B1 English · Mark Gather

Vocabulary Memory

A small companion to the way your brain actually learns words. Seven memory hooks per word, spaced reviews, test yourself before you check.

Today

Words your brain is ready to forget. Catch them just in time and the trace deepens.

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Add a word

Seven small fields, sixty seconds. Each one is a hook your memory can grab on its way to forgetting.

01 · The word
What are you learning?
The headword and its part of speech.
02 · Pronunciation
How does it sound?
Type the word above, then click Fetch to look up the official phonemic spelling and audio. Add your own stress notation underneath.
Phonemic spelling (IPA)
click fetch to look up
03 · Meaning
Say it in your own words
Not a dictionary translation. A short, clear gloss you understand.
04 · Chunks & collocations
Learn it with its friends
Two or three word partnerships. Words live in chunks, not in isolation.
05 · Word family
The relatives
Verb, noun, adjective. One word, three doors.
06 · Personal sentence
Make it yours
One true sentence about your life. Personal meaning is what makes it stick.
Try: Make a sentence about your work this week…
07 · Quick image
A picture for your mind
Choose one emoji that captures the word. Dual coding (image and word) is one of the most powerful memory aids we have. Pick just one.
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Library

Every word you've recorded. Click any entry to see its full memory hooks.

How it works

A short tour of the system, and why each piece earns its place.

Step 01
Seven hooks, not one definition

A single translation is the weakest possible memory trace. Each hook (meaning, chunks, family, personal sentence, image, pronunciation) is a different route into the same word. Networked memories are recovered more reliably than isolated ones.

Step 02
Spaced retrieval, not re-reading

Each word is scheduled at expanding intervals: 1 day, 3 days, 1 week, 1 month. At each review, your brain works to produce the word before checking. That effort is what consolidates the trace. When you load a large pack, the words are introduced a few each day rather than all at once, so the schedule stays gentle.

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If you remember it, the interval grows. If you don't, you return to day one. No shame in that. Forgetting is part of the process.

Step 03
Chunks and personal meaning

Words are remembered in company. Make a decision and heavy rain are stored as units, not assembled word by word. Personal sentences add emotional and autobiographical context, which is some of the stickiest memory we have.

Step 04
Test before you look

The single most powerful study habit in the research literature. Trying and failing to recall is more valuable than reading the answer ten times. The Review screen uses the personal sentence as your prompt, with the word blanked out. Try first, then reveal.

Keep it close
Use it from your phone or computer

iPhone: open this page in Safari, tap Share, then Add to Home Screen. Android: open it in Chrome, tap the menu, then Add to Home screen. Desktop: bookmark the page, or use your browser's install option if it appears.

Backup
Your words stay in this browser

If you move to another phone, computer or browser, export your library first. Import the backup on the new device and your words will be added there.

Evidence base. Spaced practice (Ebbinghaus, Cepeda et al.), retrieval practice (Roediger and Karpicke), the lexical approach and collocations (Lewis, Nation), dual coding (Paivio), and depth of processing (Craik and Lockhart). For B1 adult English learners.

Card 1 of 1
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Try to recall the word, then reveal.