Transcript for:
Top 8 Free Online English Tools

In this video, I'm going to share 8 of my  favorite online English tools you can use   to improve your English faster than ever! The  best part is that you can use them all for free!  I'm Kevin, and my mission is to help you  get out of English Intermediate Purgatory.   If you're looking for tools that will  help you speak more fluent English   and understand native speakers,  you'll love this video. Keep watching.  The first tool on this list is HelloTalk.  It's my favorite way to find native speakers   to practice having conversations. Once you've downloaded the app,   you can find people by going to the search  tab and then clicking the filter button. This   allows you to pick the age range, region  or city, the person's native language,   and what they are trying to learn. When you click "search,"   you'll see a list of everyone that meets that  criteria. If you get a lot of results, you can   also click where it says "serious learners" to  find people who really care about practicing.  Another great feature is that  you can limit who can find you.   Just go to the Me tab, click the gear icon, select  "privacy," and then "who can find me." In addition   to hiding yourself from search results, you can  say that only people of the same gender can find   you. This is useful if you have problems with  people just looking for romantic relationships.  Once you've chosen someone, my favorite features   are that you can easily give each other  corrections on texts and send audio recordings.  The second tool is Forvo. It's a great  website to help you discover how real people,   not robots, pronounce words in English.  All you need to do is search for a word.  Let's try to see how people say special. You can  see in the results that we can first filter by   type of accent, British or American. If you click on the word itself, it'll take   you to a list of people who submitted a recording  so you can hear multiple ways of saying that word.  The third tool is YouGlish, and it's one  of my absolute favorites! With YouGlish,   you can search for a word or phrase and  see how it is used in context across   multiple high-quality YouTube videos. All you need to do is enter an expression,   choose the type of English you're  interested in, and click search.  In the results, you'll get dozens or even  hundreds of videos with the expression,   and the video is set to the exact moment  where the expression appears. You also get   the full subtitles beneath the video  with your expression highlighted.  This tool is fantastic for improving  your pronunciation and your vocabulary   by seeing how native speakers use  whatever you're trying to learn.  The fourth tool is HiNative. I've talked  before about how important it is to get   consistent feedback from native speakers  to speak more naturally. The problem is,   you might not personally know a lot of native  speakers, and even if you do, you might feel   guilty asking them for feedback all the time. That's where HiNative comes in. HiNative   allows you to ask questions about English and  get feedback from a community of native speakers.   The nice thing is that since there  are thousands of people on HiNative,   you never have to feel guilty about asking the  same person for feedback all the time.  All you do is write a question, click  submit, and within an hour or two,   you'll have a handful of responses. You can use  HiNative to ask for feedback on your writing,   speaking, pronunciation, or just to get answers  to questions about confusing words or expressions.  HiNative is a big part of my deliberate writing  technique that you can learn about in this video.   It's a great technique to help  you improve your speaking.   That's right, writing more will help you speak better.  Number five on this list is DeepL. If you've used an   online translator before, you've probably used  Google Translate, but Google doesn't provide the   most natural translations in my experience. DeepL, on the other hand, provides extremely   natural translations you can use to get  instant feedback on your speaking or writing.   The deliberate writing technique that I  spoke about earlier uses both HiNative and   DeepL to give you two layers of feedback  - one automated and one from real humans.  With DeepL, all you do is write or paste  your text on the left,   and you'll get the translation on the right.  What's great about DeepL's translations   is that it lets you select specific words and  see different alternatives, allowing you to make   sure the translation fits what you wanted to say. DeepL currently supports Chinese, Dutch, French,   German, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese,  Russian, and Spanish. It seems like they're   adding new languages all the time, though, so if  yours isn't currently supported, be sure to check   back in a little bit to see if they added it. By the way, DeepL even lets you translate   complete documents. Just click the translate  documents button and select or drag and drop your file.  Tool number six is Visual Speed Controller.  If you've ever wished you could control   how fast people spoke while you're  studying, this tool is for you.  Visual Speed Controller lets you control  the speed of any video or audio on your PC   and gives you the ability to create shortcuts  for rewinding and fast-forwarding content.  This is particularly useful if you're trying  to do a dictation. You can play a video,   use your space bar to pause it, write  what you heard, and then click the Z key   to go back just 2 seconds so you can listen  to anything you missed again and again.  It makes it much easier than having to  click buttons with your mouse to rewind.  The seventh tool is my favorite way to study  vocabulary. It's called Anki. Anki allows you to   create digital flashcards and, most importantly,  controls when you review them using a technique   called spaced repetition. If you've never  heard of spaced repetition before, it basically   means you'll be asked to do a flashcard exactly when you're about to forget it.  For newer vocabulary, this means reviewing the  cards frequently. For vocabulary you already know,   this means reviewing it days,  weeks, or even months later.  Over time, this repeated exposure just as you're  about to forget helps reinforce what you already   learned and gives you a better chance to remember it in a real conversation.  In addition, Anki has many cool advanced features,  such as the ability to create multiple decks,   create tags to filter your vocabulary,  easily search for cards quickly,   and view your statistics over time.  The eighth and final tool on my list is super  cool. It's called Loom, and it's a way to record   short videos of yourself easily. You can  share these videos with people via email,   social media, or anywhere else you  can paste a link such as HiNative.  I've been using Loom to share personal  messages with my email subscribers   so they can get to know me a bit better and  practice their English at the same time.  If you use Loom to record yourself,  it's a great way to get used to speaking   under pressure. In other words, it  lets you feel a similar type of   stress to what you'd feel in a real conversation.  Therefore, the more you do it, the more  comfortable you'll feel in stressful situations,   like a conversation. The more comfortable  you feel, the easier it'll be to   remember vocabulary and organize your sentences. Once you record yourself, you can share that   video with a native speaker to get feedback or  just have an asynchronous conversation. If you're   already a Deliberate English email subscriber,  try it out and send me an email with your video.  So there you have it! My top 8 favorite free tools  to help you improve your English. If you'd like   a "cheat sheet" that has a summary of all of these  tools, plus a few extras, along with what they're   for and links to everything, you can get one at  deliberatenglish.com. Simply join the email list,   and after getting another freebie, my 15-minute  English workout guide, you'll have the option   to grab this Online Resource Cheat Sheet as well. If you liked this video, click like and subscribe   below. Don't forget to click the bell icon  to get notifications for all my free lessons.   Remember, you can get a free 15-minute English  workout guide, full of short but challenging   exercises to help you improve your English faster,  and grab a copy of the Online Resource Cheat Sheet   by going to deliberateenglish.com. See you there!