![]() But I can’t imagine their Korean course is much different in terms of availability at least. Again, this is for their Japanese course. I think it only gave me one lesson for free and I have to pay for the others? And yet I can test out of lessons for free. This is because learning common Asian languages like Korean, and learning Japanese, is incredibly convenient in English. (At least DuoLingo throws me some odd sentences that I really have to rely on my translation skills for, rather than being able to guess the gist from one or two words.) I hate the cha-ching money sound when you get something correct. While both of these platforms are great services which you will be able to get plenty of use from, Lingodeer will be a better online language learning app than Duolingo is. I’m using LingoDeer for Japanese and it’s gross imo. Then again I tested out of the first few sections so idk, maybe it’s more prevalent in the start. besides maybe some uncommon word choice? Haven’t noticed a ton of gendered pronoun use besides maybe one or two usages of 그는 and 그녀는. ![]() I can’t speak to how accurate it all is given that I’m not fluent, but I haven’t noticed any obvious errors another comment mentioned. DuoLingo seems okay for helping you practice if you already have a grasp of the language, but not rly for learning new things unless you’re really good at picking up on patterns and intuiting how to use them from examples.
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