![]() ![]() (On behalf of the uTalk team - please don’t do this, it messes up the search results.) Sometimes users even give the app 1-star reviews in the app store just because it doesn’t yet have their language. Perhaps unsurprisingly, “When will you be doing X language?” is one of the questions Richard gets most often from users. ![]() #UTALK REVIEWS FULL#You can find the full list of uTalk’s languages here.Ĭonsidering the political status of Tibet today, and my recent obsession with Turkic languages, I couldn’t help but wonder - “Well, when will uTalk be doing Uyghur?” (uTalk already does provide Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Uzbek, Turkmen, Azerbaijani and Turkish, which is excellent.) (Interestingly, it looks like uTalk already supported Dzongkha, a Tibetic language which is official in Bhutan, before Lhasa Tibetan.) The launch had been scheduled to coincide with Tibetan New Year (Losar), which is usually the same day as Chinese/Vietnamese/Korean New Year and fell on the 5th of February this year. (And since the app lets users learn any language through any of the other languages in its collection, that comes out to over 20,000 possible language combinations!)Īs a matter of fact, uTalk had just launched its 142nd language - Tibetan - a few weeks before I spoke with Richard. Now that I’ve tried it, I feel like this was how I should have been using the app all along - taking advantage of the app’s mind-bogglingly large collection of languages, of which it currently has 142. UTalk’s Nat Dinham and Richard Howeson at the Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava, Slovakia When will uTalk be adding ?Īs part of my preparation for our call, I decided to branch out beyond the languages that I had won full access to, and tested out dozens of the other languages in uTalk’s collection. And at LangFest in Montreal last year, I won the uTalk trivia contest again, winning two more full courses and one “quick fix course”: Then at the Polyglot Gathering in Bratislava last spring, uTalk organized another language trivia competition, in which I came in second place and won a bottle of Slovak wine, which was nice. Unfortunately I was distracted by other languages soon after (if I remember correctly, I entered an “Indian language phase” for a few months in late 2017) and I forgot about the app for a while. #UTALK REVIEWS FREE#The prize was free access to one language on uTalk for a year, and I chose Egyptian Arabic. The company organized a language trivia competition during the conference, which I won, of course. I first learned about uTalk in 2017, at the LangFest conference in Montreal. It’s a pretty great app, though it took me a while to warm up to it. And brushed up on my Lingala, Albanian and Marathi. I learned a bit of Luxembourgish this weekend. ![]()
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