What learners say about LingoBear
“Hands down one of the best language apps I've tried, love it.”
gayshouldbecanon
“Really cool way to build vocab breadth and depth on topics of interest! Especially love the explanation field which provides so much helpful context.”
vayabien
“I really think this will help language learners with motivation. It's great that you can type in your interest, and it creates a story/article for you. Well done!”
Chasing_toucans
“This is really cool! The UI is very intuitive and not annoying and the text it generated was interesting and the right level for me. This really is the first language tool I've seen in a while that's actually interesting and fresh.”
anonymous
“Just tried it out. This is Awesome! I'll be using it on my Xbox a lot I can foresee.”
michaeldross
“Loved it. This is the kind of thing that makes me excited about generative AI in the language learning space.”
ButterflyBitter888
Every word in your Inuktitut reading passage is clickable. Get English translations and grammar help — essential for unpacking long polysynthetic verbs.
Type any topic and LingoBear generates a fresh Inuktitut reading passage — useful when classroom materials are limited.
Inuktitut (ᐃᓄᒃᑎᑐᑦ) is the major Inuit language of eastern Canada, with around 39,000 speakers across Nunavut, Nunavik (northern Quebec) and Nunatsiavut (Labrador). It is one of the official languages of Nunavut and part of the wider Inuit dialect continuum that runs from Alaska through Canada to Greenland. The closely related variety in Inuvialuit (western Canada) is sometimes counted separately.
Inuktitut is written in two systems: Canadian Aboriginal Syllabics, used in Nunavut and most of Nunavik (ᐃ = i, ᐅ = u, ᐊ = a, rotated by consonant), and the Latin-based Roman orthography used in Labrador and parts of the western Arctic. A unified writing system, Inuktut Qaliujaaqpait, was approved in 2019 but adoption is gradual. Like Greenlandic, the language is polysynthetic — single words can be sentence-length.