Numbers, out loud,
in any language
you're learning.
Hear it, type it. Read it, say it. Drill the part of the language your textbook forgets — until "setecentos sessenta e três" lands instantly.
Three buttons. That's the whole app.
Pick a language & a range
Fourteen languages, including regional splits like PT-PT vs PT-BR. Set min, max, and step.
Generate a random number
One tap. Hear it spoken — or read the digits silently and say them out loud.
Check, repeat, keep going
Type your answer or reveal the spelled-out form. Your session history is right there.
Receptive and productive. Both halves of fluency.
Hear a number,
type the digits.
Numbers come at you fast in real life. Train your ear to chunk them without translating.
See digits,
say them aloud.
Force the productive side. Your mouth has to find the word before you reveal the answer.
The textbook teaches you "one, two, three". The bus driver shouts "setenta e cinco" and you freeze.
Numbers are the part of a foreign language that hits you when you have to act fast — prices, addresses, train platforms, phone numbers, times. They're also the part most courses spend ten minutes on and never come back to.
This app exists for the part that comes after that ten minutes: enough reps, in enough configurations, that you stop translating.
The cheat sheets are the companion. One per language, written by someone who's actually used the numbers, not generated from a list. They cover the irregulars, the gender agreement, the regional differences — the things you'd otherwise discover only by getting one wrong.