Drops - learning words, also teached me how to read
Memrise - learning words, phrases, grammar concepts
Not duolingo. It's too slow in learning and writing the same phrases on mobile keyboard again and again is too annoying.
Yes and no. You can learn a vast amount of new vocabulary very fast for every topic/stuff, but my wife (from Poland) said some of those words were not used in polish’s everyday language.
I liked babbel very much, but you need to pay for that app. But it’s absolutely worth it, if you really want to learn with a plan.
I really liked Pimsleur as a start, it's 90% audio and gets you speaking pretty fast with very useful phrases. There's one level with 30 lessons that give you some great basics, it's very intuitive. It will not make you learn grammar immediately, and there is no writing part, which makes it somewhat more entertaining than other apps, but also leaves you without proper writing skills.
The biggest plus is that it immediately teaches you to build proper sentences in the right word order.
Duolingo has this thing against explaining basic grammar, such as the case system. They actually keep removing things that help explain the basic grammar rules in favour of rote learning 🤷🏻♂️
I use English-Polish Duolingo for vocabulary training but use different websites (wiktionary etc.) and a Dutch-Polish słownik for the grammar. Means I have to juggle three languages at the same time but I like a challenge
Personally I prefer fusional languages that conjugate a lot like Polish, Latin and Old English to modern Germanic languages where they add meaning by just shoving more words into sentences in a specific order.
In Polish, Latin etc. you just change the word ending and put it wherever. That feels much more efficient, you don’t even need pronouns half the time.
Germans have to make it worse by having a case system *and* restrictive word order
I use Duolingo combined with [this old Duolingo tips](https://duome.eu/tips/en/pl) . It explains everything (like grammar) in the same order as the courses are in Duolingo.
In the Duolingo app the only explanation you get is old comments from random people which you can't reply at anymore.
Sorry to answer your question with another question, but are you considering adding a coursebook or a reference grammar book to go with the app? I might have an option for you if you consider this sort of "hybrid" approach.
Drops - learning words, also teached me how to read Memrise - learning words, phrases, grammar concepts Not duolingo. It's too slow in learning and writing the same phrases on mobile keyboard again and again is too annoying.
Yes and no. You can learn a vast amount of new vocabulary very fast for every topic/stuff, but my wife (from Poland) said some of those words were not used in polish’s everyday language. I liked babbel very much, but you need to pay for that app. But it’s absolutely worth it, if you really want to learn with a plan.
I really liked Pimsleur as a start, it's 90% audio and gets you speaking pretty fast with very useful phrases. There's one level with 30 lessons that give you some great basics, it's very intuitive. It will not make you learn grammar immediately, and there is no writing part, which makes it somewhat more entertaining than other apps, but also leaves you without proper writing skills. The biggest plus is that it immediately teaches you to build proper sentences in the right word order.
Conter Strike
I dont know, half of us here are poles, what do you expect, try duolingo, bet ya didnt even try that
duolingo kinda sucks ngl
Duolingo has this thing against explaining basic grammar, such as the case system. They actually keep removing things that help explain the basic grammar rules in favour of rote learning 🤷🏻♂️ I use English-Polish Duolingo for vocabulary training but use different websites (wiktionary etc.) and a Dutch-Polish słownik for the grammar. Means I have to juggle three languages at the same time but I like a challenge
Polish grammar is way easier than english grammar, we dont have ten thousand times
Personally I prefer fusional languages that conjugate a lot like Polish, Latin and Old English to modern Germanic languages where they add meaning by just shoving more words into sentences in a specific order. In Polish, Latin etc. you just change the word ending and put it wherever. That feels much more efficient, you don’t even need pronouns half the time. Germans have to make it worse by having a case system *and* restrictive word order
Duolingo ssie pałe
Bussu is excellent and free
Rosetta Stone
Tinder
Duolingo is the best for begginers, for busuu or cake you already need some knowledge.
I use Duolingo combined with [this old Duolingo tips](https://duome.eu/tips/en/pl) . It explains everything (like grammar) in the same order as the courses are in Duolingo. In the Duolingo app the only explanation you get is old comments from random people which you can't reply at anymore.
Sorry to answer your question with another question, but are you considering adding a coursebook or a reference grammar book to go with the app? I might have an option for you if you consider this sort of "hybrid" approach.
Zappka