Spanish · Reading Companion

Read Spanish. Click words. Remember them.

Paste any Spanish article — news, Wikipedia, a short story, anything you'd actually want to read. Click a word to see what it means. Every lookup is queued for spaced-repetition review automatically. No flashcards to build. No course to finish.

Not a course. A reading companion that turns what you're already reading into vocabulary you remember. No account needed to start. Also available as a Chrome extension for any webpage.

1 · Paste an article

News, Wikipedia, a blog post — anything in Spanish you'd actually want to read. Paste the text (or a URL), and open it in the reader.

2 · Click words as you read

Tap any word. A popover shows the meaning and part of speech, with one click for the full definition when you want it. The sentence you were on is remembered so you come back to it.

3 · Review later, quickly

Every word you look up enters a spaced-repetition queue. A 2-minute daily review of fill-in-the-blank sentences from your own reading keeps the words moving into long-term memory. You don't have to build anything — it builds itself.

What you don't have to do

  • No curriculum to follow
  • No decks to build
  • No daily streak to keep
  • No lessons to finish

If you want a course, this isn't one. If you're already reading Spanish and losing vocabulary to the void, this is for you.

See a real lookup

fuera (adverb) [/ˈfwe.ɾa/]
En el exterior de un lugar o espacio:
outside, out
• El perro está fuera de la casa.
The dog is outside the house.
En un lugar distinto al de origen o residencia:
away, abroad
• Estuve fuera por trabajo toda la semana.
I was away for work all week.
Common phrases: fuera de lugar, fuera de control
Idioms: estar fuera de sí (to be beside oneself)

This is what clicking a word shows — inline, without leaving your article.

Works in your browser. No sign-up to try. Log in later to keep your words across devices.

From the blog

Word Holder also supports Italian, French, German, Dutch and Bulgarian.