LingQ | Learn 42 Languages Reviews

LingQ | Learn 42 Languages Reviews

Published by on 2024-01-10

About: 1000s of lessons with audio + matching text. Learn words and phrases with SRS
Review! Import and learn from anything on the web! Start with easy beginner
lessons but quickly progress into learning from real, compelling content.


About LingQ Learn 42 Languages


Watch your vocabulary and your avatar grow! Track all your learning activities including listening time, words of reading and more.

Your account will be charged for renewal within 24-hours prior to the end of the current period, and will continue at the price listed above.

LingQ Co-Founder, Steve Kaufmann, one of the world’s leading polyglots, has learned 15 languages using this approach.

You may manage your subscription and auto-renewal may be turned off by going to Settings.app -> iTunes & App Store -> Apple ID.

Your subscription automatically renews unless auto-renew is turned off at least 24-hours before the end of the current period/trial.

Payment will be charged to your iTunes Account at the end of your free trial period.

Start with easy beginner lessons but quickly progress into learning from real, compelling content.

You will need a Premium subscription to get full unlimited access to LingQ functionality.

This lets you take advantage of dead time and short breaks throughout the day to spend more time with your new language.

1000s of hours of lessons, podcasts, audiobooks, interviews and more, all with transcript.

Review and learn your new vocabulary in context and using our proprietary SRS review tools.

Register your account and have your data synced to our web application so you can study on the web along with on multiple devices.

1000s of lessons with audio + matching text.

The LingQ app also lets you work offline and syncs up when you get back online.


         


Overall User Satisfaction Rating


Negative experience
52.0%

Positive experience
48.0%

Neutral
38.5%

~ from Justuseapp.com NLP analysis of 4,029 combined software reviews.

20 LingQ Learn 42 Languages Reviews

4.7 out of 5

By


LingQ: Great Reading Platform, Forums distract

The system, with its highlighted words, is great. 5 stars.
The feed needs fixed, it's just a bunch of random articles. I can't find my own uploaded content half the time, even under Imports, without searching specifically by name. 4 stars.
The forums are toxic - there's a 85% male ratio on there, I'd estimate. Questioners are a mix of internationals, and "bros" who use their words-learned as a way to measure themselves. I thought the forums had a bit of toxicity to them, then I got straight up attacked by someone I had never talked to. Another time, spam was posted in a forum, and I called the person out on it, and a group swarm came after me. They also accused me of "group think" while they swarmed, without ideas/original thoughts backing up their opinions, just insults. The spam they posted had a gender-dynamic to it; trying to convert men (and men only).
I don't know if Steve's looked at the user data, or even cares, but I'd bet he's pushing away women users from his site. I'm someone comfortable swinging it with the guys, and dang, do I not want to be on those forums. Within 7 days of starting my membership, I was being bullied [and by someone who thought I was a man, since he called me a "little boy."] The fact that very few women ever speak on the forums is an extra sign that LingQ has cultivated a bad chat culture that is (likely) driving away female potential users.


By


Really disappointed

I am really bummed out because I was really hoping this would live up to the hype. I’m learning French and have be using Duolingo, which I’ve been pretty happy with, because you can learn a lot for free. But I wanted to try this more immersive approach, studying current news articles and such. I love this idea...and I think it could be massively helpful. But why don’t you guys stop advertising this as a free app with purchases available to improve the experience. I can’t do anything with LingQLearn42Languages unless I pay for it. I couldn’t even get through a single beginner lesson. I saw another reviewer complain that he was getting spam regarding his progress. Yeah, it’s a notification. But it feels kind of spammy when the notification is reminding you to do something that you can’t do unless you pay to do it. I realize you gotta make money, but this just feels kind of icky of you guys. I have no idea how useful LingQLearn42Languages is because I’m not going to pay to figure it out. The interface was kind of confusing, too. I’d hit the play button and it wouldn’t match up with the text. It was weird and frustrating. I don’t want to watch a bunch of videos to learn how to use an app. I’ll look up news articles and use a pocket translator to learn my way through it. Seriously bummed out.


By


A must have for people learning languages

This is my first review I’m writing for an application, I have wanted to write this for a while now as I’ve used LingQ for almost a year, anyway LingQ is the best tool to use for an input based approach on language learning, which is by far the best way to learn a language, using LingQ you read various texts and listen to many different materials, and even within the free version you have access to a multitude of resources for all levels of language learning. The premium version is a must have as it keeps track of the vocabulary you learn, making it extremely easy to keep track of progress and choose material based on your level. The only problem I’ve ran into is with more advanced and upper intermediate level vocabulary, as the translations are entirely user dependent, but still it’s such a minor issue. My other problem lies in how LingQ often has trouble reading Arabic script, it often counts 1 word as two words, or you’ll see the same word as different words. (Still a very minor issue) all in all, if you are looking to brush up on your second language or are an aspiring polyglot, LingQLearn42Languages is a must.


By


WAS a Great App

I loved LingQLearn42Languages when I first got it. Among other things, it gave me easy access to a wide variety of material to help keep language learning fun and easy. A couple of months ago they updated to version 5, and the problems began. I could no longer change word definitions to match the context, I had several problems with the daily LinQs, the trash can button would come up darkened, not letting me remove things, the X button to get out of things would stop working, etc. It just got to the point where I was spending more time fighting with the program and texting customer service than I was studying the context. Unfortunately, the end of my subscription is coming in a few weeks, and I don’t want to spend another year fighting with LingQLearn42Languages. I have other materials that I use each day as well, so for now I’ll stick with those and I’ll try the free version in another 6 months or so, to see if they’ve got all the bugs out. When everything is working right again I’ll probably resubscribe, but right now it’s just frustrating me, and demotivating my desire to continue in this area of my language studies..


By


Good if you have money

I’ve seen many reviews like this, and many of them have developer responses stating that you can complete as many lessons as you want without having to pay, while this is technically true, the lessons are practically useless if you can’t click on unknown word to get the translation! I completed one lesson and it was great, albeit a little easy since I’ve been trying to learn Japanese Hiragana for a about a year now, but then on the second lesson I went to tap a new word to learn the translation, and it said I needed premium to do that! So I struggled through the lesson by guessing, but I will be deleting it after this. I don’t usually get upset when language apps aren’t free, most of them aren’t, but LingQLearn42Languages continuously advertises itself as a completely free app, when in reality, you cant complete lessons without either guessing and not learning anything, or paying. If your willing to pay, great! This is an amazing app for you and I’m sure it will be super easy for you to learn with this, however, if your like me and either don’t have the money, not willing to give money for this, or maybe your a minor, then this is not LingQLearn42Languages for you.


By


Incredibly Powerful App

LingQ is by far the most useful language learning app for self-learners. Unlike most apps, its main focus is not a guided course that will teach you similarly to a classroom teacher. Rather, LingQ’s strongest features are for the personalization of the material you study, which is the best way to learn once you have the bare basics down. LingQLearn42Languages will help you study from any text you want by enabling you to import articles, books, videos, songs into its reader. There, it is a breeze to go through the material and study it to achieve comprehension. LingQ’s reader integrates a variety of online resources that anybody studying a text in a foreign language would use (translations from multiple websites, google images, native dictionaries, verb conjugation resources, etc). It might be a little bit of a steep learning curve at first, but it is definitely worth the investment. I recommend watching their getting started page on their website to understand their approach.


By


Better than most!

Okay by most I mean that there might be some that come off as better, but they might not be. LingQ stand at the top and it might not even be able to see its forerunners from that high! I’m 15 and I’ve been learning a multitude of languages from French to Spanish to English(at least to improve my vocabulary) to now Latin it’s by far the best. Even if you’re learning your native or mother tongue it will still help you learn faster. I don’t have much to any experience with the forums as I don’t usually use them but the few that I have have been tremendously helpful. The only complaint that I would really have particularly with Latin in LingQ is that you can’t use the auto-text to speech function whereas before you’d be able to use it with a similar language like Italian (as they sound similar and are relatives of each other) not I have to intuitively build a sense of how new and unfamiliar words look to me to be read as.


By


LingQ is a Game Changer!

Forget about memorizing endless stacks of flash cards with vocabulary. I’m not saying it’s worthless to learn vocabulary, but it’s important to learn the new word IN CONTEXT. Just as in English, one word in a foreign language can have lots of different meanings and depending on the language’s grammar, may even change its spelling. The way to really advance to the next level is through reading and listening within context. I’ve personally seen advances in my language level when I read more, but looking up words in the dictionary becomes tiresome. LingQ has access to lots of different reading material that is read out loud for you (and you can upload your own), and once you highlight words it automatically gives you the definition(s). I’m personally learning Polish and as it’s not a popular language here in the Bay Area, it’s hard to find material unless I purchase it from Poland, so I’ve found this really helpful.


By


LingQ is the most unknown and effective language learning tools know to man!

As we’ve heard from Stephen Kaufman, Stephen Krashen and many others: “language learning is the constant pursuit of acquiring a large vocabulary, the best way to do that is by listening and reading a lot to content that is meaningful to us and used regularly”

LingQ most definitely serves this purpose above and beyond. I cannot say enough great things about LingQLearn42Languages/company. Thousands of different kinds of content to read and listen to, no matter who you are or what your interests are, you will be able to find content that is of interest to you. Even if you’re a flashcarder, you have a home here. LingQ makes it very convenient to review hundred of flashcards if wanted within seconds.

My experience? In three short weeks, my listening level went from only understanding simple concepts in conversation to being able to follow and fully understand in depth to an intermediate conversation that I found on LingQ. Consistently learning, at least, being exposed to 150 new words for every 3 hour learning session. I’m confident that word count can be a lot higher, but I took a little bit slower and listen a lot more.

All in all, link is the absolute next best thing when it comes to language learning and I guarantee it will not be rivaled.

Stop telling the native speaker you don’t understand and download LingQ today!


By


Engaging in all the right ways

I’m deeply impressed with LingQLearn42Languages . Hearing and reading has helped with my general language comprehension so much more than the other apps that encourage forced memorization through banal flash cards and short statements like “this is my mom” etc. instead LingQLearn42Languages focuses on the theories proposed by Stephen Krashen and the like to encourage learning through “comprehensible input”
lingq slowly encourages new word comprehension through short, generally comprehensible narratives that keep you in the perfect balance of understanding and mystery, always pushing you to expand your vocabulary while not overwhelming you to the language as a whole. It also allows you to mark your unknown words for future flash card review. I haven’t used it yet, but you can also meet with other native speakers and trade language lesson(invaluable!). It really is a one stop shop for language learners!


By


Learning French with Lingq

Like many others, I took French courses at University many years ago. When I finally had the chance to visit Paris in 2016, I began learning again. I tried many on-line apps, along with Rosetta Stone. I memorized phrases by listening to CDs during my daily commute to and from work. Slowly, very slowly, my vocabulary improved but I still had problems with the grammar. I was tired of learning phrases that I would never use and reading about things that just weren’t interesting to me in English let alone French. Then I discovered Lingq and my French language skills exploded. I have improved more using Lingq for the last 120 days than all the previous years combined! I am si grateful to Lingq that now I can travel to France and have a discussion with my French friends. Merci beaucoup Steve and all who have made this possible at Lingq!


By


THE Foundational Language Learning App

If Apple were to take all of the language learning apps they’ve ever featured and roll them into one super app, they still wouldn’t be able to match the power of LingQ. LingQLearn42Languages is not only well designed, it may be the best language learning tool ever available in digital form.

Not only is there a curriculum that can be followed to great effect, there is also the freedom to explore your target language at your own pace, using your own interests even to the point of turning just about any media source the internet has to offer into a language learning opportunity.

You simply cannot learn a language meaningfully by building a flashcard vocabulary devoid of context the likes of which are put forth in apps like Duolingo, Drops or Rosetta Stone. They simply cannot help you maintain the level of enthusiasm and reward that is required for advancement in an educational method as gargantuan as language learning. This is not so with LingQ. Just when you think you’ve hit a wall, LingQ has a way of showing you a bright light at the end of the tunnel.

If you want to actually learn a language, LingQLearn42Languages fulfills the major tenants of that goal. You will not be disappointed in both your use of LingQLearn42Languages and the expenditure of the monthly fee for expanded app use. Happy learning!


By


Magical flash cards

Imagine a deck of flashcards with magical powers and you have LingQ, which I have been using for about two years now, growing my Italian vocabulary to over 13,000 words. I can use it both on my Mac computer and my iPhone. I looked at other similar services but none of them came close to the thorough, imaginative way that LingQ works. There are lots of materials to read for whatever level you’re on—or you can enter your own texts. Reading and listening, you mark the words you don’t know and forget the rest. The marked words then pop up in your daily reviews until you mark them as learned.

It’s an ambitious program and improvements show up regularly. Occasionally I’ve had a problem making my account work the way it should, but the help department has been able to solve it for me.


By


Great way to learn vocab and improve listening!

I absolutely love that LingQ tracks words I have learned and highlights ones I don't know or are working on. This utterly transforms my reading (and vocabulary learning) experience. In the past I have tracked new words by hand, on paper, using a dictionary, but this makes reading slow-going and frustrating. Being able to click and bring up candidate definitions, and select or enter my own, is a wonderful advance. I have been pleased with the content available and the ability to import new content. I am also exploring the audio side and working to spend more time listening. I look forward to exploring more of the options like submitting my own writing or working with a tutor. So far I am really pleased with both the website and LingQLearn42Languages ! Nice work!


By


Transformative Language Learning Method but Clunky App

Like many of you, I gave LingQ a try after slow progress becoming truly conversational in foreign languages from other methods. I had heard great things and wanted to give it a try.

WOW, IT REALLY WORKS!!! Truly truly the best way by far to learn languages, and it is now just crazy to me that people would learn languages any other way. This is THE WAY for most people to learn languages and it’s actually enjoyable. I want to spread the word and let other people see the light / take advantage.

HOWEVER, as a technologist, it baffles me why the implementation is so clunky. From the user-experience, to the features being designed more for developers than language learners (e.g., manually adding foreign words is extremely user unfriendly), to the inconsistent cross-device experience, ..... LingQLearn42Languages feels at least 5 years out of date if not more.

I really with they would become a modern user-experience (to be honest....you could learn a lot from DuoLingo here) and this will make it so so much easier for others to take advantage of this truly better way to learn languages.

We love you guys! Make it easier for us to work with you!


By


Can't believe I only just found it

I learned Spanish up to an intermediate level over the past two years. I just found out about LingQLearn42Languages while trying to learn Japanese and I wish I knew about LingQLearn42Languages from the start of my language learning journey. It’s so much easier to learn through context and reading along especially when LingQLearn42Languages keeps track of the words you know and the words you are still learning. It doesn’t over complicate things trying to guess what level with each word you’re at. You simply do it yourself. I’ve only just begun using LingQLearn42Languages but I can tell that it’s great for learning languages. I’ve been uploading my own songs that I’d like to learn and it’s working very well so far.


By


My FAVORITE way to learn Spanish

If you’re a bookworm, you’re going to love LingQLearn42Languages. It’s super easy to find free ebooks online, download them, upload to LingQLearn42Languages and you’re off to the races. It keeps track of all the words and phrases you’ve learned and are working on and automagically turns them into flash cards - but I barely even use that feature because by reading you’re exposed to words in an order that makes sense - the more you see it the sooner you learn it. Thus prevents you from wasting tine on words and phrases that are uncommon - ESPECIALLY if you’re reading books based on your interests. This might not be the fastest way to reach fluency but if you’re going to read anyway, why not make it in your target language?


By


Worth the monthly fee

Love LingQLearn42Languages. Due to copyright issues, there is a relatively limited amount of free reading, BUT LingQLearn42Languages is amazing because I can Import Spanish text (like Harry Potter or random websites in Spanish) and it lets you get immediate feedback on words you don’t know. The accompanied oral pronunciation has helped a lot with my pronunciation. I only regret it took me so long to realize you can change the talking voice from Spain accent to Mexican/Standard accent (which is how I learned).

I do, however, remain very confused at the amount of people that have trouble “cancelling” their free trial if they don’t want it. In your phone just go to settings, name/Apple ID/media, subscriptions, LingQ, and cancel or change your subscription 🤷‍♀️🤷‍♀️🤷‍♀️


By


Fantastic app and service

LingQLearn42Languages has helped me have breakthroughs in a few languages, and I recommend it to anybody who I think is interested, and sometimes to people who aren't too. Only real problem for me is the lack of content in some languages (which is inevitable and totally possible to work around, especially given the import tool) and the fact that Genius imports (which I use a lot) don't format well in LingQLearn42Languages . The Genius convention is to use line breaks instead of periods or commas to separate lyrics, but when they're imported, it's as one massive unpunctuated block of text, which especially in languages without capital letters (mostly Hebrew in my case) is pretty hard to read.


By


Im sure it’s great, just not for me.

I’ve been learning Swedish for a few months now through a combination of Duolingo and trying find other materials on my own, like listening to Swedish music and radio stations and watching movies. It seems everything has been improving but my listening comprehension, so I figured I’d try out this “LingQ” app I hear Steve Kaufman advertising in his podcast all the time. I knew there was a subscription feature, but I thought there’d be more you could do without it. I didn’t even get through a single lesson before I’d reached my lingq limit. Now that I’ve reached this limit, I cannot use LingQLearn42Languages anymore because it won’t let you advance to the next page of a lesson without making at least one lingq on the current page. I’m sure it’s a great app and could help me improve more than I ever could with Duolingo, but it’s just not going to work for me.


By


Spam and Jumbled Mess

First I used it for 30 minutes before it was spamming me with upgrade requests and blocking me adding more words to my list. 7 day trial should mean regular use for 7 days but instead it means we tricked you into downloading LingQLearn42Languages and give us money before you actually get to evaluate LingQLearn42Languages.

I ended up doing the actual trial which you only get if you sign up for a plan and was happy for about an hour adding words to study then it came time to actually study and the UI is such a jumbled mess that I spent 10 minutes looking for the flash card study until I had to google it and it was a tiny icon in the corner. Then the actual flash card UI is overly complicated and I was immediately turned off and canceled my subscription but I kept getting spam emails telling me to continue my streak. I went to the Website and opted out of all emails and today the emails are still coming.

Overall terrible app


By


Is it just me?!

After looking at the great reviews and people saying LingQLearn42Languages is amazing, (Lingq even claims it is the best) I decided to try it.

I was most excited about being read to while I followed along. But then when I came to a word I didn’t know, I was supposed to be able to highlight it and go back to somewhere else to look at it for later. The definitions that were offered were helpful maybe 10% of the time. I just stopped using that feature as it didn’t seem helpful. Maybe the user interface is bad?

It seems like their main aim here is to deliver meaningful content to the user in the form of articles, to which the user has expressed interest in the subject matter. But, for some reason, none of them seemed interesting to me. I guess I felt a little overwhelmed at everything I was supposed to sort through on my little iPhone app. It seemed crazily organized. Usually when I get an app, I want to explore and see what everything is and how I can work my way around it. This one seemed too expansive? (Maybe) to be able to do that? Anyway, it was difficult to navigate and not quite what I was looking for.

But I am currently living in another country and trying to learn the language of the country. I only speak English fluently. And I’m a beginner in Italian.


By


I’m so glad they developed this app!!

I’ve always been fast at language learning and prefer to learn by myself instead of being in lectures. LingQLearn42Languages totally fits in my learning process. My current goal is German and I’ve been seeking for context that are accessible for beginners. After watching the vlogs from Akiyama San on Bilibili I decided to give LingQ a try. Turns out LingQLearn42Languages has just what I need. It’s such a brilliant idea to catalog words in given context and rate one’s own familiarity and decide if they should be reviewed or learned in the future. This is what I’ve been doing for years in my head but it was less efficient. I’m so glad Mr. Kaufmann made this into an app. This is the ultimate learning flow for any languages.


By


The best app that helps me to learn another language

I’ve tried duolingo. Fabulous app. And I finished the whole content on Italian and got my golden owl. I am an avid Italki user, taking 4 lessons a week. I bought many books on learning Italian ( those mostly unused). Of all methods I’ve tried and still trying, LingQ came as a surprise. It has already taken me far surpassed what I’ve done on my own. Learning Italian is no longer a chore. I wanted to learn, but learning seemed so stressful before LingQ came along. With all other methods, I got the illusion that I can speak Italian, but my comprehension was not quite there. I am confident that with LingQ, I can finally get somewhere that I will be happy about. Hopefully in six months.




Is LingQ Learn 42 Languages Safe?


Yes. LingQ | Learn 42 Languages is very safe to use. This is based on our NLP (Natural language processing) analysis of over 4,029 User Reviews sourced from the Appstore and the appstore cumulative rating of 4.7/5 . Justuseapp Safety Score for LingQ Learn 42 Languages Is 48.0/100.


Is LingQ Learn 42 Languages Legit?


Yes. LingQ | Learn 42 Languages is a totally legit app. This conclusion was arrived at by running over 4,029 LingQ | Learn 42 Languages User Reviews through our NLP machine learning process to determine if users believe the app is legitimate or not. Based on this, Justuseapp Legitimacy Score for LingQ Learn 42 Languages Is 86.5/100..


Is LingQ | Learn 42 Languages not working?


LingQ | Learn 42 Languages works most of the time. If it is not working for you, we recommend you excersise some patience and retry later or Contact Support.



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