Learn through real conversation
Language exchange through short chats and voice. Meet partners worldwide and build listening, vocabulary, and natural phrasing without studying in a vacuum.

What language exchange looks like
Three ways Linglo fits real life: conversation, words in context, and how people really talk.
Real back-and-forth
Messages and voice with many partners, with different accents and speeds, so you adapt faster than a single course voice.
Words in context
Vocabulary from chats you care about: names, topics, and phrases you’ll actually reuse.
How people really talk
Slang, fillers, and natural lines, not only polished textbook sentences.
Start in two steps
Open the app and go. Topic Battle and the rest are inside when you’re ready.
- 1
Set your languages
Say what you speak and what you’re learning so we can suggest better partners.
- 2
Jump into chats
Text, voice notes, a few minutes a day. Consistency beats marathon sessions.
Topic Battle
A 1v1 timed duel on a shared topic.
- Two matched players write during a timed writing phase.
- The community votes, and players too when the mode allows.
- Finishes on the clock; your battles stay in history.
From learners
People sharing what happened for them, in their own words.
- SC
Sarah Chen
Learning Japanese
I moved abroad and needed Japanese for daily life, not exam scores. I was too shy to type at first, so I sent rough voice notes. People replied anyway, and after a few weeks I stopped freezing in convenience stores.
- MR
Marco Rodriguez
Learning English
I understood my teacher fine but froze on real calls. I looked for partners who were okay with slow messages first. We moved to voice later when I felt safe. Last month I did a work call in English without switching back to Spanish.
- LF
Lucía Fernández
Learning Spanish
I studied Spanish years ago but Mexico was rough. Everyone talked faster than my app audio. I matched with people from a few places here and asked them to voice note how they'd really order or joke. I still make mistakes, but I order food without scripting it in my head first.
- JP
James Park
Learning Korean
I married into a Korean family and was tired of smiling through conversations I half understood. I text someone here most nights, even one or two lines, and they fix how I sound. My spouse's parents noticed I follow more at dinner now.
- DM
Daniel Meyer
Learning Japanese
I commuted an hour and hated drilling fake sentences. I started sending short clips about my actual day, my dog, work stress. People wrote back how they'd phrase it. That stuck with me more than repeating textbook lines.
- BA
Beatriz Almeida
Learning Portuguese
I visit family in Brazil twice a year. In class I sounded fine, but relatives switched to English because I sounded stiff. Since January I've been chatting with Brazilians here about normal stuff. Last trip they stayed in Portuguese with me longer than before.
- CF
Claire Fontaine
Learning French
I need French for work emails in Montreal, not grades. I paste drafts I'm nervous to send and people tell me what sounds natural versus overly formal. It's less scary for me than a class because I choose when I ask.
Help & download
FAQ for setup and login issues. Need a human? Email us. We read every message.



