Verb Conjugation Practice
For a lot of learners, conjugation is the first wall a language throws up. One verb splinters into a dozen shapes depending on who's doing the action and when, and suddenly the tidy dictionary word is a moving target.
Conjugation is the way a verb changes form to match who's acting and when. English does a light version of it: I go, she goes, we went. Many languages take it much further, with a separate ending for nearly every combination of person, tense, and mood. (A few, like Mandarin Chinese, barely conjugate at all: the verb holds still and other words carry the timing.)
That's why conjugation rewards drilling more than almost anything else in a language. The forms follow patterns, and patterns are learned by doing them, not by reading a table once and hoping. The problem with most conjugation exercises is that they're flat: the same forms you already own come up as often as the ones you keep getting wrong, so half your reps are wasted on verbs you'd never miss.
Atlas Runa runs conjugation practice as targeted drills that lean into your weak spots. The exercises adapt to your level and to the forms you keep forgetting, so you spend your reps where they count instead of re-proving the easy present tense. Each drill ties the correction back to the pattern behind it, in plain language, so a form starts to feel like a rule you can extend rather than a fact you have to memorize one verb at a time. Runa, the AI coach that already knows which endings you've got shaky, keeps nudging the next set toward what you actually need to work on.
Pick your language below to start drilling the forms that keep tripping you up.
Atlas Runa has many free tools but the AI ones have a substantial cost so those require a paid account.
