Articles & Reviews
Tips to learn English vocabulary faster, plus real stories from learners who use LexiMory every day.
Articles
How to Actually Remember English Words: A Practical Guide to Spaced Repetition
Most learners forget new English words within days. Spaced repetition changes that by reviewing words at exactly the right time. Here is how it works and how to start.
Why Images and Audio Help You Learn English Words Faster Than Text Alone
Reading a translation is not enough to make a word stick. When you combine images, audio, and real sentences, your brain forms stronger memories. Here is the science behind it.
How Many English Words Do You Actually Need to Be Fluent?
Native speakers know 20,000+ words, but you do not need nearly that many. Here is how many words each level actually requires — and how to get there efficiently.
The 15-Minute Daily Routine That Doubles Your English Vocabulary
You do not need hours of study to grow your vocabulary. A focused 15-minute daily routine — done consistently — beats weekend cramming sessions every time.
Flashcards vs. Word Lists: Which Is the Best Way to Learn English Vocabulary?
Word lists feel productive. Flashcards feel slow. But when it comes to actually remembering vocabulary weeks later, only one method consistently wins.
7 English Vocabulary Mistakes That Make You Sound Like a Beginner (and How to Fix Them)
Small word choices reveal your level faster than grammar. Here are seven vocabulary habits that make non-native speakers sound less fluent — and simple fixes for each.
User Reviews
How I Memorized 300+ English Words Without Cramming — Marta's LexiMory Story
"I used to forget new English words the next day. Now I add them to LexiMory and the flashcards do the rest."
Like Having a Tutor in My Pocket — Ravi's Experience with LexiMory
"The images and audio make such a difference. I can actually hear the word in my mind when I need it during a conversation."
From Homework Struggles to Streak Records — How LexiMory Helped My Daughter Love English
"My daughter went from struggling with English homework to actually enjoying it. She loves organizing words into her own categories."