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French

For non-native speakers worldwide

Learn French naturally while browsing real websites

Read the internet in French like you already do during study. Unknown words are highlighted, translated on click, and repeated across sites until they feel familiar.

Why learning French feels hard

Spoken French often sounds different from spelling in textbooks.
Gender, agreement, and verb forms are easy to mix up without repetition.
Switching between apps breaks focus and flow.

How it works

Open a real website in French

Read news, blogs, or study materials you already use every day.

French article open in the browser.

Unknown words are highlighted automatically

You immediately see which words are new without interrupting reading.

Highlighted words on the page.

Click to see a translation instantly

A quick click shows the meaning, so you keep reading without delay.

Translation tooltip on click.

The word follows you to other websites

Repetition happens naturally across sites until the word sticks.

The same word highlighted on another site.

You remember it without memorization

Your vocabulary grows passively during normal browsing and study.

Progress view for remembered words.

Why this works especially well for French

French relies on frequent function words and agreement patterns that repeat across content. Seeing them in context helps you internalize real usage quickly.

Liaison, silent letters, and multi-word expressions make context essential. Real sentences across the web teach what lists cannot.

Who it is for

Students who read French sources while they study.
Professionals who work with French articles and docs.
Travelers preparing for French-speaking countries.
Self-learners who want steady, daily progress.

If you already read articles, posts, and study materials in French, you are closer than you think. You can learn French online without changing your routine, because every page becomes practice.

The fastest way to learn French vocabulary is to meet words again and again in real sentences. This is how you learn French while browsing, without dedicated sessions or flashcards.

For most people, the best way to learn French naturally is to stay in context and keep reading. This approach keeps the meaning, the repetition, and the habit in one place.

If you already read the internet in French, you are already learning. Just make it effortless.

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