Numbers Practice
Numbers feel like the easy part of a language, right up until someone says a price out loud and you're still translating the tens while they've moved on to the change. Learning to count is quick. Learning to grab a number the instant you hear it, or produce one without a silent pause to assemble it, is a separate skill entirely, and it's the one that actually matters at the register, on the phone, and whenever a time or date gets mentioned in passing.
The reason numbers lag is that they show up rarely in study material and constantly in real life. A story might use a handful of them; a market stall throws dozens at you a minute. What closes that gap isn't more reading, it's reps: hearing numbers and saying numbers until the step where you translate them quietly disappears.
Atlas Runa turns numbers into fast, focused drills. You practice recognizing them by ear and producing them on demand, at a pace that ramps up as they get automatic, so the goal isn't just knowing the words but reaching for them without thinking. It's the small, unglamorous practice that quietly removes one of the most common everyday stumbles.
Choose your language below to start drilling numbers until they're instant.
Atlas Runa has many free tools but the AI ones have a substantial cost so those require a paid account.
