![]() This is definitely a must-have app from the moment you are a lower intermediate learner in my opinion.ĭon’t use it as a replacement for your regular reading practice in your textbooks, but use it to complement it whenever you have a few minutes to kill on the subway. Most free texts I read are fairy tails, so I hope the Korean material will also start covering topics such as science, news articles, etc (as is already available for many other languages). Right now, I can still survive with the free texts that are available, but I might consider going for premium if one day I run out of free material. I don’t know if you get anything in return.Įvery text I’ve tried also has high-quality audio so you can improve your listening skills as well.Īs a little bonus, you can save words you want to revise later. As a user, you can even provide them with your own texts if you have good translation skills to offer. The translations are of high quality as they are provided by humans rather than by machines. You indicate your mother tongue and your target language, and the app will display the versions of both languages in a split screen so you can compare whatever part you do not understand in the target language. In brief, it allows you to improve your reading skills by providing you with texts that have been translated into a variety of languages. I’ve now had time to use it for a couple of weeks while commuting, and I must say, it is one of the few truly useful language related apps I’ve been using. I recently mentioned Beelinguapp in a previous post without explaining what it is.
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