Speaking practice
Open the speaking practice workspace.
Practice German speaking with guided prompts, pronunciation support, vocabulary recall, listening preparation, and AI tutor feedback.
Open the speaking practice workspace.
Train listening before speaking responses.
Write the sentence after saying it aloud.
Ask for sentence and pronunciation help.
German speaking practice works best when learners say complete sentences, not only isolated words. A sentence forces the learner to use word order, articles, verb endings, and pronunciation at the same time. This is why a good speaking route should include a target sentence, audio support, live transcript, scoring, and a clear correction.
Beginners can start with short A1 sentences such as Ich lerne Deutsch or Ich gehe nach Hause. A2 learners should add time phrases and modal verbs. B1 and B2 learners need reasons, opinions, and connected phrases such as weil, dass, obwohl, trotzdem, and meiner Meinung nach.
Listening prepares the ear before the mouth has to produce the sentence. If a learner cannot recognize the rhythm of a German sentence, speaking it clearly becomes harder. A useful routine is listen once, read the sentence, listen again, speak aloud, then compare the transcript.
The speaking practice route uses browser-native speech recognition, so it can remain free. It is designed for normal learners who need fast feedback without paid APIs or blocked content.
Do not aim for perfect accent first. Aim for clear word endings, correct vowel length, and understandable rhythm. German listeners need to hear the difference between ich and nicht, schon and schön, and verbs that change endings.
After each speaking round, write the same sentence and use grammar practice if the structure is weak. This creates a loop between speaking, writing, listening, and grammar instead of treating pronunciation as a separate skill.
A daily speaking routine can be short and still useful. Choose one sentence, listen to it, read it once, say it slowly, say it naturally, then change one detail. For example, start with Ich gehe nach Hause and change the time, place, or subject: Heute gehe ich nach Hause, Wir gehen zur Schule, or Ich fahre nach Berlin.
This approach trains fluency without forcing the learner into long speeches too early. Beginners should repeat correct sentence frames. Intermediate learners should add a reason, an opinion, or a short story. The practice page gives prompts so the learner can move from one sentence to a more complete answer gradually.
A1 prompts should be short: introduce yourself, spell a name, say where you live, order food, or ask for the price. A2 prompts can include routines, plans, appointments, and simple past experiences. B1 prompts should ask for opinions, reasons, advantages, disadvantages, and short explanations.
The prompt should match the learner level. If the prompt is too hard, the learner stops speaking and starts translating word by word. If it is too easy, there is no growth. A level-based speaking path keeps practice challenging but possible, which increases confidence and return visits.
Good speaking feedback should show the score, missing words, improved sentence, and one pronunciation tip. It should not overwhelm the learner with every possible grammar issue. A useful correction might say: keep the verb in position two, pronounce ich softly, or repeat the ending in gehst.
Because the speaking evaluator uses browser-native features, the platform can keep this practice free. For best results, learners should speak in a quiet place, use short prompts first, and repeat the corrected sentence immediately after feedback.
Continue into connected lessons and practice instead of stopping on one article.
The platform is built for long-term learning and Google-safe growth, not thin pages or locked content.
Grammar, vocabulary, lessons, practice, and tools remain accessible without a paywall.
Learning pages are connected by level, topic, examples, and practice actions.
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Short answers for learners and search engines before moving into practice.
Yes. Use browser-native speaking prompts, listen to the target sentence, speak aloud, and compare your transcript with the expected German sentence.
Start with introductions, daily routines, shopping phrases, simple questions, and short sentences using haben, sein, gehen, kommen, and lernen.
Repeat short sentences, listen before speaking, focus on word endings and German vowel sounds, then practise the corrected sentence again.