A1 Core Sprint
Start with the highest-signal beginner words before adding complexity.
Checkpoint
Recognize common everyday nouns, verbs, and function words.
Practice Missions
Use 6,276 scraped and organized German entries through focused missions: levels, articles, noun plurals, noun cases, context sentences, semantic links, verb prefixes, verbs, confusable meanings, topics, and long-tail recall.
6,276
Corpus words
15
Practice missions
4
Recommended starts
10-20
Questions per drill
Start with the highest-signal beginner words before adding complexity.
Checkpoint
Recognize common everyday nouns, verbs, and function words.
Turn example-backed entries into sentence-based recall.
Checkpoint
Identify the word practiced by a complete German example.
Practice stored synonyms and related words as connected memory neighborhoods.
Checkpoint
Choose which word is linked to the prompt in the semantic graph.
Work through a dense semantic cluster so related words reinforce each other.
Checkpoint
Recognize and translate words from one practical domain.
Use level-based missions when learners need a clean starting sequence.
Start with the highest-signal beginner words before adding complexity.
Checkpoint
Recognize common everyday nouns, verbs, and function words.
Broaden everyday vocabulary once the first layer feels familiar.
Checkpoint
Move from isolated words into practical sentence choices.
Build the vocabulary range needed for opinions, work, plans, and nuance.
Checkpoint
Turn recognition into flexible intermediate expression.
Target the areas where German learners usually lose points: semantic links, articles, plurals, forms, and close meanings.
Turn example-backed entries into sentence-based recall.
Checkpoint
Identify the word practiced by a complete German example.
Practice stored synonyms and related words as connected memory neighborhoods.
Checkpoint
Choose which word is linked to the prompt in the semantic graph.
Make noun gender visible and drill der, die, das directly.
Checkpoint
Answer article prompts without guessing from translation.
Practice noun plural forms from real corpus patterns instead of treating them as trivia.
Checkpoint
Recall the plural form for a noun before seeing answer options.
Practice nominative, accusative, dative, and genitive noun forms from real declension tables.
Checkpoint
Choose the exact case form instead of only recognizing the base noun.
Practice verbs that have conjugation data, not just translations.
Checkpoint
Complete present-tense prompts with the correct form.
Practice German prefixes like be-, ver-, an-, auf-, and zurück- as meaning signals.
Checkpoint
Pick the exact verb from a focused prefix family.
Use close distractors from the top-ranked words to sharpen recall.
Checkpoint
Pick the right meaning when the wrong answers feel plausible.
Practice semantically related words together for faster pattern-building.
Work through a dense semantic cluster so related words reinforce each other.
Checkpoint
Recognize and translate words from one practical domain.
Work through a dense semantic cluster so related words reinforce each other.
Checkpoint
Recognize and translate words from one practical domain.
Work through a dense semantic cluster so related words reinforce each other.
Checkpoint
Recognize and translate words from one practical domain.
Use the scraped tail to keep the product deeper than a beginner list.
Bring the imported long-tail words into active practice instead of leaving them buried.
Checkpoint
Recover less frequent words from English prompts.
Get our free German learning cheat sheet — the 50 most common mistakes German learners make (and how to fix them).