Company Name: Real Academia Española
About: «Diccionario RAE descargable» es la aplicación sin conexión a internet
oficial de la Real Academia Española (RAE) y la Asociación de Academias de la
Lengua Española (ASALE) para consultar la 23.ª edición del «Diccionario de
la lengua española» sin necesidad de estar conectado a la red.
The following contact options are available: Pricing Information, Support, General Help, and Press Information/New Coverage (to guage reputation). Discover which options are the fastest to get your customer service issues resolved.
E-Mail: [email protected]
Website: 🌍 Visit DLE descargable Website
Privacy Policy: https://dle.rae.es/app/doc/es/aviso_legal.html
Developer: Soporte de la Real Academia Española
by A1n2d3y7
Pagué por esta app y no está optimizada para la pantalla grande. Es decir, el teclado es del tamaño de un iPad Air lo cual es demasiado distorsionado para usar cómodamente la aplicación en mi iPad Pro 12.9.
by Lucius Ba
Compré esta aplicación y funcionaba en el principio muy bien últimamente cuando la estoy usando se cierra sola especialmente cuando no estoy conectado al Internet al cual no entiendo porque pagué para poder usarla sin Internet
by Carlos Sebastián Trejo Ortiz
Dear RAE,
I would like to start by saying that I am a High School student in Redlands, California, USA. I primarily use this app to search words that I have encountered in my reading of Spanish Books and school work. —I would have written this review in Spanish, but I have used English instead because my writing in English is more precise. —This app has saved me the trouble of buying the voluminous RAE dictionary by providing a digital copy at a reasonable price with offline access. —That is the most positive thing I have to say at the moment; I think it could use a few touch-ups.
So, let's begin.
The user interface could use some redecorating. By that, I mean, make it look user friendly; I recommend something similar to the style of the digital 4$ Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Also, the Merriam-Webster Dictionary provides audio to guide the user in pronouncing words (no matter how obvious the reading of the word is); I think that it would only be fair to provide this since your dictionary is about 5$ more. Also, I believe that it should approximate words much like its 99.¢ student dictionary counterpart.
Thank you for taking the time to read my suggestions, and I hope all of you —software developers, academics, and linguists at RAE— are healthy and well, families and all, in these perilous times.
Regards,
Carlos Sebastián Trejo Ortiz