Speak German
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Break the language barrier with a smarter German dictionary, daily flashcards, and cultural insights—all in one place.
Learn German the smart way
A smarter dictionary, daily flashcards, and real-world examples — built for how German is actually spoken.
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Smart Dictionary
Thousands of words organized by theme. Tap any word to see its gender, plural, and natural example sentences in context.
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Daily Flashcards
SRS-based review with image-backed core cards. Learn vocabulary by seeing and hearing, not just reading definitions.
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Structured Lessons
Grammar guides and exercises built around real German usage — gendered nouns, the case system, and everyday phrases.
Explore German by topic
Deep-dives on grammar, vocabulary, culture, and how to learn efficiently.
German Modal Particles: doch, mal, ja, eben
German modal particles doch, mal, ja, and eben add attitude, not meaning. Before/after examples show how to use each one so your German stops sounding stiff.
German Body Parts: Vocabulary + How to Say It Hurts
Learn German body parts with der/die/das and plurals, plus the two ways to say something hurts: Mir tut der Kopf weh and Ich habe Kopfschmerzen.
Du vs. Sie: When to Use Each in German
Use Sie with strangers, elders, and at work; use du with friends, family, kids, and peers. Here's how to pick the right German you every time.
How Long Does It Take to Learn German? Real Timeline
How long to learn German? Conversational B1 takes ~6–12 months, fluent B2 about 1.5–2.5 years part-time. Here's an honest, hours-based timeline by CEFR level.