversation from lesson one. (pimsleur.com)
  2. Babbel — best all-around for fast, practical progress. It uses short structured lessons, grammar support, and conversation practice, with AI speech practice in Babbel Speak. (babbel.com)
  3. Busuu — good if you want a balance of structure and feedback. It offers short lessons, community corrections, and in Premium Plus, AI conversations and pronunciation feedback. (help.busuu.com)
  4. Rosetta Stone — strong for pronunciation and immersion, thanks to TruAccent speech recognition and dynamic immersion lessons. (rosettastone.com)
  5. Duolingo — best for consistency and habit-building, but usually not the fastest path to real speaking ability. (en.duolingo.com)

My pick:

  • Fastest speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best overall speed + structure: Babbel
  • Best budget/free habit app: Duolingo

If you want, I can also give you the best app for your target language (Spanish, French, Japanese, etc.).

What are the best alternatives to the most popular language learning app? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you mean Duolingo, the best alternatives are:

  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and grammar
  • Busuu — strong structured courses plus native speaker feedback
  • Rosetta Stone — good for immersive, beginner-friendly learning
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening
  • Memrise — great for vocabulary and real-world video clips
  • LingQ — best for reading/listening with lots of content
  • Drops — fun, visual vocab learning
  • Clozemaster — best for drilling vocabulary in context

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best free-ish option: Busuu / Memrise
  • Best for immersion: Rosetta Stone

If you want, I can also rank them by price, best for Spanish/French/Japanese, or best free apps.

retrieval Mentioned

If you mean Duolingo, the best alternatives are:

  • Babbel — best all-around replacement if you want more structure, grammar, and real conversation practice. (techradar.com)
  • Rosetta Stone — best for pronunciation and immersion-style learning, with strong speech feedback and live lessons. (blog.rosettastone.com)
  • Busuu — best if you want community feedback plus short, structured lessons and AI speaking practice. (help.busuu.com)
  • Pimsleur — best for audio-first learning and getting comfortable speaking quickly. (pimsleur.com)
  • Memrise — best for learning natural, everyday speech with native-speaker videos and AI practice. (memrise.com)
  • Mango Languages — best if you want practical phrases and a big language catalog. (info.mangolanguages.com)

Quick pick:

  • Want the closest “serious” upgrade from DuolingoBabbel. (techradar.com)
  • Want speaking confidencePimsleur or Rosetta Stone. (pimsleur.com)
  • Want free/community-heavy practiceBusuu or Memrise. (help.busuu.com)

If you want, I can rank these by best free option, best for Spanish, or best for beginners.

How do the top language learning apps compare for beginners? comparison 50/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For beginners, the best apps usually depend on whether you want fun/low-friction practice or structured learning.

Quick comparison
  • DuolingoBest for getting started
    • Very beginner-friendly, gamified, easy to stick with
    • Good for building a habit and learning basic vocab
    • Weak on grammar depth and real speaking
  • BabbelBest all-around for beginners
    • More structured lessons than Duolingo
    • Strong for practical phrases, grammar, and real-world use
    • Better if you want to actually progress, not just play
  • Rosetta StoneBest immersion-style approach
    • Teaches with pictures and context, little translation
    • Good for pronunciation and intuition
    • Can feel slow or repetitive for some beginners
  • BusuuBest for feedback
    • Beginner courses are solid and organized
    • Community corrections from native speakers are a big plus
    • Good balance of structure and practice
  • MemriseBest for vocab and listening
    • Strong for everyday phrases and native-speaker video clips
    • Good supplement, less complete as a main course
    • Better for reinforcing than for full instruction
  • PimsleurBest for speaking early
    • Audio-first, excellent for pronunciation and conversation basics
    • Great if you want to learn while driving/walking
    • Not as strong for reading/writing
  • LingoDeerBest for Asian languages
    • Especially good for Japanese, Korean, and Chinese
    • Clear grammar explanations and structured lessons
    • Great for beginners in those languages
Best picks by goal
  • Easiest to stick with: Duolingo
  • Best serious beginner course: Babbel
  • Best speaking focus: Pimsleur
  • Best feedback: Busuu
  • Best for Japanese/Korean/Chinese: LingoDeer
Simple recommendation

If you want one app:

  • Babbel for most beginners
  • Duolingo if you want free, casual learning
  • Pimsleur if speaking is your priority

If you want, I can also compare them for a specific language like Spanish, French, Japanese, or German.

retrieval Mentioned

For beginners, the main tradeoff is fun/free vs. structure vs. speaking practice:

| App | Best for | Beginner vibe | |---|---|---| | Duolingo | Free, gamified start | Easiest to stick with; bite-sized lessons, free courses, and practice tools. (blog.duolingo.com) | | Babbel | Structured learning | Best if you want guided beginner lessons, grammar, and practical phrases. (support.babbel.com) | | Busuu | Feedback + guided basics | Good for beginners who want short lessons plus community feedback; premium adds AI conversations and pronunciation help. (help.busuu.com) | | Rosetta Stone | Immersion + pronunciation | Strong if you want to learn by context and speaking from lesson 1. (rosettastone.com) | | Pimsleur | Speaking/listening | Best for audio-first learners who want to speak early and learn on the go. (pimsleur.com) | | Mango Languages | Practical conversation + lots of languages | Good if you want a lot of language options and some library/free-access potential. (mangolanguages.com) |

Quick recommendation:

If you want, I can also rank these by price, best for Spanish/French/Japanese, or best free option only.

What are the best alternatives to a gamified language app? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you want something better than a gamified app, the best alternatives usually fall into these buckets:

1) Structured courses
  • Babbel — best for practical, guided lessons with real grammar and dialogue.
  • Busuu — good mix of lessons plus native-speaker feedback.
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening, especially if you want to learn on the go.
2) Immersion-based learning
  • LingQ — great for reading/listening with real content.
  • FluentU — learns through videos, captions, and vocab.
  • YouTube + graded content — surprisingly effective if you follow channels in your target language.
3) Conversation practice
  • italki — best for 1:1 tutors.
  • Preply — similar, often a bit more budget-friendly.
  • Tandem / HelloTalk — good for language exchange with native speakers.
4) Traditional resources
  • Assimil — excellent for self-study.
  • Teach Yourself / Colloquial — solid book-based courses.
  • Anki — best for vocabulary memorization.
Best overall picks
  • For speaking: Pimsleur + italki
  • For a full self-study course: Babbel or Busuu
  • For immersion: LingQ
  • For vocab: Anki

If you tell me the language and your goal (speaking, reading, travel, exams), I can recommend the best combo.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want alternatives to a gamified app, these are the best picks:

  • Babbel — best for structured, practical lessons and speaking practice. It focuses on real-life conversation, short lessons, and has AI speech features plus live classes. (babbel.com)
  • Busuu — best for a balanced self-study app with community corrections. It covers reading, writing, listening, and speaking, with native-speaker feedback and short lessons. (help.busuu.com)
  • Pimsleur — best if you learn by listening and want hands-free, audio-first practice. It’s built around audio lessons and emphasizes conversation skills and offline use. (pimsleur-english.com)
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation. Its core method is Dynamic Immersion, with speech recognition, offline units, and live lessons. (blog.rosettastone.com)
  • LingQ — best if you prefer reading/listening to real content like podcasts, books, and videos instead of drills. (lingq.com)

If you want real speaking practice with a human, Preply is a strong choice because it connects you with 1-on-1 tutors who tailor lessons to your goals. (preply.com)

Quick pick:

  • Want the closest “serious Duolingo replacement”? Babbel
  • Want speaking + community correction? Busuu
  • Want audio-only learning? Pimsleur
  • Want immersion? Rosetta Stone
  • Want authentic content? LingQ
  • Want a tutor? Preply (babbel.com)

If you tell me your target language and goal (travel, fluency, grammar, speaking), I can narrow it to the top 2.

Which language learning apps are better than a flashcard-based app? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you want something better than a pure flashcard app, these are stronger picks:

  • Duolingo — best for daily habit-building, beginner grammar, and short lessons
  • Babbel — better for practical conversation and structured courses
  • Busuu — good mix of lessons plus native-speaker feedback
  • Rosetta Stone — strong immersion-style learning, especially for pronunciation
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and listening, very little flashcard feel
  • LingQ — great for reading/listening with real content
  • Clozemaster — much better than flashcards for vocabulary in context
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best if you want real conversations with native speakers

Best overall replacements for flashcards:

  • Babbel for structured learning
  • Pimsleur for speaking
  • LingQ for immersion
  • HelloTalk for actual conversation

If you tell me which language and your goal (speaking, reading, travel, exams), I can recommend the best one.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want more than flashcards, these are usually better:

  • Busuu — better if you want a more complete mix of speaking, listening, reading, and writing, plus feedback and native-speaker/community practice. (busuu.com)
  • Babbel — better for structured lessons with grammar and speaking practice, not just word memorization. (babbel.com)
  • Pimsleur — better if your goal is actually speaking out loud and improving listening, with audio-first lessons. (babbel.com)
  • Rosetta Stone — better if you want pronunciation work and speech recognition instead of flashcard-style review. (rosettastone.com)
  • Duolingo — better if you want a gamified, interactive app with speaking/conversation features, though it’s still more exercise-based than tutor-like. (en.duolingo.com)

My short take:

  • For speaking: Pimsleur or Busuu.
  • For all-around learning: Babbel or Busuu.
  • For pronunciation: Rosetta Stone.

If you want, I can rank these for your goal: travel, conversation, grammar, or beginner vocabulary.

What are the best alternatives to a subscription language learning app? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best alternatives to a subscription language app:

  • Duolingo Max-free? (not subscription alternative actually). Better:
  • Mango Languages — often free through libraries; very solid for practical conversation.
  • Pimsleur — audio-first, great for speaking and pronunciation; buy by level, not necessarily a monthly app.
  • Assimil — classic self-study books/audio; excellent for guided learning.
  • Teach Yourself / Hugo / Colloquial books — cheap, structured, good for independent study.
  • Language Transfer — free audio courses, especially good for Spanish, French, Italian, German, etc.
  • Coffee Break Languages — free podcasts with paid extras; good for commute learning.
  • italki or Preply — pay per lesson for live tutors instead of a subscription.
  • Anki — free flashcard app for vocabulary; very effective if you build your own deck.
  • LingQ — more reading/listening based; not ideal if you want zero subscription, but better for immersion than gamified apps.
  • YouTube + podcasts + graded readers — the cheapest route; pair with a textbook like Easy French Step-by-Step or Practice Makes Perfect.

If you want the best non-subscription setup, I’d do:

  1. Assimil or Teach Yourself for structure
  2. Anki for vocab
  3. italki lessons 1–2x/week
  4. YouTube/podcasts for immersion

If you tell me the language and your goal (speaking, travel, school, fluency), I can recommend the best exact combo.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want to avoid a monthly subscription, the best alternatives are:

  • Anki — best for vocab and spaced repetition; it’s free/open source with free AnkiWeb sync. (apps.ankiweb.net)
  • Pimsleur Lifetime — best if you want a one-time purchase and structured audio lessons instead of ongoing billing. (pimsleur.com)
  • Language exchange — best for speaking practice; The Mixxer and Language Share are free language-exchange platforms. (language-exchanges.org)
  • Mango Languages through your library — best if your local library offers it, since many library systems provide free access with a library card. (mentorpl.org)

If you want the simplest non-subscription setup, I’d do: Anki + YouTube/podcasts + language exchange + a textbook.

If you want, I can narrow this down by goal: speaking, vocab, grammar, or travel basics.

Which language learning apps are best for speaking compared with app-based courses? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For speaking, the best apps are usually conversation-first rather than “course-first.”

Best for speaking
  • italki — best overall for real speaking practice with tutors
  • Preply — similar to italki, easy to find affordable tutors
  • HelloTalk — best for language exchange with native speakers
  • Tandem — good for casual speaking/chat practice
  • Pimsleur — best structured app for actually speaking out loud
Better than app-based courses for speaking?

Usually yes, if your goal is to talk rather than just learn vocabulary/grammar. Apps like Duolingo, Babbel, Rosetta Stone, Busuu, Memrise are good for basics, but they’re weaker for real conversation.

Best combo
  • Pimsleur for building speaking habits
  • italki or Preply for live practice
  • HelloTalk for extra informal speaking/chatting
Quick ranking for speaking
  1. italki
  2. Preply
  3. Pimsleur
  4. HelloTalk
  5. Tandem

If you want, I can also give the best app for speaking by language (Spanish, French, Japanese, etc.).

retrieval Mentioned

If your main goal is speaking, the best apps are the ones that give you real conversation practice, not just lesson completion.

Best for speaking:

  • Busuu — strongest if you want guided speaking practice + instant feedback. Its new Busuu Conversations feature is built for real-time speaking practice and personalized feedback. (blog.busuu.com)
  • Duolingo Max — best if you want low-pressure AI speaking practice. Duolingo’s Video Call feature is designed to prepare learners for real-world conversations and is available in several languages for Max subscribers. (investors.duolingo.com)
  • Rosetta Stone — best for pronunciation and accent training. Its TruAccent speech recognition is built into lessons and gives immediate feedback. (rosettastone.com)
  • Babbel — good if you want a more course-like app with speaking built in. Babbel includes speech recognition in lessons, and Babbel Speak adds AI conversation practice. (support.babbel.com)

Compared with app-based courses:

  • Better for speaking: Busuu, Duolingo Max, Babbel Speak, Rosetta Stone.
  • Better for structured learning overall: Babbel, Duolingo, Rosetta Stone.
  • Best “just start talking” option: Busuu Conversations or Duolingo Video Call. (blog.busuu.com)

Quick pick:

  • Most speaking-focused: Busuu
  • Best gamified speaking practice: Duolingo Max
  • Best pronunciation drill: Rosetta Stone
  • Best balanced course + speaking: Babbel

If you want, I can also rank them by price, best for beginners, or best for Spanish/French/Japanese.

What are the best alternatives to a video-less language learning app? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you want better alternatives to a video-less language learning app, here are strong options:

  • Duolingo — best for gamified daily practice and beginner vocab/grammar.
  • Babbel — better for structured lessons and practical conversation.
  • Busuu — good mix of lessons plus native-speaker feedback.
  • Rosetta Stone — immersive, no-translation style; solid for pronunciation.
  • Memrise — great for real-world phrases and listening practice.
  • Pimsleur — best if you want mostly audio and speaking drills.
  • FluentU — best if you specifically want video-based learning.
  • LingQ — excellent for reading/listening with real content.

If you want the closest “upgrade” depends on your goal:

  • Speaking: Pimsleur or Busuu
  • Grammar + structure: Babbel
  • Fun daily practice: Duolingo
  • Video learning: FluentU
  • Real content immersion: LingQ

If you tell me the language and your level, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want a video-free language app, my top picks are:

  1. Babbel — best all-around for structured lessons, grammar, reading, writing, listening, and speaking practice. (babbel.com)
  2. Pimsleur — best if you want audio-first learning and mostly want to speak/listen while commuting or multitasking. (babbel.com)
  3. Rosetta Stone — best for immersive learning with images, text, and speech recognition, not video-centric lessons. (rosettastone.com)
  4. Busuu — best for short lessons plus grammar, speaking, writing, and native-speaker feedback. (busuu-english.com)
  5. Duolingo — best free option if you want gamified practice with reading, listening, speaking, and writing, plus Stories. (blog.duolingo.com)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can narrow this down by budget, best for speaking, or best for Spanish/French/Japanese.

How do language learning apps compare with online tutors? comparison
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Language apps and online tutors serve different needs:

Language apps (Duolingo, Babbel, Busuu, Rosetta Stone)

Best for: beginners, routine practice, vocabulary, grammar basics Pros:

  • Cheap or free
  • Easy to use anytime
  • Good for daily habit-building
  • Great for drilling vocab and simple sentence patterns

Cons:

  • Limited speaking practice
  • Weak on real conversation
  • Feedback is often generic
  • Can feel “learny” but not fluent-making
Online tutors (italki, Preply, Cambly)

Best for: speaking, pronunciation, confidence, personalized feedback Pros:

  • Real conversation practice
  • Immediate correction
  • Lessons tailored to your goals
  • Better for breaking through plateaus

Cons:

  • More expensive
  • Requires scheduling
  • Quality varies by tutor
Which is better?
  • Apps are better for starting out and building consistency.
  • Tutors are better for speaking fluency and faster progress.
  • Best combo: use Duolingo/Babbel/Busuu daily, and add italki or Preply 1–2 times a week.

If you tell me the language and your budget, I can recommend the best option.

retrieval Not mentioned

Short version:

  • Language apps are better for cheap, flexible, daily practice.
  • Online tutors are better for speaking, feedback, and faster progress.

Language learning apps

  • Pros: low cost, convenient, good for vocab/grammar, easy habit-building.
  • Cons: weak for real conversation, limited personalized correction, can feel repetitive.

Online tutors

  • Pros: live speaking practice, instant feedback, personalized lessons, better for pronunciation and confidence.
  • Cons: more expensive, harder to schedule, quality varies by tutor.

Best use cases

  • Apps: beginners, casual learners, review between lessons.
  • Tutors: intermediate+ learners, speaking practice, exam prep, or if you need structure.

Best approach for most people: Use an app daily + a tutor 1–2 times a week. That usually gives the best mix of consistency and real-world practice.

If you want, I can also compare specific apps vs tutoring platforms.

What are the best alternatives to an app that focuses on vocabulary drills? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

If you want alternatives to a vocabulary-drill app, these are strong options:

  • Anki — best for custom flashcards and spaced repetition; very effective if you want control.
  • Quizlet — easiest for ready-made vocab sets and casual practice.
  • Memrise — great for learning words in context with audio and short lessons.
  • LingQ — best if you want to build vocabulary through reading and listening, not drills.
  • Drops — very visual, quick daily vocab practice, less test-like.
  • Clozemaster — best for learning words through sentence context and fill-in-the-blank practice.
  • Duolingo — good if you want vocab as part of a broader language course.

If you tell me the language and whether you want free, gamified, or serious study, I can narrow it down to the best 2–3.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you want better alternatives to a vocab-drill app, I’d look at:

  • Anki — best if you want pure retention and total control over your cards/review schedule. (apps.ankiweb.net)
  • Quizlet — best if you want a more polished, flexible study app with flashcards, practice tests, and multiple study modes. (quizlet.com)
  • Memrise — best if you want vocab plus real-world context, with native-speaker video clips and speaking practice instead of just drills. (memrise.com)
  • Duolingo — best if you want a gamified language app that goes beyond vocab into bite-sized lessons and broader language practice. (en.duolingo.com)

Quick pick:

  • For memorizing words fast: Anki
  • For school/study sets: Quizlet
  • For learning words in context: Memrise
  • For a fun all-in-one language app: Duolingo (apps.ankiweb.net)

If you want, I can also give you the best free options only or the best iPhone/Android options.

Which language learning apps are best for real conversation compared with classroom courses? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For real conversation, the best apps are usually the ones that get you speaking with native speakers or tutors, not just drilling vocabulary.

Best for real conversation
  • italki — Best overall for live 1:1 lessons with native-speaking tutors. Good for practical speaking fast.
  • Preply — Similar to italki; easy to find conversation-focused tutors.
  • Tandem — Best for language exchange with real people. Great if you want casual chats.
  • HelloTalk — Also strong for language exchange, with corrections and voice messages.
  • Cambly — Best for instant English conversation practice, especially if you want no scheduling.
Best apps for building speaking confidence first
  • Busuu — Better structured than most apps, with some speaking exercises and community feedback.
  • Babbel — Good for usable phrases and dialogue practice, but not enough for real conversation alone.
  • Duolingo — Good for habit-building, but weak for actual conversation fluency.
Compared with classroom courses

Apps win if you want:

  • more speaking time
  • flexibility
  • cheaper practice
  • faster real-world exposure

Classroom courses win if you want:

  • a structured curriculum
  • teacher feedback
  • accountability
  • exam prep
Best combo

If your goal is real conversation, I’d recommend:

  1. italki or Preply for guided speaking
  2. Tandem or HelloTalk for casual practice
  3. Babbel or Busuu for structure between lessons

If you tell me which language you’re learning and your budget, I can suggest the best app stack.

retrieval Mentioned

For real conversation, the best apps are usually:

  1. Preply — best if you want live 1-on-1 speaking with a tutor and instant feedback. (preply.com)
  2. Tandem — best for language exchange with real people via text, voice notes, voice calls, and video calls. (tandem.net)
  3. HelloTalk — similar to Tandem, strong for casual conversation with native speakers through text, voice, video, and voicerooms. (hellotalk.com)
  4. Busuu — best if you want a course plus speaking practice, including AI conversation scenarios and pronunciation practice. (help.busuu.com)
  5. Babbel — good for guided speaking practice with scripted/AI scenarios, but it’s more structured than spontaneous conversation. (support.babbel.com)

Compared with classroom courses:

  • Apps are usually better for more speaking reps, lower cost, and flexible scheduling.
  • Classroom courses are usually better for structure, accountability, and a teacher correcting you live.
  • If your main goal is “I want to talk to real people confidently,” Preply + Tandem/HelloTalk is a strong combo. (preply.com)

My short ranking for conversation:

  • Best overall: Preply
  • Best free-ish practice with humans: Tandem / HelloTalk
  • Best app-only structure: Busuu
  • Best scripted confidence builder: Babbel (preply.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to best for beginners, best cheap option, or best for Spanish/French/Japanese.

How can I stay consistent with language learning every day? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Make it too easy to skip and too small to fail.

  • Set a daily minimum: 5–10 minutes, no exceptions.
  • Tie it to a habit: right after coffee, commute, or brushing teeth.
  • Use one main app:
    • Duolingo for streaks and low-friction practice
    • Anki for spaced repetition vocab
    • Babbel or Busuu for more structured lessons
  • Keep a “ready-to-go” routine: open the app, do 1 lesson, review 10 cards, done.
  • Track the streak visibly: calendar, habit app, or notes app.
  • Make it fun: one podcast, YouTube channel, or show in the target language every day.
  • Don’t aim for perfect: even 2 minutes counts—protect the streak.

Best simple formula: 5 minutes daily + one app + one fixed time.

retrieval Not mentioned

Make it tiny, specific, and automatic:

  • Set a minimum: e.g. 5 minutes a day, no excuses.
  • Attach it to a habit: after coffee, before bed, during commute.
  • Use one daily routine: flashcards + 1 short listening clip + 3 sentences speaking.
  • Lower the bar on bad days: “touch the language” counts.
  • Track streaks visibly: calendar, habit app, or notes.
  • Make it enjoyable: one show, one podcast, one app, one topic.
  • Review often, not perfectly: consistency beats intensity.
  • Prepare in advance: keep the app/book ready so starting is frictionless.

A good rule: never miss twice.

If you want, I can build you a simple 10-minute daily language routine.

How do I build vocabulary faster in a new language? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Fastest way: learn words in context, review with spaced repetition, and use them immediately.

What works best
  1. Start with high-frequency words
    • Learn the 1,000–2,000 most common words first.
    • Use a frequency list or app like Anki or Memrise.
  2. Use spaced repetition
    • Best tool: Anki
    • Make cards with:
      • word
      • simple example sentence
      • audio if possible
    • Don’t just memorize single words.
  3. Learn phrases, not isolated words
    • Example: instead of “take,” learn “take a shower,” “take a break,” “take a bus.”
    • Apps good for this: LingQ, Pimsleur, Babbel
  4. Read and listen daily
    • Use graded readers and short content you understand.
    • Good products:
      • LingQ for reading/listening
      • Readlang for instant word lookup
      • StoryLearning graded books
  5. Use the words actively
    • Write 5–10 sentences per day.
    • Speak with a tutor or exchange partner.
    • Good platforms: italki, Preply, HelloTalk
  6. Focus on repetition in real contexts
    • See the same word in 5–10 different sentences.
    • This builds memory much faster than flashcards alone.
Simple daily routine
  • 10 min Anki review
  • 20 min reading/listening
  • 10 min sentence writing or speaking
  • 5 new words/phrases max per day
Avoid
  • Memorizing huge word lists
  • Learning rare words too early
  • Only using translation apps without review

If you want, I can give you a 7-day vocabulary plan for your target language.

retrieval Not mentioned

Fastest way: use words repeatedly in context, not just memorize lists.

A good system:

  1. Learn the most common words first

Start with the top 1,000–2,000 words.

  1. Use spaced repetition

Review with Anki or flashcards daily.

  1. Learn words in sentences

“I want coffee” beats “coffee = café.”

  1. Read and listen every day

Even 15–30 minutes helps a lot.

  1. Make your own examples

Writing 1–3 sentences with each new word locks it in.

  1. Speak as early as possible

Using a word out loud helps memory.

  1. Focus on high-utility words

Learn words for food, time, travel, opinions, feelings, and daily actions first.

  1. Avoid passive studying only

Flashcards + reading + speaking is much better than just rereading lists.

If you want, I can give you a 7-day vocabulary plan for any language.

How can I improve my pronunciation when learning a language? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A good way to improve pronunciation is to train listening + imitation + feedback.

What to do:

  1. Listen to native speech daily

Use short clips, not long podcasts. Focus on rhythm, stress, and intonation.

  1. Shadow native speakers

Play a sentence and repeat it immediately, trying to match the sound, speed, and melody.

  1. Record yourself

Compare your voice to the original. This is one of the fastest ways to notice mistakes.

  1. Learn mouth positions

Pay attention to tongue, lips, and jaw. Many sounds improve just by copying articulation.

  1. Practice minimal pairs

Example: ship/sheep, light/right. This helps train sounds you confuse.

  1. Get feedback

A tutor or speech app can catch errors you won’t hear yourself.

Useful tools:

  • ELSA Speak — great for pronunciation feedback
  • Speechling — good for guided pronunciation practice
  • Forvo — native speaker audio for words
  • Anki — make pronunciation flashcards with audio
  • italki — affordable 1-on-1 tutoring with native speakers

Best routine (10 minutes/day):

  • 2 min: listen
  • 3 min: shadow
  • 3 min: record and compare
  • 2 min: repeat problem sounds

If you want, I can make you a pronunciation plan for a specific language.

retrieval Not mentioned

A few high-impact ways:

  • Copy native audio closely: shadow short clips line by line.
  • Record yourself: compare your speech to the original.
  • Learn sounds, not just words: focus on troublesome vowels/consonants.
  • Practice minimal pairs: e.g. ship/sheep, bit/beat.
  • Use slow-to-fast repetition: accurate first, then speed.
  • Get feedback: from a tutor, native speaker, or pronunciation app.
  • Use IPA or pronunciation guides: helps with exact sounds.
  • Work on stress and rhythm: often more important than individual sounds.

Best routine:

  1. Listen
  2. Repeat slowly
  3. Record
  4. Compare
  5. Repeat until it sounds close

If you want, I can make you a 10-minute daily pronunciation plan for any language.

How do I practice speaking when I do not have a partner? problem 10/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

You can practice speaking alone effectively. Try these:

  • Shadowing: play a short audio/video clip and repeat it out loud immediately. Good for BBC Learning English, VOA Learning English, or TED Talks.
  • Read aloud: use articles, books, or scripts and focus on pronunciation and rhythm.
  • Record yourself: use your phone, then listen back for clarity, pace, and filler words.
  • Self-Q&A: pick a topic and speak for 1–2 minutes answering your own questions.
  • Describe your day: narrate what you’re doing in real time.
  • Use apps:
    • ELSA Speak for pronunciation
    • HelloTalk or Tandem if you want later to find partners
    • Cambly or italki for paid speaking practice

A simple routine:

  1. 5 min shadowing
  2. 5 min read aloud
  3. 5 min record a short monologue
  4. 5 min listen and repeat corrections

If you want, I can make you a 7-day solo speaking plan.

retrieval Not mentioned

A few good solo ways:

  • Shadowing: listen to a native speaker and repeat immediately after them.
  • Record yourself: answer prompts, then play it back and compare.
  • Read aloud: news, books, scripts, or dialogue.
  • Talk to yourself: narrate your day or describe objects around you.
  • Use language apps/tools: speaking exercises, AI chat, or speech recognition.
  • Mirror practice: rehearse common conversations out loud.
  • Think in the language: form simple sentences in your head during daily tasks.

Best routine:

  1. 5 min shadowing
  2. 5 min read aloud
  3. 5 min record free speaking
  4. 5 min review mistakes

If you want, I can give you a daily 15-minute solo speaking plan.

How can I learn a language on a busy schedule? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Use tiny, consistent sessions instead of long study blocks.

A simple busy-schedule plan:

  • 10 min/day vocab: use Anki or Memrise
  • 10 min/day listening: Pimsleur, Duolingo Podcasts, or Coffee Break Languages
  • 5 min/day speaking: talk to yourself, or use italki for 1–2 lessons/week
  • 5 min/day reading: LingQ or easy news with News in Slow (by language)

Best strategy:

  1. Learn the most common 500–1000 words
  2. Focus on listening + speaking first
  3. Review daily with spaced repetition
  4. Use dead time: commute, gym, chores

If you want a super simple setup:

  • Anki for vocab
  • Pimsleur for speaking
  • italki for live practice

If you tell me the language and how many minutes you have per day, I can make you a tight weekly plan.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use tiny, consistent daily sessions.

A simple busy-schedule plan:

  • 10 min/day vocab with flashcards
  • 10 min/day listening during commute/chores
  • 5 min/day speaking out loud or with an app
  • 1 longer session/week for grammar or review

Best methods:

  • Spaced repetition for words
  • Input first: easy videos, podcasts, dialogues
  • Shadowing: repeat after native audio
  • Micro-goals: “learn 20 travel words,” not “be fluent”

Make it fit your life:

  • Use dead time: waiting in line, walking, lunch
  • Keep materials on your phone
  • Pick one main resource, not five

Good apps:

  • Anki for flashcards
  • Duolingo for habit-building
  • HelloTalk or Tandem for speaking
  • Pimsleur for audio practice

Rule of thumb: 20 minutes every day beats 2 hours once a week.

If you want, I can make you a 7-day language plan for your schedule.

How do I stop forgetting words I learned? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

To stop forgetting words, do this:

  1. Review them with spaced repetition
    • Best tool: Anki
    • Also good: Memrise or Quizlet
    • Review a little every day instead of cramming.
  2. Use the word, don’t just read it
    • Make 1–2 original sentences.
    • Say it out loud.
    • Try to use it in a real conversation that day.
  3. Learn in context
    • Don’t memorize isolated lists only.
    • Save the full sentence, not just the word.
  4. Make a quick memory hook
    • Link the word to an image, funny association, or similar word.
    • Stronger if it feels vivid or weird.
  5. Test yourself
    • Cover the answer and recall it from memory.
    • Recall works better than rereading.
  6. Keep your list small
    • 5–10 new words a day is plenty if you want them to stick.

If you want, I can make you a simple daily word-review system using Anki.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use active recall + spaced repetition.

Quick plan:

  1. Review words in intervals: same day, 1 day later, 3 days, 1 week, 2 weeks, 1 month.
  2. Make your own example sentence for each word.
  3. Use the word in speaking/writing within 24 hours.
  4. Study in context, not just isolated lists.
  5. Keep a tiny review deck (Anki, Quizlet, or paper).
  6. Test yourself, don’t just re-read.
  7. Revisit old words while learning new ones.

Best habit: learn fewer words, but recycle them often.

If you want, I can make you a 7-day vocabulary review schedule.

How can I get better at listening comprehension? problem 30/mo
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

A good way to improve listening comprehension is to do short, repeated listening with active checking.

What works
  • Listen daily: 10–20 minutes beats occasional long sessions.
  • Use easy content first: aim for “mostly understandable,” not perfect.
  • Repeat the same audio 2–3 times:
    1. listen for gist
    2. listen for details
    3. read transcript and relisten
  • Shadowing: pause and repeat aloud what you hear.
  • Transcribe small chunks: 20–30 seconds at a time.
  • Notice weak spots: fast speech, linking, contractions, accents, unknown words.
  • Build vocab in context: write down phrases, not single words.
Good tools
  • YouTube with transcripts/subtitles
  • TED Talks for clear speech
  • BBC Learning English
  • VOA Learning English
  • LingQ for graded listening
  • ELSA Speak for pronunciation + listening discrimination
  • Anki for reviewing phrases you hear often
Simple routine
  • 5 min: listen once without subtitles
  • 5 min: listen again with subtitles/transcript
  • 5 min: shadow 5–10 lines
  • 5 min: note 5 useful phrases

If you want, I can make you a 2-week listening plan based on your level.

retrieval Not mentioned

Practice with easy, repeatable input and active checking:

  • Listen daily: 10–20 minutes of podcasts, YouTube, or dialogs.
  • Start slightly below your level so you catch most words.
  • Use transcripts: listen once בלי text, then again with transcript, then again without.
  • Shadowing: pause and repeat what you hear, matching rhythm and pronunciation.
  • Chunking: train yourself to catch phrases, not single words.
  • Write quick summaries after listening: “Who? What happened? Why?”
  • Replay short sections instead of trying to understand everything at once.
  • Mix accents and speeds gradually.

Good resources:

  • BBC Learning English
  • VOA Learning English
  • TED-Ed / TED Talks with transcripts
  • Spotify/Apple podcasts with transcripts where available

If you want, I can make you a 2-week listening practice plan based on your current level.

How do I learn grammar without getting bored? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Make grammar feel like a tool, not a textbook.

Best ways to learn it without boredom
  • Use short lessons: 10–15 minutes a day beats long sessions.
  • Learn from real examples: songs, YouTube subtitles, articles, chats.
  • Fix your own mistakes: keep a note of errors you make repeatedly.
  • Practice by writing: a few sentences a day is better than passive reading.
  • Gamify it: quiz yourself, use streaks, and set tiny goals.
Good resources that don’t feel dry
  • Grammarly — catches mistakes while you write.
  • LanguageTool — a solid alternative to Grammarly.
  • Perfect English Grammar — clear exercises, especially for English.
  • BBC Learning English — short, engaging grammar lessons.
  • Khan Academy / Duolingo — useful if you like interactive practice.
Easy routine
  1. Learn one rule.
  2. Read 5 real examples.
  3. Write 3 sentences using it.
  4. Check them with Grammarly or LanguageTool.
  5. Repeat tomorrow.

If you want, I can also make you a 7-day grammar plan that’s actually fun.

retrieval Not mentioned

Make it active and tiny, not textbook-heavy:

  • Use grammar in something you care about: songs, TV subtitles, Reddit posts, chat, journaling.
  • Learn one rule at a time: e.g. “past tense,” not “all tenses.”
  • Do quick drills: 5–10 minutes max, then stop.
  • Turn rules into examples you’d actually say.
  • Notice grammar in the wild: pick out one structure from articles or videos.
  • Write and edit your own sentences instead of only doing exercises.
  • Gamify it: streaks, quizzes, flashcards, points.
  • Mix it with speaking/listening so it feels useful, not abstract.

Best formula: 1 rule → 5 examples → 5 minutes practice → use it in real life

If you want, I can make you a fun 7-day grammar plan.

How can I track my language learning progress? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Track it with a mix of time, output, and real-world performance:

  • Set a baseline: take a placement test and record your current level.
  • Log study time: use apps like Toggl Track, Clockify, or a simple spreadsheet.
  • Measure skills separately:
    • Listening: note how much you understand without subtitles.
    • Speaking: record weekly voice notes in Otter.ai or your phone.
    • Reading: track pages/articles read and how many unknown words you need.
    • Writing: keep a weekly journal and compare older entries.
  • Take regular tests: every 4–6 weeks, redo the same quiz or use tools like Duolingo Practice Hub, LingQ, or official exam prep materials.
  • Use milestone goals: “Hold a 5-minute conversation,” “Read a news article,” “Write 200 words.”
  • Review monthly: compare recordings, writing samples, and test scores.

A simple system: hours studied + test scores + one speaking sample + one writing sample per month.

If you want, I can make you a free progress-tracking template for your language.

retrieval Not mentioned

Track a few things consistently:

  • Vocabulary: words you know actively vs. recognize passively
  • Listening: how much you understand without subtitles
  • Speaking: fluency, pronunciation, and how long you can talk
  • Reading: what level of texts you can handle
  • Writing: accuracy, variety, and speed
  • Consistency: days studied per week and total hours

Simple ways to measure it:

  • Take a baseline test now, then retest monthly
  • Keep a weekly log of study time and what you did
  • Record yourself speaking the same prompt every 2–4 weeks
  • Save old writing samples and compare them
  • Use app stats, but don’t rely on them alone
  • Track real-world wins: “understood a podcast episode,” “had a 5-minute conversation,” etc.

Best approach: use a scorecard with 1–5 ratings for listening, speaking, reading, writing, and vocabulary, updated every month.

If you want, I can make you a simple progress tracker template.

How do I make language study a daily habit? problem
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Make it small, fixed, and automatic:

  1. Pick one daily trigger

Example: “After I brush my teeth, I study 10 minutes.”

  1. Keep the session tiny

Start with 5–10 minutes. Consistency beats intensity.

  1. Use one main app/tool

Good options:

  • Duolingo for quick daily practice
  • Anki for spaced repetition vocab
  • LingQ for reading/listening
  • Babbel for structured lessons
  1. Tie it to something easy

Do language study while:

  • drinking coffee
  • commuting
  • waiting for dinner
  1. Make it visible

Leave the app open, a notebook on your desk, or a flashcard deck on your phone home screen.

  1. Track streaks

A simple calendar or app streak helps a lot.

  1. Don’t miss twice

If you skip a day, do at least 2 minutes the next day.

A good starter rule: “Every day, 10 minutes, same time, same place.”

If you want, I can build you a 7-day language habit plan for your schedule.

retrieval Not mentioned

Make it small, specific, and tied to something you already do.

A simple formula:

  1. Pick a fixed time — e.g. after breakfast or before bed.
  2. Make it tiny — start with 5–10 minutes.
  3. Use one clear task — flashcards, one lesson, one article, one conversation.
  4. Track streaks — calendar checkmark or habit app.
  5. Lower friction — keep the app/book open and ready.
  6. Never miss twice — if you skip a day, do a shorter session next day.

Good daily routine:

  • 5 min vocab review
  • 5 min listening or reading
  • 2 min speaking aloud

Best way to stick with it: attach language study to an existing habit. Example: “After I make coffee, I do 10 minutes of Spanish.”

If you want, I can help you build a custom 10-minute daily language routine.

Are there any free language learning apps? transactional 8,100/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Yes — a few good free language learning apps are:

  • Duolingo — best-known free option; great for beginners and daily practice.
  • Memrise — good for vocabulary and real-life phrases; free tier available.
  • Busuu — has a free version with basic lessons.
  • HelloTalk — free language exchange with native speakers.
  • Tandem — another solid free chat-based language exchange app.
  • AnkiDroid / AnkiMobile — flashcards for memorization; AnkiDroid is free on Android.

If you want, I can also recommend the best free app for Spanish, French, Japanese, or Korean.

retrieval Mentioned

Yes—there are several good free language-learning apps. A few popular ones are:

  • Duolingo — free core courses; some extra features are paid. (blog.duolingo.com)
  • Memrise — free to start, with a paid Pro upgrade for extra features. (memrise.com)
  • Busuu — has a free plan and paid Premium options. (busuu.com)
  • LingQ — you can get started for free. (lingq.com)
  • AnkiDroid — free Android flashcard app for memorizing vocab. (ankidroid.org)

If you want, I can also recommend the best free app for your goal (speaking, vocabulary, grammar, or beginner level).

What do language learning apps cost per month? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Typical language app pricing is:

  • Duolingo Super: about $7–$13/month
  • Babbel: about $8–$15/month
  • Busuu Premium: about $7–$13/month
  • Rosetta Stone: about $12–$20/month
  • Memrise Pro: about $8–$15/month
  • Pimsleur: about $20+/month
  • Mondly: about $10–$15/month

A lot of apps look cheaper if you pay annually instead of monthly.

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the cheapest good apps, or
  2. a best app by language list.
retrieval Not mentioned

Usually $0 to about $20/month. Many apps have a free tier, and paid plans often get cheaper on longer subscriptions. (blog.duolingo.com)

Examples:

  • Babbel: about $8.95/month on an annual plan, or $13.45/month on a 6‑month plan; Babbel says prices vary by location and plan. (babbel.com)
  • Rosetta Stone: about $10.95–$19.95/month depending on plan length. (espanol.rosettastone.com)
  • Duolingo: the core app is free; premium options are Super Duolingo and Duolingo Max. (blog.duolingo.com)

If you want, I can make a quick price comparison of the best apps for Spanish/French/Japanese.

Which language learning apps have a free trial? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some popular language-learning apps that offer a free trial:

  • Babbel — usually a 7-day free trial
  • Rosetta Stone — often a 3-day free trial or trial access
  • Pimsleur — typically a 7-day free trial
  • Busuu — often has a 7-day free Premium trial
  • Mondly — commonly offers a free trial on Premium plans
  • Lingoda — usually has a trial class / intro offer rather than a full app trial
  • FluentU — sometimes offers a 14-day free trial
  • Rocket Languages — often has a free trial/demo period

A few apps that are more free-forever than trial-based:

  • Duolingo
  • Memrise (free tier available)
  • Anki (free on desktop/Android)

If you want, I can also list the best free-trial apps by language (Spanish, French, Japanese, etc.).

retrieval Mentioned

A few popular language apps currently offer a free trial (or at least a free start):

  • Rosetta Stone — free trial. (rosettastone.com)
  • Mango Languages — free trial; Mango says each subscription plan includes a free trial, and some pages advertise a free month. (mangolanguages.com)
  • Babbel — not usually a full-length trial, but you can create a free account and get the first lesson of each level free plus some free features. (support.babbel.com)

If you just want free access without a trial, Duolingo and Busuu both have free versions. (en.duolingo.com)

If you want, I can also make you a best free-trial language app shortlist by goal (speaking, travel, school, or beginner).

What is the cheapest language learning app? transactional 40/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

The cheapest language-learning app is usually Duolingo — it has a free plan that’s hard to beat.

If you want other low-cost options:

  • Memrise — often has a free tier, paid plan is usually affordable
  • Busuu — frequently discounted, but not the cheapest
  • Mondly — sometimes sold as a one-time lifetime deal, which can be a bargain

If you want the absolute lowest cost: Duolingo Free.

retrieval Mentioned

If you mean the lowest-cost app overall, it’s Duolingo — it has a free tier for all courses. (blog.duolingo.com)

If you mean paid apps only, Babbel looks cheapest from the official/current pricing I found, at $8.95/month billed annually. (babbel.com)

For comparison, Busuu says Premium starts from 8.99 EUR/month, and Rosetta Stone shows $10.50/month on a 12-month plan. (help.busuu.com)

If you want, I can rank the cheapest apps by free vs paid and give you the best one for your goal.

Are premium language learning apps worth it? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Sometimes—if you’ll actually use them.

Worth it if you want:

  • Structure + consistency: Babbel is good for practical grammar and dialogue.
  • Lots of content across levels: Busuu has solid courses and community feedback.
  • Daily habit + gamification: Duolingo Max can be fun, but it’s weaker for deep speaking/writing.
  • Flashcards + reading help: LingQ is great for vocabulary through real content.

Usually not worth it if:

  • You won’t study at least a few times a week.
  • You need full fluency fast.
  • You mainly want speaking practice—then a tutor on italki or Preply is often better value.

Best value picks:

  • Babbel for beginners/intermediates
  • Busuu Premium for structured learning + feedback
  • LingQ if you like reading/listening immersion
  • Duolingo free is often enough for casual learning

Rule of thumb: If a premium app saves you from quitting, it’s worth it. If you’re already disciplined, free + YouTube + Anki + a tutor may be better.

If you want, I can recommend the best app based on the language you’re learning and your budget.

retrieval Mentioned

Sometimes—if you actually use them.

Worth it if you want:

  • Structure and a clear path
  • Speaking practice or feedback
  • Accountability from streaks/reminders
  • Offline access or no ads
  • A specific goal like travel, exam prep, or daily conversation

Usually not worth it if:

  • You won’t use it consistently
  • You mainly want free vocabulary/grammar
  • The app feels like a game but doesn’t get you to real speaking/listening
  • You already have a good system with free resources

Best rule: Pay only if the premium features solve a real problem for you.

Good premium apps depend on your goal:

  • Duolingo Max/Super: casual habit-building
  • Babbel: structured lessons
  • Busuu Premium: feedback/community
  • Rosetta Stone: immersion-style practice
  • Pimsleur: speaking/listening
  • Anki: often free is enough for flashcards

If you want, I can recommend the best paid app for your language and budget.

Which language learning apps offer offline access with a subscription? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

These language apps commonly offer offline access with a paid subscription:

  • Duolingo Super — offline lessons on mobile
  • Babbel — offline lesson downloads
  • Rosetta Stone — offline mode in the mobile app
  • Busuu Premium / Premium Plus — offline lessons
  • Memrise Pro — offline access on mobile
  • Pimsleur Premium — download audio lessons for offline use
  • Mondly Premium — offline lessons

If you want, I can also narrow this down by best value, best for travel, or best for a specific language.

retrieval Mentioned

These currently offer offline access with a paid subscription:

  • Babbel — offline mode in the app with a subscription; you can download lessons and even podcasts. (support.babbel.com)
  • BusuuPremium subscribers can download lessons and learn offline. (help.busuu.com)
  • Rosetta Stone — paid plans include lessons available online and offline; the app supports offline mode/downloaded units. (rosettastone.com)

If you want, I can also compare which one has the best offline features or cheapest subscription.

Do any language learning apps have family plans? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Yes — several do. Common options include:

  • Duolingo Super Family — covers up to 6 people
  • Babbel Family — shared plan for multiple users (availability varies by region)
  • Rosetta Stone Family — family access for multiple learners
  • Busuu — sometimes offers multi-user/family-style plans depending on country

If you want, I can compare the best family plans by price, number of users, and features.

retrieval Mentioned

Yes — a few do.

  • Duolingo has a Family Plan for Super Duolingo that can include up to 6 accounts. (blog.duolingo.com)
  • Babbel has a Group Plan (basically its family-style plan) for up to 6 people total. (support.babbel.com)
  • Busuu says it doesn’t currently offer a Family Plan or Family Sharing. (help.busuu.com)

If you want, I can also compare the family plans by price and features.

Which language learning apps are best value for money? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best value for money depends on your goal, but these are usually the top picks:

Best overall value

Babbel

  • Good if you want structured, practical lessons
  • Usually better “real learning” than gamified apps
  • Paid, but often worth it for serious beginners
Best free value

Duolingo

  • Free version is very usable
  • Great for habit-building and absolute beginners
  • Not ideal as your only app if you want fluency
Best for vocabulary

Memrise

  • Strong for words, phrases, and pronunciation
  • Good value if you like short, repeatable practice
Best for speaking

Pimsleur

  • More expensive than others, but excellent for speaking and listening
  • Very good value if your main goal is conversation
Best budget combo

Busuu

  • Often a sweet spot between price and quality
  • Includes useful grammar and community corrections
  • Good value if you want more than Duolingo but less cost than premium tutoring
Best premium “all-in-one”

Rosetta Stone

  • Polished and reliable
  • Usually not the cheapest, but solid if discounted
  • Best value only when on sale
My quick picks
  • Tight budget: Duolingo
  • Best paid value: Babbel
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best middle ground: Busuu

If you tell me the language you’re learning, I can narrow it to the best-value app for that specific language.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want best value for money, I’d rank them like this:

  1. Duolingo Free — best if you want the lowest cost possible: it’s genuinely free, with paid tiers only if you want extras like ad-free learning or AI features. (blog.duolingo.com)
  2. Memrise Pro — strong value if you want lots of speaking/listening practice and one subscription for 23 languages; Memrise’s own page says the Pro plan unlocks all features and removes ads, and it has previously listed Pro at $9.99/month. (memrise.com)
  3. Babbel — best for structured, practical lessons; Babbel says pricing varies by plan, but its published examples show an annual plan around $8.95/month and a lifetime option at $299.99. (support.babbel.com)
  4. Busuu — good mid-tier value if you want community feedback and grammar/vocab tools; Busuu says free includes the core course and community feedback, while Premium adds review tools, offline mode, and no ads. (help.busuu.com)
  5. Rosetta Stone — usually the pricier “premium” pick; its pricing page shows $15.95/month for 3 months, $11.95/month for 12 months, and a lifetime option. (rosettastone.com)
  6. Pimsleur — best if your priority is speaking out loud, but usually not the cheapest; Pimsleur emphasizes 30-minute conversational lessons, voice coach feedback, and subscription/lifetime access. (pimsleur.com)

My quick picks:

If you want, I can narrow this down by budget, language, or whether you care more about speaking, grammar, or travel phrases.

Can I use a language learning app without paying? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Yes—many language apps have free tiers, but with limits.

Common free options:

  • Duolingo — free lessons with ads and some feature limits
  • Memrise — free basic content
  • Busuu — limited free lessons
  • Anki — free on desktop/Android for flashcards
  • Tandem / HelloTalk — free language exchange with native speakers

Usually, the free version means:

  • fewer lessons or courses
  • ads
  • limited offline use
  • some features locked behind premium

If you tell me which language you want to learn, I can recommend the best free app for it.

retrieval Not mentioned

Yes—often you can use a language-learning app for free, but usually with limits.

Common free-tier limits:

  • fewer lessons/features
  • ads
  • daily practice caps
  • limited speaking/listening exercises
  • no offline mode or progress reports

Some apps offer:

  • free basic access
  • free trials
  • freemium plans with optional paid upgrades

If you want, I can suggest the best fully free language apps.

What language learning apps are worth the subscription price? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If you’ll actually use them, these are the ones most worth paying for:

  • Babbel — Best overall for practical conversation and grammar. Good structure, less gamified fluff.
  • Busuu Premium — Great value if you want feedback from native speakers plus solid course quality.
  • Duolingo Super — Worth it mainly if you already use Duolingo daily and want no ads/unlimited hearts.
  • Rosetta Stone — Best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation, but pricey for what you get.
  • Pimsleur — Worth it for speaking and listening, especially for commuting or hands-free practice.
  • LingQ Premium — Excellent if you like reading/listening to real content and building vocabulary fast.
  • Memrise Pro — Good for phrases, listening, and realistic native-speaker clips.

My quick picks:

  • Beginner: Babbel
  • Speaking practice: Pimsleur
  • Serious vocabulary/input: LingQ
  • Budget-friendly upgrade: Busuu

If you tell me which language and your goal (travel, speaking, reading, exam), I can recommend the best one.

retrieval Mentioned

Short answer: Babbel, Pimsleur, and Rosetta Stone are the ones I’d most often call “worth paying for,” depending on your goal. Busuu is also strong if you want feedback/community, and Drops is good if you like short, gamified vocab sessions. (babbel.com)

Best picks by type

  • Babbel: best all-around paid app for structured lessons and practical grammar. Babbel says its pricing is roughly $9–18/month and it focuses on short, expert-designed lessons. (babbel.com)
  • Pimsleur: best if you want to speak and learn while commuting; it’s audio-first with lots of speaking practice, and its official pages emphasize 50+ languages and subscription/lifetime options. (babbel.com)
  • Rosetta Stone: worth it if you like immersive, very polished lessons and pronunciation work. Its official pricing page shows $11.95/mo annual, $15.95/mo for 3 months, or $399 lifetime (often discounted). (rosettastone.com)
  • Busuu: good if you want a more guided course plus community/pronunciation/AI features; its Premium Plus tier adds AI Conversations and pronunciation feedback. (help.busuu.com)
  • Drops: worth it if you mainly want vocabulary and fast daily practice; Premium removes time limits and ads and costs $11/month, $69.99/year, or $150 lifetime on the official page. (languagedrops.com)

Usually not worth paying for unless you’ll use the extras

  • Duolingo Super/Max: good if you love Duolingo and want no ads or AI extras, but the free version remains the core product. (blog.duolingo.com)

If you want, I can give you a best app by goal list: speaking, travel, grammar, vocabulary, or cheapest value.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best language learning apps? 22,200/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and habit-building; very easy to stick with.
  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and grammar; more structured than Duolingo.
  • Busuu — best for guided lessons plus native-speaker feedback.
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation.
  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and real-world phrases.
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening; strong if you learn by audio.
  • LingQ — best for reading/listening with lots of content.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for chatting with native speakers.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall for most people: Babbel
  • Best free option: Duolingo
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for real conversation: HelloTalk or Tandem

If you tell me the language you want to learn and your level, I can recommend the best app combo.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and habit-building; very easy to stick with.
  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and structured lessons.
  • Busuu — great for grammar + native speaker feedback.
  • Rosetta Stone — good for immersive learning and pronunciation.
  • Memrise — strong for vocabulary and real-world video clips.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and listening, especially if you want audio-first learning.
  • LingQ — best for reading/listening with lots of real content.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for chatting with native speakers.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall for most people: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for conversation practice: HelloTalk
  • Best for serious study: Busuu or LingQ

If you tell me the language you want to learn and your budget, I can narrow it down to the best 2–3.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best language learning apps, depending on what you want:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and habit-building; very easy to start, gamified.
  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and grammar; more structured than Duolingo.
  • Busuu — best for feedback and community corrections; solid all-around app.
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersive learning; good if you like a classic approach.
  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and listening practice with native-speaker video.
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and pronunciation; audio-first, great for commuting.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for chatting with native speakers.

If I had to pick the top 3:

  1. Babbel for serious learners
  2. Duolingo for casual daily practice
  3. Pimsleur if speaking is your priority

If you tell me which language you’re learning and your goal (speaking, travel, exam, etc.), I can recommend the best one.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language learning apps:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit-building
  • Babbel — best for structured lessons and practical conversation
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation
  • Busuu — best for grammar plus native-speaker feedback
  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and real-world phrases
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening practice
  • Mondly — good all-around app with lots of languages
  • Anki — best for custom flashcards and memorization

If you want the best overall, I’d pick Babbel for serious learning or Duolingo for casual daily practice.

If you tell me which language you want to learn and your goal (travel, conversation, fluency, exam prep), I can narrow it down to the best 2–3.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language learning apps, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit-building

Fun, easy, good for vocabulary and basic grammar.

  • Babbel — best for practical conversation

More structured than Duolingo, with clearer explanations.

  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning

Strong for pronunciation and intuitive learning.

  • Busuu — best for all-around learning with feedback

Includes community corrections from native speakers.

  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and real-life phrases

Great for memorization and video clips of native speakers.

  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening

Audio-first, excellent if you want to speak early.

  • LingQ — best for reading and input-based learning

Ideal if you like learning through articles, podcasts, and books.

  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for language exchange

Connect with native speakers for texting and voice chats.

If you want the simplest recommendation:

  • Beginner: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Speaking: Pimsleur
  • Serious all-around: Busuu
  • Conversation practice: HelloTalk

If you tell me the language you want to learn, I can recommend the best app for that specific language.

What are the top language learning apps for beginners? 22,200/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Top beginner-friendly language learning apps:

  1. Duolingo — best for free, gamified basics and daily habit-building.
  2. Babbel — best for practical conversation and structured lessons.
  3. Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation.
  4. Busuu — good mix of lessons plus feedback from native speakers.
  5. Memrise — strong for vocabulary and real-world phrases.
  6. Pimsleur — best for audio-based speaking practice and listening.
  7. Mango Languages — solid, simple courses, often free through libraries.

Best overall for beginners:

  • Duolingo if you want free and easy
  • Babbel if you want more serious progress
  • Pimsleur if speaking fast is your goal

If you tell me the language you want to learn, I can rank the best apps for that specific language.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Top beginner-friendly language apps:

  1. Duolingo

Best for: gamified daily practice, easy start Good for: short lessons, motivation, lots of languages

  1. Babbel

Best for: structured lessons and practical conversation Good for: adults who want real-life phrases and grammar

  1. Busuu

Best for: beginner courses with feedback from native speakers Good for: balanced speaking, writing, and vocabulary

  1. Rosetta Stone

Best for: immersive learning from scratch Good for: learners who prefer visuals and repetition

  1. Memrise

Best for: vocabulary and pronunciation Good for: remembering useful words and native speaker audio

  1. Mondly

Best for: bite-sized lessons and chatbot practice Good for: casual learners who want quick sessions

  1. Drops

Best for: visual vocabulary building Good for: learning words fast in 5-minute sessions

If you want the best overall for beginners, I’d pick:

  • Duolingo for free, easy habit-building
  • Babbel for the best structured beginner course
  • Busuu if you want more speaking practice

If you tell me which language you want to learn, I can recommend the best app for that specific language.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language learning apps for beginners:

  1. Duolingo — Best for getting started
    • Very easy, game-like lessons
    • Great for building a daily habit
    • Best for: vocabulary and basic phrases
  2. Babbel — Best for practical conversation
    • Clear, structured lessons
    • Focuses on real-life dialogue
    • Best for: beginners who want to speak sooner
  3. Busuu — Best for feedback and grammar
    • Good beginner courses
    • Has community feedback from native speakers
    • Best for: learners who want correction
  4. Rosetta Stone — Best for immersion style learning
    • Teaches through images and context
    • Strong for pronunciation and listening
    • Best for: people who like a more natural approach
  5. Mango Languages — Best for travel and everyday use
    • Practical phrases and pronunciation help
    • Good for less commonly studied languages too
    • Best for: travelers and casual learners
  6. Memrise — Best for vocabulary
    • Strong flashcard-style repetition
    • Includes native speaker videos
    • Best for: memorizing words and phrases fast

Best overall for beginners: Duolingo Best if you want more structure: Babbel

If you want, I can also rank the best apps by free vs paid, or by which language you’re learning.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps for beginners:

  1. Duolingo
    • Best for: Gamified daily practice
    • Why: Super easy to start, short lessons, strong motivation features
  2. Babbel
    • Best for: Practical conversation skills
    • Why: Clear lesson structure, good grammar explanations, more adult-friendly than many apps
  3. Busuu
    • Best for: Beginner-friendly guided learning
    • Why: Solid lessons plus feedback from native speakers
  4. Rosetta Stone
    • Best for: Immersion-based learning
    • Why: Great for building intuition without translation; polished and well-known
  5. Memrise
    • Best for: Vocabulary and real-world phrases
    • Why: Helpful for hearing native speakers and remembering useful words fast
  6. Pimsleur
    • Best for: Speaking and listening
    • Why: Excellent audio lessons for beginners who want to talk early

Best overall for beginners: Duolingo Best for serious beginners: Babbel Best for speaking fast: Pimsleur

If you want, I can also rank the best apps by language (Spanish, French, Japanese, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Top beginner-friendly language learning apps:

  1. Duolingo — Best for gamified daily practice
    • Very easy to start
    • Great for vocabulary and basic phrases
    • Best if you want short lessons and streaks
  2. Babbel — Best for structured lessons
    • Clear grammar explanations
    • More practical conversations than many apps
    • Good if you want a more traditional course
  3. Busuu — Best for feedback and speaking
    • Offers community corrections from native speakers
    • Strong beginner path
    • Good balance of vocab, grammar, and conversation
  4. Rosetta Stone — Best immersion-style learning
    • Teaches without much translation
    • Strong pronunciation practice
    • Good if you like learning by context
  5. Memrise — Best for memorizing words and phrases
    • Uses spaced repetition
    • Helpful video clips from native speakers
    • Good for building vocabulary fast
  6. Pimsleur — Best for speaking and listening
    • Audio-based lessons
    • Great for pronunciation and repetition
    • Best if you want to learn while driving or walking

My quick picks:

  • Most fun: Duolingo
  • Most structured: Babbel
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best overall for beginners: Busuu

If you tell me the language you want to learn, I can rank the best apps for that specific language.

Which language learning apps are most popular? 70/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

The most popular language learning apps are usually:

  • Duolingo — by far the most widely used; great for casual daily practice
  • Babbel — popular for structured lessons and practical conversation
  • Rosetta Stone — well-known classic, strong for immersion-style learning
  • Busuu — popular for grammar, speaking, and community feedback
  • Memrise — known for vocabulary and video-based practice
  • Pimsleur — very popular for listening and speaking
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — popular for chatting with native speakers
  • LingoDeer — especially good for Asian languages

If you want, I can also rank them by best overall, best for beginners, or best free option.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

The most popular language learning apps are:

  • Duolingo — the biggest mainstream app; great for beginners and daily practice
  • Babbel — strong for practical conversation and structured lessons
  • Rosetta Stone — long-running premium option with immersive learning
  • Busuu — popular for grammar plus community feedback
  • Memrise — good for vocabulary and real-world phrases
  • Pimsleur — best for listening and speaking practice
  • HelloTalk — language exchange with native speakers
  • Tandem — similar to HelloTalk for chat-based exchange
  • Drops — focused on visual vocabulary learning

If you want, I can also rank them by best free app, best for speaking, or best for serious learners.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular language-learning apps are:

  • Duolingo — biggest mainstream app; gamified, lots of languages
  • Babbel — strong for practical conversation, especially European languages
  • Rosetta Stone — long-running classic, immersive style
  • Memrise — good for vocabulary and real-world phrases
  • Busuu — solid lessons plus native-speaker feedback
  • Pimsleur — best known for audio-based speaking practice
  • Mondly — broad language selection, simple lessons
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for chatting with native speakers

If you want, I can also rank them by best free app, best for speaking, or best for beginners.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

The most popular language learning apps are usually:

  • Duolingo — the biggest mainstream app; very popular for free gamified learning
  • Babbel — popular for structured, practical lessons
  • Rosetta Stone — a long-running premium option
  • Busuu — strong for grammar and community feedback
  • Memrise — popular for vocabulary and real-life video clips
  • Pimsleur — best known for audio-based speaking practice
  • Drops — popular for visual vocabulary learning
  • Mondly — widely used, especially for bite-sized lessons
  • HelloTalk — popular for chatting with native speakers
  • Tandem — another major language exchange app

If you want, I can also rank these by best for beginners, speaking, or free vs paid.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular language learning apps are:

  • Duolingo — the most widely used; great for beginners and casual practice
  • Babbel — strong for structured lessons and grammar
  • Rosetta Stone — classic immersive approach, good for pronunciation
  • Busuu — solid courses with community feedback
  • Memrise — great for vocabulary and real-life phrases
  • Mango Languages — often used by libraries and schools
  • Pimsleur — best for audio-first speaking practice
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — popular for language exchange with native speakers

If you want, I can also rank them by best for beginners, speaking, free options, or serious learners.

What are the most recommended language learning apps? 20/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

The most commonly recommended language-learning apps are:

  • Duolingo — Best for beginners and daily habit-building. Very gamified, easy to stick with.
  • Babbel — Best for practical conversation and structured lessons. More serious than Duolingo.
  • Busuu — Good all-around app with grammar, vocab, and native speaker feedback.
  • Rosetta Stone — Strong for immersion-style learning and pronunciation.
  • Memrise — Great for vocabulary and real-world phrases, especially with video clips.
  • Pimsleur — Excellent for speaking and listening, especially if you want audio-only lessons.
  • LingQ — Best for reading/listening with lots of content and vocabulary tracking.

Quick picks:

  • Absolute beginner: Duolingo or Babbel
  • Speaking fast: Pimsleur or Babbel
  • Grammar + structured learning: Babbel or Busuu
  • Vocabulary focus: Memrise
  • Immersion/content-based: LingQ or Rosetta Stone

If you tell me which language you want to learn and your goal (travel, conversation, school, etc.), I can recommend the best 2–3 apps for that specifically.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the most recommended language-learning apps, depending on what you want:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit-building
  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and structured lessons
  • Busuu — best for grammar plus native-speaker feedback
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersive, intuitive learning
  • Mondly — good for quick lessons and broad language selection
  • Memrise — great for vocabulary and real-world phrases
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening practice
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for chatting with native speakers
  • LingQ — best for reading and listening with real content

If you want the safest all-around picks: Duolingo + Babbel is a strong combo.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

The most recommended language-learning apps are usually:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit-building
  • Babbel — best for structured lessons and practical conversation
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning
  • Busuu — good all-around app with native speaker feedback
  • Memrise — strong for vocabulary and real-life phrases
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening practice
  • Mondly — good for casual learning and AR/voice features
  • Anki — best for serious spaced-repetition flashcards

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Beginners: Duolingo or Babbel
  • Speaking: Pimsleur
  • Vocabulary: Memrise or Anki
  • Most balanced: Busuu

If you tell me the language you want to learn, I can suggest the best app for that specific language.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

The most commonly recommended language-learning apps are:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit-building
  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and structured lessons
  • Busuu — good mix of lessons plus native-speaker feedback
  • Rosetta Stone — strong immersion-style learning, especially for pronunciation
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and listening, especially on the go
  • Memrise — great for vocabulary and real-world phrase practice
  • Mango Languages — solid for travel phrases and many less-common languages
  • LingQ — best for reading/listening with lots of input
  • Clozemaster — great for vocabulary in context after beginner level

If you want the short version:

  • Best overall for most people: Babbel
  • Best free option: Duolingo
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for vocabulary: Memrise

If you want, I can also rank them by best for Spanish, French, Japanese, etc.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the most recommended language-learning apps:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily practice; very gamified.
  • Babbel — best for structured, practical conversation lessons.
  • Busuu — great for grammar plus feedback from native speakers.
  • Rosetta Stone — strong for immersion-style learning and pronunciation.
  • Memrise — excellent for vocabulary and real-world phrases.
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening; audio-focused.
  • LingQ — great for reading/listening with lots of authentic content.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for language exchange with native speakers.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall for most people: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for real conversation: HelloTalk
  • Best for vocabulary: Memrise

If you tell me the language and your goal (speaking, travel, exams, etc.), I can recommend the best one or two.

What language learning apps are worth trying?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

A few language apps are genuinely worth trying, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for daily habit-building and beginner vocabulary.
  • Babbel — better than Duolingo for practical phrases and grammar.
  • Busuu — good all-around app, with real native-speaker feedback.
  • Rosetta Stone — strong if you like immersive, no-English-method learning.
  • Memrise — great for listening and real-world video clips.
  • Mango Languages — solid for conversational basics, often free through libraries.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and pronunciation, audio-first.
  • Anki — best for serious flashcards and spaced repetition.

If you want the shortest shortlist:

  • Beginners: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Speaking: Pimsleur
  • Vocabulary memorization: Anki
  • Listening/real speech: Memrise

If you tell me which language you’re learning and your budget, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

A few language apps are genuinely worth trying, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for habit-building and beginner vocab; very easy to stick with.
  • Babbel — better for practical phrases and grammar; more structured than Duolingo.
  • Busuu — good all-around app with speaking/writing feedback from native speakers.
  • Rosetta Stone — solid if you like immersion-style learning and pronunciation practice.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and listening, especially if you want to learn on the go.
  • Memrise — strong for vocab and real-world audio/video clips.

If you want the best combo:

  • Beginners: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Speaking-focused: Pimsleur + Busuu
  • Vocabulary/flashcards: Memrise

If you tell me the language and your goal (travel, conversation, school, etc.), I can narrow it down to the best 2–3.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

A few language apps are actually worth your time, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for habit-building and beginner practice. Fun, easy to stick with.
  • Babbel — better for practical conversation and structured lessons.
  • Busuu — good mix of lessons plus native-speaker feedback.
  • Rosetta Stone — solid if you like immersion-style learning and don’t mind the slower pace.
  • Memrise — great for vocabulary and real-world phrases.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and listening, especially if you want audio-first learning.
  • LingQ — strong for reading/listening with lots of input from real content.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for chatting with native speakers.

If I had to pick just a few:

  • Duolingo for consistency
  • Babbel for structured learning
  • Pimsleur for speaking
  • HelloTalk for real conversation

If you tell me which language you’re learning and your goal (speaking, travel, exams, etc.), I can narrow it down.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

A few worth trying, depending on how you learn:

  • Duolingo — best for habit-building and beginner vocab.
  • Babbel — better for structured lessons and practical grammar.
  • Busuu — solid all-around, with feedback from native speakers.
  • Memrise — good for vocab and real-world phrases.
  • Rosetta Stone — immersive style, good if you like learning by context.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and listening, especially on the go.
  • Mondly — fun, lightweight practice with chatbot-style exercises.
  • LingQ — strong for reading/listening with lots of real content.
  • Drops — great for visual vocab drills, short sessions.
  • HelloTalk or Tandem — best for language exchange with native speakers.

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Beginner: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Speaking: Pimsleur + HelloTalk
  • Vocabulary: Memrise or Drops
  • All-around: Busuu

If you tell me the language and your goal (speaking, travel, exam, etc.), I can narrow it down.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

A few language apps are genuinely worth trying, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for habit-building and beginner practice; very gamified.
  • Babbel — better for practical conversation and grammar than Duolingo.
  • Busuu — strong structured courses, plus native speaker feedback.
  • Memrise — good for vocabulary and real-world phrases.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and listening, especially if you want audio-first learning.
  • Rosetta Stone — immersive and polished, good if you like learning without translations.
  • Anki — best for serious flashcard-based memorization; not a course, but very effective.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — great for chatting with native speakers.

If you want the simplest picks:

  • Beginner: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Speaking-focused: Pimsleur + HelloTalk
  • Vocabulary-heavy: Anki + Memrise

If you want, I can also recommend the best app based on the language you’re learning.

What are the best language learning apps for adults?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps for adults:

  • Duolingo — Best for habit-building and beginners. Gamified, easy to stick with.
  • Babbel — Best for practical conversation and structured lessons. Very adult-friendly.
  • Rosetta Stone — Best for immersive learning and pronunciation.
  • Busuu — Best for feedback and short, useful lessons; good community corrections.
  • Pimsleur — Best for speaking and listening, especially if you want audio-first learning.
  • Memrise — Best for vocabulary and real-world phrases with video clips.
  • Mondly — Good all-around app with chatbot-style practice and lots of languages.
  • italki — Best if you want live 1-on-1 tutoring with real teachers.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — Best for language exchange with native speakers.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best free option: Duolingo
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur or italki
  • Best for fast progress: Babbel + italki

If you tell me the language you want to learn, I can narrow it down to the best 2–3 apps for that specific language.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps for adults:

  • Duolingo — Best for daily habit-building and beginners. Fun, easy to stick with, but limited for real conversation.
  • Babbel — Best overall for practical, structured learning. Strong on grammar, vocabulary, and useful phrases.
  • Busuu — Great for guided lessons plus feedback from native speakers.
  • Rosetta Stone — Good for immersion-style learning and pronunciation practice.
  • Memrise — Excellent for vocabulary and listening with real-world video clips.
  • LingQ — Best for reading/listening with lots of native content.
  • Pimsleur — Best for speaking and listening if you want audio-only lessons.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — Best for chatting with native speakers.

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best free option: Duolingo
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for real conversation: HelloTalk

If you tell me the language you want to learn and your budget, I can narrow it to the top 3.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best language-learning apps for adults, by use case:

  • Best overall: Babbel — structured lessons, practical conversation, great for beginners and adults who want clear progress.
  • Best for speaking/listening: Pimsleur — audio-first, excellent for commuting and building speaking confidence.
  • Best free option: Duolingo — fun, easy to stick with, good for habit-building (less strong for real conversation).
  • Best for conversation practice: italki — pay for live tutors, best if you want real speaking improvement.
  • Best for serious self-study: LingQ — great for reading/listening with lots of native content.
  • Best balanced app: Busuu — strong lessons plus community feedback on writing/speaking.
  • Best for vocab and immersion: Memrise — useful for real-world phrases and pronunciation.
  • Best for pure repetition/fluency drills: Rosetta Stone — immersive style, good if you like a no-English approach.
  • Best chat practice: HelloTalk or Tandem — language exchange with native speakers.

Quick picks:

  • Want structure? Babbel
  • Want to speak fast? Pimsleur + italki
  • Want free and easy? Duolingo
  • Want real-world input? LingQ

If you tell me the language you want to learn and your budget, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 apps.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps for adults, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for habit-building and beginners

Great for daily practice, gamified lessons, and staying consistent.

  • Babbel — best for practical conversation

Strong for real-world phrases, grammar, and structured lessons.

  • Busuu — best for feedback and community correction

You can get corrections from native speakers.

  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersive learning

Good if you like learning through images, audio, and repetition.

  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and listening

Useful for natural speech clips and memorization.

  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening

Excellent if you want to build conversational skills fast, especially on the go.

  • Mango Languages — best for travelers and libraries

Often free through public libraries; very practical dialogue-based lessons.

  • LingQ — best for reading and content-based learning

Great if you want to learn through articles, podcasts, and books.

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best free option: Duolingo
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for feedback: Busuu

If you tell me the language you want to learn, I can rank the best apps for that specific language.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language learning apps for adults, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for getting started and building a daily habit
  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and structured lessons
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersive learning and pronunciation
  • Busuu — best for feedback from native speakers
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening, especially on the go
  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and real-life video clips
  • LingQ — best for reading/listening with lots of native content
  • italki — best for 1-on-1 lessons with tutors
  • Preply — another strong tutor marketplace, similar to italki
  • Mango Languages — best if your library or employer gives free access

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best free app: Duolingo
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur or italki

If you tell me the language you want to learn, I can narrow it down further.

What are the best language learning apps for kids? 170/mo
1/5 mention 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps for kids:

  1. Duolingo ABC (ages 3–6)

Best for early reading and simple language foundations. Very kid-friendly and free.

  1. Duolingo (ages 7+)

Good for older kids who want short, game-like lessons in many languages.

  1. Gus on the Go (ages 3–8)

Great for younger children; teaches vocabulary through stories and animations.

  1. LingoKids (ages 3–8)

One of the strongest overall options for kids, with songs, games, and structured lessons.

  1. Rosetta Stone Kids

Best for immersive learning and pronunciation practice; more structured than game-based apps.

  1. Cudoo Kids

Offers a variety of languages with simple lessons and kid-friendly activities.

  1. Mango Languages

Good for families and older kids; includes pronunciation and practical phrases.

Best picks by goal:

  • Best overall: LingoKids
  • Best free option: Duolingo ABC
  • Best for very young kids: Gus on the Go
  • Best for older kids: Duolingo

If you want, I can also rank them by age, price, or which language your child wants to learn.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps for kids:

  1. Duolingo ABC / Duolingo Kids
    • Best for: young kids and beginners
    • Fun, game-like lessons; very easy to use
  2. Gus on the Go
    • Best for: preschool to early elementary
    • Cute character-driven lessons, good vocabulary starter app
  3. LingoKids
    • Best for: ages 3–8
    • Strong all-around app with songs, games, and interactive lessons
  4. Mango Kids
    • Best for: slightly older kids who want real phrases
    • Clear lessons and solid language coverage
  5. Clever Kids University / Muzzy
    • Best for: younger children
    • More story-based and immersive, good for keeping attention
  6. Rosetta Stone Kids
    • Best for: structured learning
    • Good pronunciation practice and simple visual learning

Top picks by goal:

  • Most fun: LingoKids
  • Best for absolute beginners: Duolingo ABC / Gus on the Go
  • Best for older kids: Mango Kids or Rosetta Stone Kids

If you tell me your child’s age and the language you want, I can narrow it down to the best 2–3 options.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps for kids:

  1. Duolingo Kids
    • Best for: ages 5–12
    • Fun, game-like lessons with lots of repetition
    • Good for building basic vocabulary and simple phrases
  2. Gus on the Go
    • Best for: preschool to early elementary
    • Very kid-friendly, simple games and cartoons
    • Great for early vocabulary in many languages
  3. Lingokids
    • Best for: ages 2–8
    • Strong for younger kids, with songs, videos, and interactive games
    • Mostly English-focused, but great for language exposure and early learning habits
  4. Muzzy BBC
    • Best for: younger kids
    • Immersive story-based learning
    • Good if you want a more structured, curriculum-style program
  5. Babbel for Kids / Babbel
    • Best for: older kids and teens
    • More structured and practical than game-based apps
    • Better for serious language learning
  6. Rosetta Stone Kids
    • Best for: kids who do well with visual learning
    • Immersive method, strong pronunciation practice
    • Good for building listening and speaking confidence
  7. Mondly Kids
    • Best for: beginner learners
    • Bright interface, short lessons, and voice practice
    • Good for keeping attention with quick sessions

Best overall for most kids: Duolingo Kids or Lingokids Best for preschoolers: Gus on the Go Best for structured learning: Rosetta Stone Kids or Babbel

If you want, I can also give you the best app by age or best app for a specific language like Spanish, French, or Mandarin.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best language learning apps for kids, by age/use case:

  • Duolingo Kids — Best overall for young beginners; very game-like and easy to use.
  • LingoKids — Best for ages 3–8; strong mix of songs, stories, and interactive lessons.
  • Gus on the Go — Best for early vocabulary; simple, kid-friendly, and good for younger children.
  • Mango Languages for Kids — Best for structured learning; great pronunciation and beginner phrases.
  • Rosetta Stone Kids Lingo Letter Sounds — Best for pronunciation and phonics-style learning.
  • PBS Kids Games — Best free option for younger kids; not a full language app, but useful for early exposure depending on language content.
  • Monkey Junior — Best for very young learners; lots of visual learning and repetition.
  • Bilingual Child / Little Pim — Best for toddlers; focused on basic words and everyday phrases.

Top picks by age:

  • Ages 2–5: Little Pim, Monkey Junior, LingoKids
  • Ages 6–9: Duolingo Kids, Gus on the Go, Rosetta Stone Kids
  • Ages 10+: Duolingo, Mango Languages, Busuu

If you want, I can also give you the best apps by language (Spanish, French, Mandarin, etc.) or the best free ones.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps for kids:

  • Duolingo ABC – Best for young beginners (reading, letters, basic skills). Very kid-friendly and free.
  • Duolingo Kids – Good for older kids who are starting a second language in a gamified way.
  • Gus on the Go – Great for little kids; teaches vocabulary with cute stories and games.
  • Muzzy – One of the best for full immersion and younger children; strong for Spanish, French, German, etc.
  • Lingokids – Excellent all-around app for ages 2–8; fun lessons, songs, and activities.
  • Rosetta Stone Kids – Good for more structured learning, especially if you want a recognized curriculum.
  • FunEasyLearn – Better for vocabulary building with simple visuals and games.

Best picks by age:

  • Ages 2–5: Lingokids, Gus on the Go, Muzzy
  • Ages 6–10: Duolingo Kids, Lingokids, Rosetta Stone Kids
  • Reading focus: Duolingo ABC

If you want, I can also recommend the best app for Spanish, French, or Mandarin specifically.

Which language learning app is the best overall? 3,600/mo
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall: Babbel

If you want the best all-around language learning app for most adults, Babbel is usually the top pick because it has:

  • structured lessons
  • practical conversation focus
  • clear grammar explanations
  • less gimmicky progression than some competitors

Best alternatives by use case:

  • Duolingo — best free app and most fun for habit-building
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning
  • Busuu — great for feedback and community correction
  • Memrise — strong for vocab and real-world phrases

Bottom line:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best free app: Duolingo

If you tell me which language you want to learn and your budget, I can give a more precise recommendation.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

Best overall: Babbel

If you want the best all-around language learning app, I’d pick Babbel. It’s the strongest combo of:

  • clear lesson structure
  • practical real-world phrases
  • solid grammar explanations
  • good pacing for beginners and intermediate learners

Best free option: Duolingo Great for habit-building and casual learning, but less effective for deeper fluency.

If you want speaking practice: Pimsleur Excellent for pronunciation and listening, especially if you learn best by audio.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best free: Duolingo
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur

If you tell me the language you want to learn, I can give you the single best app for that specific language.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall: Duolingo

Why it wins:

  • easiest to stick with
  • strongest gamification
  • great for daily habits and beginners
  • broad language selection
  • polished app experience

Best alternatives by goal:

  • Babbel — best for practical conversation and structured lessons
  • Busuu — best for feedback from native speakers
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking/listening
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning
  • Memrise — best for vocab and real-world phrases

If you want one pick for most people, I’d choose Duolingo. If your goal is actual speaking faster, Babbel is often the better buy.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall: Babbel.

Why: it’s the best balance of structured lessons, real-world conversation, and overall quality for most learners. It’s better than Duolingo for actually building usable language skills, while still being easy to stick with.

Quick picks by use case:

  • Babbel — best overall for serious learners
  • Duolingo — best for free, gamified daily practice
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning
  • Busuu — best for feedback and community corrections
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening

If you want just one app to recommend to most people: Babbel.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Best overall: Babbel

It’s the best all-around pick for most learners because it has:

  • clear lesson structure
  • practical, real-world dialogue
  • better grammar teaching than most apps
  • less gimmicky than Duolingo

Quick picks by use case:

  • Babbel — best overall
  • Duolingo — best free option / habit builder
  • Busuu — best for feedback and community corrections
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersive style
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening

If you want, I can also recommend the best app for your target language.

What are the best free language learning apps? 6,600/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best free language-learning apps, by category:

  • Duolingo — best overall for beginners and daily habit-building
  • Anki — best for memorizing vocab fast with flashcards
  • HelloTalk — best for chatting with native speakers
  • Tandem — great for language exchange and voice/text practice
  • Memrise — good for listening and common phrases
  • Busuu — solid structured lessons; free version is limited
  • Mango Languages — free through many libraries
  • LingQ — good for reading/listening with lots of input; free tier is limited
  • Clozemaster — best for learning words in context
  • Drops — fun for visual vocab drills; free version has time limits
Best picks
  • Best overall: Duolingo
  • Best for speaking: HelloTalk or Tandem
  • Best for vocabulary: Anki
  • Best if your library offers it: Mango Languages

If you want, I can also give you the best free apps for a specific language like Spanish, Japanese, Korean, or French.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best free language-learning apps:

  • Duolingo — best for easy daily practice and gamified lessons
  • Memrise — great for real-world phrases and listening practice
  • busuu — solid structured lessons; free plan is limited but useful
  • Anki — best for custom flashcards and memorization
  • Tandem — best for chatting with native speakers
  • HelloTalk — similar to Tandem, strong for language exchange
  • Language Transfer — excellent free audio courses, especially for grammar
  • Beelinguapp — good for reading side-by-side in two languages
  • Clozemaster — great for vocabulary in context
  • LingoDeer — especially good for Asian languages; free lessons are limited

If you want the best all-around free option, I’d start with Duolingo + Anki + HelloTalk.

If you want, I can also recommend the best free apps by language (Spanish, French, Japanese, etc.).

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Best free language-learning apps depend on what you want:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit-building. Very polished, gamified, free tier is strong.
  • Anki — best for vocabulary memorization with flashcards. Free on desktop/Android; iPhone app is paid.
  • Memrise — good for useful phrases and listening; free version is decent, but some content is locked.
  • HelloTalk — best for speaking/chatting with native speakers. Free tier lets you practice via text/voice.
  • Tandem — similar to HelloTalk, great for language exchange and real conversations.
  • Busuu — solid structured lessons; free plan is limited, but still useful for basic study.
  • Clozemaster — excellent for vocabulary in context once you know the basics.

If you want just 3:

  1. Duolingo for starting
  2. Anki for retention
  3. HelloTalk for speaking practice

If you want, I can also recommend the best free app for Spanish, French, Japanese, or Korean specifically.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Best free language learning apps:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit-building.
  • Anki — best for vocabulary memorization with flashcards.
  • Memrise — good for phrase practice; free plan is limited but useful.
  • HelloTalk — best for chatting with native speakers.
  • Tandem — similar to HelloTalk, great for language exchange.
  • Busuu — solid lessons; free version has limited access.
  • Clozemaster — great for intermediate learners who want sentence practice.

If you want the best overall free combo, I’d use: Duolingo + Anki + HelloTalk.

If you tell me the language you’re learning, I can narrow it down to the best 3.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Best free language-learning apps:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and habit-building; very polished.
  • Anki — best for vocabulary memorization with flashcards; totally customizable.
  • Busuu — good structured lessons; free tier is limited but useful.
  • Memrise — great for practical phrases and listening; free content available.
  • HelloTalk — best for speaking/chatting with native speakers.
  • Tandem — similar to HelloTalk; good for language exchange.
  • Clozemaster — best for intermediate vocabulary in context.
  • LingQ — great for reading/listening, with a limited free version.
  • BBC Languages / language resources — good supplemental free material, depending on the language.
  • Quizlet — useful for making your own vocab sets.

If you want the single best free app, I’d pick:

  • Duolingo for most beginners
  • Anki for serious vocab learning
  • HelloTalk for speaking practice

If you tell me the language you’re learning, I can rank the best free apps for that specific language.

What are the best paid language learning apps? 30/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best paid language-learning apps, depending on how you like to learn:

  • Babbel — Best overall for practical conversation and structured lessons. Great for adults who want real-world speaking skills.
  • Rosetta Stone — Best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation. Very polished, but slower and more repetitive.
  • Pimsleur — Best for speaking and listening. Excellent if you want to learn on the go through audio lessons.
  • Busuu Premium — Best mix of lessons + community feedback. Good grammar, vocabulary, and speaking practice.
  • LingQ — Best for reading/listening immersion. Strong if you like learning from real content like articles, podcasts, and books.
  • italki — Best for 1-on-1 tutoring. Not a course app, but often the fastest way to improve speaking.
  • Mondly Premium — Best for casual learners who want short, gamified lessons.
  • Babbel Live — Best if you want live classes from the Babbel ecosystem.

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for immersion: LingQ
  • Best for tutoring: italki

If you want, I can also rank these by best for Spanish, French, Japanese, or travel.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best paid language-learning apps, depending on your goal:

  • Babbel — Best overall for practical conversation and structured lessons.
  • Busuu Premium — Great if you want feedback from native speakers and a solid course path.
  • Rosetta Stone — Best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation.
  • Pimsleur — Excellent for speaking and listening, especially for beginners.
  • LingQ Premium — Best for reading/listening with lots of real content.
  • italki — Best if you want live 1:1 lessons with tutors.
  • Mango Languages — Good for everyday phrases and travel language.
  • LingoDeer — Strong choice for Asian languages and grammar-heavy learning.
  • Memrise Pro — Nice for vocabulary and video-based exposure to native speakers.

If you want the best single pick, I’d usually say:

  • Babbel for most learners
  • Pimsleur if speaking is your main priority
  • italki if you want the fastest progress with real tutoring

If you want, I can also rank them by best for beginners, travel, speaking, or budget.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best paid language-learning apps, depending on your goal:

  • Babbel — Best overall for practical conversation and grammar
  • Busuu Premium — Best for structured lessons + native speaker feedback
  • Rosetta Stone — Best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation
  • Duolingo Max — Best for gamified learning with AI help
  • Pimsleur — Best for speaking and listening on the go
  • Mondly — Best for broad language selection and VR/AR extras
  • LingQ Premium — Best for reading/listening with real content
  • italki — Best if you want 1-on-1 tutoring with real teachers

Quick picks:

  • Beginner: Babbel or Busuu
  • Speaking fast: Pimsleur
  • Serious self-study: Busuu + LingQ
  • Tutor-based learning: italki
  • Most fun: Duolingo Max

If you tell me which language and your budget, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best paid language-learning apps, depending on how you like to study:

  • Babbel — best for structured lessons and practical conversation
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation
  • Busuu Premium — best for feedback from native speakers
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening
  • LingQ Premium — best for reading and vocabulary building with real content
  • Duolingo Super — best if you already like Duolingo but want fewer limits/ads
  • Mango Languages — best for cultural notes and beginner-friendly lessons
  • Mondly Premium — best for bite-sized practice and AR/chat features

Best overall for most people: Babbel Best for speaking: Pimsleur Best value: Busuu Premium

If you tell me the language you want to learn, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 apps for that language.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the best paid language-learning apps are:

  • Babbel — best for structured lessons and practical conversation
  • Busuu Premium — great for feedback from native speakers
  • Rosetta Stone — strong for immersion-style learning and pronunciation
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening, especially on the go
  • LingQ Premium — excellent for reading/listening with lots of real content
  • FluentU — great for learning through videos and authentic media
  • Clozemaster Pro — best as a vocabulary booster after the basics
  • Duolingo Max — useful if you like gamified learning and AI explanations
Best picks by goal
  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for feedback: Busuu Premium
  • Best for immersion: Rosetta Stone
  • Best for real-world content: LingQ Premium

If you tell me which language you want to learn and your budget, I can narrow it down to the best 2–3 options.

What are the best language learning apps for Spanish? 10/mo
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Top picks for learning Spanish:

  1. Babbel – best for structured lessons and practical conversation
    • Strong grammar explanations
    • Good for beginners to intermediate learners
  2. Duolingo – best free option and daily practice
    • Gamified, easy to stick with
    • Great for building a habit, less strong on speaking
  3. Busuu – best for feedback from native speakers
    • Solid lesson structure
    • Speaking/writing exercises get corrections
  4. MosaLingua – best for vocabulary and phrases
    • Good for memorizing useful Spanish fast
    • Strong for travel and everyday conversation
  5. Pimsleur – best for speaking and listening
    • Audio-first, excellent pronunciation practice
    • Great if you want to learn on the go
  6. Rosetta Stone – best immersion-style learning
    • Good for pronunciation and visual learning
    • Less explicit grammar help

If you want just one:

  • Babbel if you want the best overall structured app
  • Duolingo if you want free and fun
  • Pimsleur if speaking is your main goal

If you want, I can also rank the best apps by beginners, travel, or speaking fluency.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best Spanish-learning apps, depending on how you like to study:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit building

Fun, easy, and great for vocabulary and basic grammar.

  • Babbel — best for practical conversation

Strong structured lessons and real-world phrases.

  • Busuu — best all-around app with feedback

Good lessons plus corrections from native speakers.

  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening

Excellent if you want to sound natural and improve pronunciation.

  • Rosetta Stone — best immersive method

Strong for intuitive learning without lots of English explanations.

  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and listening to native speakers

Good for everyday Spanish and short practice sessions.

  • LingQ — best for reading and input-heavy learning

Great if you want to learn through articles, stories, and audio.

If you want the simplest recommendation:

  • Beginner: Duolingo + Babbel
  • Speaking focus: Pimsleur
  • Best overall: Busuu

If you want, I can also give you the best free apps or the best apps for intermediate Spanish.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best apps for learning Spanish, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for free daily practice and habit-building
  • Babbel — best for structured lessons and practical conversation
  • Busuu — best for feedback from native speakers
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening, especially on the go
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning
  • FluentU — best for learning with real Spanish videos
  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and phrases with native audio

Best overall for most learners: Babbel Best free option: Duolingo Best for speaking: Pimsleur

If you want, I can also give you the best app based on your level (beginner/intermediate) or budget.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best Spanish-learning apps, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit-building; very easy to start.
  • Babbel — best all-around for structured lessons and practical conversation.
  • Busuu — great for grammar plus feedback from native speakers.
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening; excellent if you want to talk fast.
  • Rosetta Stone — strong immersion-style learning; good for pronunciation.
  • Memrise — great for vocabulary and real-world phrases.
  • LingQ — best for reading and listening with lots of Spanish content.
  • Clozemaster — excellent for advanced vocab in context.
  • Anki — best flashcard app for serious spaced repetition.

Best picks by type:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best free option: Duolingo
  • Best for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for vocabulary: Memrise or Anki
  • Best for immersion: LingQ

If you want, I can also give you the best app for your level (beginner/intermediate/advanced) or a top 3 combo to use together.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best Spanish-learning apps, depending on what you want:

  • Duolingo — best for absolute beginners and daily habit-building

Fun, gamified, easy to stick with.

  • Babbel — best overall for structured learning

Strong grammar, practical phrases, and better explanations than Duolingo.

  • Busuu — best for feedback and speaking practice

Includes community corrections from native speakers.

  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning

Good if you like learning by context instead of translation.

  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and real-world Spanish

Great audio/video from native speakers.

  • Clozemaster — best for intermediate learners

Excellent for learning Spanish in full sentence context.

  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and pronunciation

Audio-first, great for commuting or hands-free practice.

  • LingQ — best for reading/listening with real content

Good if you want to learn from articles, podcasts, and books.

My quick picks:

  • Beginner: Babbel or Duolingo
  • Speaking: Pimsleur or Busuu
  • Vocabulary: Memrise
  • Intermediate: Clozemaster or LingQ

If you want, I can also rank the best free apps or the best apps for Latin American Spanish vs. Spain Spanish.

What are the best language learning apps for English?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best apps for learning English:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily habit-building
  • Babbel — best for structured lessons and practical conversation
  • Busuu — best for feedback from native speakers
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning and pronunciation
  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and real-world phrases
  • ELSA Speak — best for improving English pronunciation
  • HelloTalk — best for chatting with native speakers
  • BBC Learning English — best free app for grammar, listening, and news-based English

Best overall: Babbel Best free option: Duolingo Best for speaking: ELSA Speak or HelloTalk

If you want, I can also rank them by beginner, intermediate, or advanced level.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best apps for learning English:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily practice
  • Babbel — best for structured lessons and practical grammar
  • Busuu — good for conversation practice and feedback
  • Rosetta Stone — strong for immersion-style learning
  • Memrise — great for vocabulary and real-life phrases
  • HelloTalk — best for speaking with native English speakers
  • BBC Learning English — excellent free content for grammar, listening, and pronunciation
  • ELSA Speak — best for improving English pronunciation

Best overall picks:

  • Beginner: Duolingo
  • Serious study: Babbel
  • Speaking practice: HelloTalk or Busuu
  • Pronunciation: ELSA Speak

If you want, I can also give you the best free apps or the best apps for speaking, grammar, or vocabulary.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Best language-learning apps for learning English:

  • Duolingo – best for beginners and daily practice
  • Babbel – best for structured lessons and practical grammar
  • Busuu – great for feedback from native speakers
  • Rosetta Stone – strong for immersion and pronunciation
  • EF English Live – best if you want live teacher-led classes
  • Cambly – great for speaking with native tutors anytime
  • Memrise – useful for vocabulary and real-world phrases
  • BBC Learning English – excellent free content for listening and grammar

Best overall picks:

  • Beginner: Duolingo
  • Serious learner: Babbel
  • Speaking practice: Cambly
  • Free quality option: BBC Learning English

If you want, I can also rank them by price, speaking, or business English.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps for English, depending on your goal:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily practice
  • Babbel — best for structured lessons and practical conversation
  • Busuu — best for feedback from native speakers
  • Rosetta Stone — best for immersion-style learning
  • Memrise — best for vocabulary and real-world phrases
  • BBC Learning English — best free app for grammar, listening, and news-based English
  • Cambly — best for live tutoring with native English speakers
  • italki — best for affordable 1-on-1 lessons

My top picks:

  • Beginner: Duolingo + BBC Learning English
  • Serious learner: Babbel + Busuu
  • Speaking practice: Cambly or italki

If you want, I can also rank them by free vs paid, speaking, or business English.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language learning apps for learning English:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners and daily practice; very easy to use.
  • Babbel — best for structured lessons and practical conversation.
  • Busuu — good for speaking practice and feedback from native speakers.
  • Rosetta Stone — strong for immersion-style learning and pronunciation.
  • Memrise — great for vocabulary and real-world video clips.
  • BBC Learning English — excellent free app/content for grammar, news, and pronunciation.
  • ELSA Speak — best for improving English pronunciation and accent.

Best overall picks:

  • Babbel for serious learning
  • Duolingo for casual practice
  • ELSA Speak for speaking/pronunciation

If you want, I can also rank them by free vs paid, or by beginner/intermediate/advanced.

What are the best language learning apps for travel?
4/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

Best language apps for travel:

  • Babbel — best for practical travel phrases and short lessons.
  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and listening on the go.
  • Duolingo — best free option for quick daily practice.
  • Memrise — good for real-world audio and useful phrases.
  • Drops — great for vocabulary, especially visual learners.
  • Google Translate — essential for live translation, camera text, and conversation mode.
  • Lingopie — useful if you want immersive listening before your trip.
  • Speakly — strong for the most useful travel vocabulary first.

If you want just 3 for travel: Babbel + Pimsleur + Google Translate.

If you tell me the language and trip length, I can narrow it down.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For travel, the best language apps are usually the ones that help you speak quickly and look up phrases on the go:

  • Pimsleur — best for speaking and pronunciation; great if you want useful travel conversation fast.
  • Babbel — best overall for practical travel phrases and short lessons.
  • Duolingo — best free option; good for basics, but less travel-focused.
  • Google Translate — best for real-time use; text, camera translation, and conversation mode.
  • LingQ — good if you want to build vocabulary before a trip.
  • Memrise — useful for memorizing common phrases with native-speaker audio.
  • Busuu — solid all-around app with practical dialogue practice.

Best combo for travel:

  • Pimsleur for speaking
  • Google Translate for emergencies and menus/signs
  • Babbel or Duolingo for daily practice

If you tell me the language and where you’re traveling, I can recommend the best 2–3 apps specifically.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Best language-learning apps for travel:

  • Duolingo — best for quick daily practice and basic phrases.
  • Babbel — better for practical travel conversations and grammar.
  • Busuu — good for structured lessons and pronunciation help.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and listening on the go.
  • MosaLingua — strong for travel-specific vocabulary and flashcards.
  • Google Translate — not a learning app, but essential for live translation, camera text, and conversation mode.

If you want the best combo for travel:

  • Duolingo + Google Translate for free/easy use
  • Babbel + Pimsleur if you want to actually speak confidently

If you tell me the language and where you’re traveling, I can recommend the best one for that trip.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Best language apps for travel:

  • Pimsleur — best for speaking fast. Great audio lessons for ordering food, directions, taxis.
  • Babbel — best overall for practical travel phrases and short lessons.
  • Mango Languages — very good for travel conversation; often free through libraries.
  • Duolingo — best free option for basics and vocabulary, less useful for real conversation.
  • Google Translate — essential travel companion for live text, voice, and camera translation.
  • Memrise — good for useful phrases with real native-speaker clips.
  • Busuu — solid for short, practical lessons and feedback.

If you want the simplest pick:

  • Best overall: Babbel
  • Best speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best free: Duolingo + Google Translate

If you tell me the language and your trip style, I can narrow it down to the best 2–3 apps.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Best language-learning apps for travel:

  1. Duolingo — best for quick, daily basics and staying motivated.
  2. Babbel — best for practical travel phrases and clearer grammar.
  3. Pimsleur — best for speaking and pronunciation before a trip.
  4. Rosetta Stone — good for immersive learning and pronunciation.
  5. Busuu — solid all-rounder with useful real-world dialogue practice.
  6. Memrise — great for travel vocabulary and natural-sounding clips.
  7. Google Translate — essential travel companion for live translation and camera text.

Best picks by use:

  • Fastest start: Duolingo
  • Best for conversation: Pimsleur
  • Best for travel phrases: Babbel
  • Best backup while traveling: Google Translate

If you want, I can also rank the best apps for a specific language like Spanish, French, or Japanese.

What are the best language learning apps with speaking practice?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best language-learning apps for speaking practice:

  • Pimsleur — best for speaking from day one; very audio-heavy and great for pronunciation and recall.
  • Babbel — strong for practical conversation; includes speech recognition and structured speaking exercises.
  • Rosetta Stone — good for pronunciation and immersion-style speaking drills.
  • Busuu — useful because you can get speaking feedback from native speakers.
  • ELSA Speak — excellent for English pronunciation specifically; very precise feedback.
  • Duolingo Max — has speaking practice plus AI conversation features in supported languages.
  • HelloTalk — best for real conversation with native speakers via chat, voice notes, and calls.
  • Tandem — similar to HelloTalk; great for live speaking exchanges.
  • Mondly — decent for conversational practice and speech recognition.
  • italki — not an app in the same sense, but one of the best for actual speaking with tutors.

Best picks by goal:

  • Best overall for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for real conversation: HelloTalk or Tandem
  • Best for pronunciation: ELSA Speak
  • Best structured course with speaking: Babbel
  • Best native-speaker feedback: Busuu

If you tell me which language you’re learning and your level, I can narrow it down to the top 3.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best language-learning apps for speaking practice:

  1. Pimsleur — Best for speaking from day one
    • Audio-first lessons
    • Strong repetition and pronunciation practice
    • Great if you want to speak out loud a lot
  2. Babbel — Best all-around structured app
    • Speaking exercises built into lessons
    • Clear grammar and conversation focus
    • Good for practical, everyday phrases
  3. Busuu — Best for feedback on speaking
    • Speaking prompts
    • Community feedback from native speakers
    • Good balance of lessons and practice
  4. Rosetta Stone — Best for pronunciation
    • Strong speech recognition
    • Helps train accent and pronunciation
    • Very immersive, less translation-based
  5. Speak — Best for AI conversation practice
    • Built around talking with AI
    • Good for low-pressure speaking drills
    • Best if you want lots of speaking time
  6. Duolingo — Best free option with light speaking practice
    • Quick speaking exercises
    • Easy to use daily
    • Good starter app, but not the strongest for real conversation
  7. HelloTalk / Tandem — Best for real speaking with native speakers
    • Voice messages, calls, and chat
    • Great for conversation exchange
    • More social, less structured

Best picks by goal:

  • Most speaking practice: Pimsleur, Speak
  • Best pronunciation: Rosetta Stone
  • Best structured course: Babbel, Busuu
  • Best real conversation: HelloTalk, Tandem

If you want, I can also recommend the best app for your target language (Spanish, French, Japanese, etc.).

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language-learning apps with solid speaking practice:

  • Pimsleur — best for speaking from day one; very audio-heavy and excellent for pronunciation and recall.
  • Babbel — great structured lessons with speaking drills and dialogue practice.
  • Rosetta Stone — strong immersion-style speaking and pronunciation practice.
  • Duolingo Max — good for casual practice; includes speaking exercises and AI roleplay in supported languages.
  • Busuu — includes speaking prompts and feedback from native speakers.
  • ELSA Speak — best for pronunciation training, especially for English.
  • Mondly — decent conversation practice and speech recognition.
  • Speak — focused on conversation practice, especially for real speaking fluency.
  • italki — best if you want actual live speaking with tutors, not just app exercises.
  • HelloTalk / Tandem — best for speaking with native speakers through chat and voice notes.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall for speaking: Pimsleur
  • Best for pronunciation: ELSA Speak
  • Best for real conversation: italki
  • Best all-around app: Babbel

If you want, I can also give you the best app by language or best free options.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best language-learning apps with real speaking practice:

  • Babbel — Best for practical speaking. Strong dialogue-based lessons and speech recognition.
  • Rosetta Stone — Best for immersion-style speaking. Good if you want to think and respond in the target language.
  • Pimsleur — Best for listening + speaking drills. Very strong for pronunciation and repetition.
  • Busuu — Best for feedback from native speakers. Great if you want corrections on your spoken/written exercises.
  • Duolingo Max — Best for casual practice. Has roleplay-style speaking with AI, but less structured than Babbel/Pimsleur.
  • ELSA Speak — Best for pronunciation. Excellent if your main goal is clearer accent and speaking accuracy.
  • italki — Best for live speaking with real tutors. Not a classic app, but the strongest option for actual conversation practice.

Quick pick:

  • Want structured speaking lessons: Babbel
  • Want heavy speaking repetition: Pimsleur
  • Want live conversation: italki
  • Want pronunciation help: ELSA Speak

If you tell me which language you’re learning and your budget, I can rank the best 3 for you.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best language learning apps with speaking practice:

  • Duolingo — best for beginners; lots of speaking prompts, easy to stick with.
  • Babbel — very good for practical conversation; stronger speaking focus than most.
  • Rosetta Stone — classic option with lots of pronunciation practice and voice recognition.
  • Busuu — good speaking exercises plus feedback from native speakers.
  • Pimsleur — excellent for speaking and listening; very conversation-driven.
  • Talkpal AI — great if you want AI conversation practice anytime.
  • HelloTalk — best for chatting with real native speakers by voice/text.
  • Tandem — similar to HelloTalk, strong for real speaking exchanges.

Best picks by goal:

  • Best overall speaking practice: Pimsleur
  • Best structured course: Babbel
  • Best free option: Duolingo
  • Best with real people: HelloTalk or Tandem
  • Best AI speaking practice: Talkpal AI

If you tell me the language you’re learning, I can narrow it down to the top 2–3 apps.

What are the best language learning apps with gamification?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best gamified language-learning apps:

  1. Duolingo
    • Best overall for gamification
    • Streaks, XP, leagues, hearts, daily quests
    • Great for beginners and staying consistent
  2. Busuu
    • Best for structured learning + motivation
    • Has goals, reviews, progress tracking, and community corrections
    • More serious than Duolingo, still engaging
  3. Memrise
    • Best for vocab + real-life phrases
    • Uses spaced repetition, videos of native speakers, and streaks
    • Feels game-like without being too childish
  4. Drops
    • Best for visual learners
    • Fast, swipe-based mini-games focused on vocabulary
    • Very polished and addictive
  5. LingQ
    • Best for reading/listening immersion
    • XP, streaks, and content tracking
    • Less “gamey,” but motivating if you like media-based learning

My quick picks:

  • Most fun: Duolingo
  • Best balance of fun + quality: Busuu
  • Best for vocab games: Drops
  • Best for memorization: Memrise

If you want, I can also rank them by best for Spanish/French/Japanese, or by free vs paid.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best gamified language-learning apps:

  • Duolingo — the most game-like overall: streaks, XP, leagues, hearts, daily quests. Best for beginners and casual practice.
  • Busuu — structured lessons plus badges, goals, and community feedback. Best if you want a more serious course feel.
  • Memrise — very strong for vocabulary with points, streaks, and fast-paced review. Great for memorization.
  • Drops — highly visual, swipe-based, and very gamified. Best for short daily vocab sessions.
  • LingoDeer — better for grammar-heavy languages like Japanese, Korean, and Chinese; still has progress rewards and lesson milestones.
  • Mondly — polished, game-like lessons with points and chatbots. Good for variety and quick practice.
  • Babbel — less gamey than Duolingo, but still has progress tracking and structured motivation. Best if you want quality lessons with light gamification.
  • Clozemaster — more of a game than a course; excellent for intermediate learners who want lots of sentence practice.

Best overall: Duolingo Best for vocabulary: Memrise or Drops Best for grammar/structure: LingoDeer or Busuu

If you tell me the language you want to learn, I can recommend the best app for that specific language.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best gamified language-learning apps:

  1. Duolingo — best overall for gamification
    • Streaks, XP, leagues, quests, rewards
    • Great for daily habit-building and beginners
  2. Memrise — best for fun vocabulary practice
    • Short lessons, spaced repetition, native-speaker video clips
    • Feels game-like without being too childish
  3. Busuu — best for structured progress + rewards
    • Level-based lessons, streaks, review goals
    • Also has real feedback from native speakers
  4. Drops — best for visual, quick sessions
    • Very game-like, swipe/tap format, 5-minute lessons
    • Strong for vocab, weaker for grammar and speaking
  5. LingoDeer — best for Asian languages with some gamification
    • Clear lesson structure, quizzes, progress tracking
    • Good if you want more depth than Duolingo

Best pick by goal:

  • Most addictive/gamified: Duolingo
  • Best vocab game: Memrise or Drops
  • Best balanced app: Busuu
  • Best for Korean/Japanese/Chinese basics: LingoDeer

If you want, I can also give you the best app for each language (Spanish, Japanese, French, etc.).

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Top gamified language-learning apps:

  1. Duolingo
    • Best for: motivation and daily practice
    • Why: streaks, XP, leagues, hearts, quick lessons
    • Good for: beginners and casual learners
  2. Busuu
    • Best for: structured learning with rewards
    • Why: goals, progress tracking, quizzes, community corrections
    • Good for: learners who want more grammar and real feedback
  3. Memrise
    • Best for: vocabulary building
    • Why: points, levels, spaced repetition, video clips, challenge-style review
    • Good for: memorizing words and phrases fast
  4. Babbel
    • Best for: practical conversation
    • Why: less “gamey” than Duolingo, but still has progress tracking and bite-sized lessons
    • Good for: serious learners who still want engaging lessons
  5. Mondly
    • Best for: flashy gamification
    • Why: streaks, badges, quizzes, chatbots, AR/VR-style features
    • Good for: learners who like a playful interface
  6. Rosetta Stone
    • Best for: immersive learning
    • Why: progress milestones and interactive exercises, though lighter on gamification
    • Good for: long-term, distraction-free study

Best overall: Duolingo Best for vocabulary: Memrise Best for structured learning: Busuu

If you want, I can rank them by best free apps, best for adults, or best for kids.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best language-learning apps with strong gamification:

  1. Duolingo

Best overall for addictive streaks, XP, leagues, and short lessons. Great for beginners and casual learners.

  1. Busuu

Good balance of gamified progress and real language learning. Has levels, goals, and native speaker feedback.

  1. Memrise

Best for vocabulary and phrases, with game-like review, points, and video clips from native speakers.

  1. Mondly

Very gamified with points, badges, daily challenges, and chat-style lessons. Strong for quick practice.

  1. Drops

Best for visual learners. Fast, colorful, swipe-based vocabulary games with daily time limits.

  1. LingQ

Less “gamey” than Duolingo, but still motivating with stats, streaks, and tracking for reading/listening.

If you want the most fun and addictive: Duolingo. If you want the best mix of gamification and usefulness: Busuu or Memrise.

If you want, I can also rank them by best for beginners, best for vocabulary, or best for serious fluency.

All 72 prompts run for Busuu

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Busuu known for?
  • 2 What are Busuu's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Busuu? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Busuu compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Busuu?
  • 6 What is a typical language learning app known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best language learning apps for complete beginners? discovery
  • 2 What language learning apps are best for intermediate learners? discovery
  • 3 What language learning apps work best for advanced learners? discovery
  • 4 What are the best language learning apps for busy adults? discovery
  • 5 What language learning apps are good for students? discovery
  • 6 What are the best language learning apps for kids and teens? discovery
  • 7 What language learning apps are best for speaking practice? discovery
  • 8 What are the best language learning apps for vocabulary building? discovery
  • 9 What language learning apps are good for grammar practice? discovery
  • 10 What are the best language learning apps for reading and listening? discovery
  • 11 What language learning apps are best for pronunciation? discovery
  • 12 What are the best language learning apps with spaced repetition? discovery
  • 13 What language learning apps are best for self-paced learning? discovery
  • 14 What are the best language learning apps for travel preparation? discovery
  • 15 What language learning apps are best for business language? discovery
  • 16 What are the best language learning apps for learning multiple languages? discovery
  • 17 What language learning apps are best for daily practice? discovery
  • 18 What are the best language learning apps with offline lessons? discovery
  • 19 What language learning apps are best for immersive learning? discovery
  • 20 What are the best language learning apps for quick progress? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to the most popular language learning app? comparison
  • 22 How do the top language learning apps compare for beginners? comparison
  • 23 What are the best alternatives to a gamified language app? comparison
  • 24 Which language learning apps are better than a flashcard-based app? comparison
  • 25 What are the best alternatives to a subscription language learning app? comparison
  • 26 Which language learning apps are best for speaking compared with app-based courses? comparison
  • 27 What are the best alternatives to a video-less language learning app? comparison
  • 28 How do language learning apps compare with online tutors? comparison
  • 29 What are the best alternatives to an app that focuses on vocabulary drills? comparison
  • 30 Which language learning apps are best for real conversation compared with classroom courses? comparison
  • 31 How can I stay consistent with language learning every day? problem
  • 32 How do I build vocabulary faster in a new language? problem
  • 33 How can I improve my pronunciation when learning a language? problem
  • 34 How do I practice speaking when I do not have a partner? problem
  • 35 How can I learn a language on a busy schedule? problem
  • 36 How do I stop forgetting words I learned? problem
  • 37 How can I get better at listening comprehension? problem
  • 38 How do I learn grammar without getting bored? problem
  • 39 How can I track my language learning progress? problem
  • 40 How do I make language study a daily habit? problem
  • 41 Are there any free language learning apps? transactional
  • 42 What do language learning apps cost per month? transactional
  • 43 Which language learning apps have a free trial? transactional
  • 44 What is the cheapest language learning app? transactional
  • 45 Are premium language learning apps worth it? transactional
  • 46 Which language learning apps offer offline access with a subscription? transactional
  • 47 Do any language learning apps have family plans? transactional
  • 48 Which language learning apps are best value for money? transactional
  • 49 Can I use a language learning app without paying? transactional
  • 50 What language learning apps are worth the subscription price? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best language learning apps? 22,200/mo
  • 2 What are the top language learning apps for beginners? 22,200/mo
  • 3 Which language learning apps are most popular? 70/mo
  • 4 What are the most recommended language learning apps? 20/mo
  • 5 What language learning apps are worth trying?
  • 6 What are the best language learning apps for adults?
  • 7 What are the best language learning apps for kids? 170/mo
  • 8 Which language learning app is the best overall? 3,600/mo
  • 9 What are the best free language learning apps? 6,600/mo
  • 10 What are the best paid language learning apps? 30/mo
  • 11 What are the best language learning apps for Spanish? 10/mo
  • 12 What are the best language learning apps for English?
  • 13 What are the best language learning apps for travel?
  • 14 What are the best language learning apps with speaking practice?
  • 15 What are the best language learning apps with gamification?