This is not just a demonstration.
It is a complete learning session.
Simply follow the video attentively and try to recall the translations yourself.
The more focused you are during the exercise, the stronger the learning effect will be.
By the end of the lesson, you will have learned 16 Spanish words and phrases in approximately 16 minutes.
This is exactly how learning works inside the Dikiwi app.
This sample lesson consists of two steps.
In this lesson, you first learn 16 carefully selected Spanish words and phrases.
In the next lesson, you will use these same building blocks to learn 5 complete Spanish sentences.
This progression is intentional.
Before the brain can process complete sentences efficiently, it first needs familiar reference points.
The vocabulary learned here provides those reference points.
As a result, the sentences in the next lesson often feel much easier than expected.
During this process, language is not only learned consciously.
Patterns, structures, and relationships are also absorbed automatically in the background.
Lesson sheet preview: The following document is the exact lesson sheet you can download and use directly with the Dikiwi app.
Page 1 contains the vocabulary for this lesson.
Page 2 contains the complete sentences from chapter 6.8.
Start your first lesson within 5 minutes.
The lesson sheet contains the vocabulary on page 1 and the complete sentences on page 2.
Or install the Dikiwi app directly:
1. The first vocabulary item appears on the learning card “it is looking”.
2. You briefly think about whether you know the translation “él está mirando”.
3. Tap “Show translation” to reveal the back of the card.
4. Use the audio button to hear the pronunciation.
5. Then the words “calm” and “green” appear – steps 2 to 4 repeat.
6. Then you decide: “Yes, I knew it” or “No, learn again”. In the video, we click “Yes, I knew it”.
7. The 2nd stage becomes active. The vocabulary item moves from Learning → Practicing (see counter 1/5).
8. The new vocabulary item “the leaves” appears – the process repeats.
9. Gradually, the vocabulary item moves on to the “Consolidating” phase (see counter 1/7) – the 3rd stage becomes active.
10. This process repeats until all repetitions have been completed successfully.
11. At the end, the system counts how many words have really been learned (see learned counter) – the 4th stage becomes active.
12. After each learned word, the reward screen appears.
13. Only now, once the words have reached the 4th stage, can they be tested.
14. Words that have not reached the 4th stage are considered not learned.
Congratulations!
If you actively participated, you have just learned 16 Spanish words and phrases.
Learning progress can happen surprisingly fast when vocabulary is repeated in a structured way.