raamat
book
Estonian 0–B1
Start from zero and learn in 5-minute bursts — or stay as long as you want. Small wins that add up, on your schedule.
Estonian 0–B1
tere
Why Yesti
Every exercise is short, immediate, and concrete. No long lectures, no endless word lists.
AI explains, adapts, and steps in when you're stuck — in your own language, in context.
5 minutes between meetings or a longer stretch on the couch — both move you forward.
No grammar walls, no word dumps. You learn one thing and move on.
You answer — and immediately see what was right and why. Hints in your own language.
Hear pronunciation, see the picture, read the context. Multi-channel makes it stick.
Phone, tablet, laptop — continue where you left off. Progress syncs.
Take a look
Each screen is designed so a single glance moves you forward.

Pick the right translation, build the sentence, earn XP.

Your words, sorted by topic and CEFR level.

What's clear, what still needs review.
A2 exam
Targeted prep: 500 most-likely words, mock exams, and a separate practice for every skill — reading, listening, writing, speaking.
raamat
book
söök
food
tänan
thanks
Dictionary
Spaced repetition, themed packs, audio pronunciation, and a curated core vocabulary — all in one place.
AI tutor
When you get stuck, AI picks up where the lesson left off — in your own language, in context, without textbook jargon.
Tap an answer to get a plain-language breakdown of why it's right or wrong.
AI explains nuance — when to use one word over another and what register fits.
Ask in your own language and get an answer grounded in your current lesson.
AI notices what you keep getting wrong and suggests focused practice.
Why is it "raamatut" and not "raamat"?
The verb "lugema" (to read) takes its object in the partitive when the action is ongoing. "Ma loen raamatut" = I'm in the process of reading the book. "Ma loen raamatu läbi" would be a completed action — that one takes the genitive.
FAQ