- Duolingo has nonstop enshittfied. Just getting worse and worse - And yet, people fall completely into their marketing. 
 
 
- What alternatives are there to Duolingo? - I wanted to know the same thing so this is what my searching has brought up, specifically for Scots Gaelic as that’s what I’ve been learning. - Speak Gaelic - Gaelic only, government funded, free - IndyLan - for endangered European languages, made by Heriot-Watt University and EU funded, free - Mango Languages - appears to be the closest to a Duolingo replacement. Many languages, subscription. - Glossika - another Duo replacement however that URL doesn’t fill me with confidence that they’re not going down the same route… Subscription for most languages, endangered ones are free. - Apart from the first Mango lesson for free and a few IndyLan lessons I’ve not tried any of these so can’t speak for their quality but thought a list might still be handy. - Mango is really good and you might be able to use it for free with your library card if you’re in the US! 
- HelloChinese for Mandarin 
 
- I like Busuu. But like Duolingo, using it by itself isn’t a good idea; you need to study grammar and vocabulary separately to learn at a decent pace. - Busuu’s best feature is its community corrections from native speakers, but they’ve been nerfed a lot in the past decade. You can still get something out of it though, just don’t pay for premium (even on sale) because it’s not really worth it. - There used to be something called Conversation Exchange that was useful for for supplementation, but it was a pretty big jump from what I would get from Duolingo to speaking with someone there. 
 
- Clozemaster and AnkiCard 
- I am using Ling and Mondly for my language learning. 
 
- As a researcher studying French, how would you say hello? - “Hello” oder “Bonjour” 
- 👋 - Lol, that’s my default! 
 
- Yo 
- Bonjour, bonsoir, bonuit? 
 
- But they said they weren’t getting rid of anyone. 🤣 Capitalism strikes again. 
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