After you complete a set of phrases, you hear a longer audio passage that combines concepts you've been practicing.
The passage might be a short story, a description, or a conversation. It uses vocabulary and structures you've worked on, but in a new context.
You listen and gauge how much you understand.
This serves several purposes:
Realistic listening practice. Real speech is faster, more fluid, and less predictable than isolated phrases. Listening exercises bridge the gap between drill practice and actual comprehension.
Integration. Understanding "the ball is on the table" in isolation is different from catching it within a flowing narrative. These exercises reveal whether concepts are genuinely sticking.
Volume. Developing fluency requires massive exposure. Listening exercises add variety and density to your input. Even when you don't catch every word, your brain is processing patterns.
After the exercise, you rate how much you understood. There are no right or wrong answers.
These exercises also work in hands-free mode.
