The best language content in the world isn't in any app.
It's on YouTube, in the news, and in the songs you already love. Flor turns it into your daily speaking and writing practice.
Invite-only alpha · Spanish, French, Japanese, German, and 8 more
Apps build their own little worlds. The internet built a better one.
Apps invent toy sentences, generic dialogues, and the same 500 words every learner has heard ten times. Meanwhile, YouTube has hundreds of professional language teachers posting hour-long lessons every week, in every major language. The news covers any topic, at native level, every day. There are songs you've already played fifty times whose chorus you've never actually understood.
The problem isn't the content. There's already too much of it. The problem is that you watch a Dreaming Spanish video and a week later you can't remember the new phrases. You read a news article and don't notice which expressions were idiomatic. You hear a song you love and never figure out what the bridge means.
Flor sits between you and that content. You drop in a link — a video, an article, a song. Flor pulls the transcript or lyrics, surfaces the vocabulary and phrases worth keeping, and turns whatever you brought into something you actively practice instead of passively consume.
1. Drop in anything.
A YouTube video. A news article. A song. A whole course playlist from a teacher you follow — Flor remembers where you left off so you can come back lesson by lesson. Or pin a YouTube playlist of your favorite content and Flor keeps it in sync as the creator adds new videos. It handles the unglamorous work — fetching transcripts, parsing articles, pulling synced lyrics so the words line up with the singing. Twelve languages.
2. Flor pulls out what's worth learning.
Vocabulary you don't know yet. Idiomatic phrases that wouldn't translate word-for-word. The grammar moves the speaker just used. Topics covered in the video, so you have something real to talk or write about. Everything sits next to the transcript, lined up with the moment it was said. Tap a word for a translation, save a phrase, or hand a topic to the AI as a conversation starter or a writing prompt.
3. Practice using what you just learned.
Have a conversation with the AI, in real time, voice in and voice out. It already knows what video you watched, which phrases you saved, and what grammar the lesson covered — so it actually uses them. Or open a writing pad: Flor reads what you write, marks the rough edges, suggests cleaner phrasings, explains why. Vocabulary from your last video lands in both modes automatically.
And as you write or speak, the words you reach for tend to already be there. Flor surfaces the right word, the natural phrase, or a cleaner way to put the whole sentence — quietly, alongside what you're working on, before you have to stop and ask. Speaking and writing in a new language should feel like expressing yourself, not searching for words.
Everything connects. The phrases you save from yesterday's video are in tomorrow's conversation.
In practice
Language learning videos
Resume where you left off in a C1 Spanish course playlist. Topics, examples, and the key vocabulary used by the teacher are extracted automatically. Click a topic to jump to the moment it was taught. When you're ready, practice speaking or writing using those examples and vocabulary directly — they're already in front of you.
News articles
The latest stories from your favorite immersion news sites sit on your home page. Open one. The phrases and vocabulary worth learning are extracted automatically. Step through the article line by line with audio playback if you want to hear it spoken. When you're ready to turn reading into something active, answer a comprehension question Flor generates from the piece.
Songs
You've played "Bésame Mucho" fifty times. Open it in Flor. Synced lyrics scroll with the singing. Tap a line for a translation. Save the phrases that catch your ear. Loop a section until you can sing it back — your saved loops collect on your home screen, so reviewing across the songs in your library takes one click. Songs put cadence and pattern into your speech in a way drills never will.
Immersive videos
You watch a Japanese chef make ramen at home. Flor pulls out the kitchen vocabulary, the small expressions a textbook never covers, the way they actually speak when cooking for themselves. Put the words into practice with a role-play — describe the trouble you're having with your own ramen, in Japanese, and the AI plays along.
Who Flor is for
Serious learners who've moved past the basics — comfortable with simple things, but far from real fluency, and stuck on the plateau every learner hits between the two. People who'd rather watch a real Japanese cooking video than answer multiple-choice questions about pretend coffee orders. People who already know that breaking through the plateau takes a daily routine across all four skills: active listening, reading, speaking, and writing.
Not for absolute beginners. There's no “ask for the bathroom” track. Flor will be easier to use after a few months on something else first.
Not for people who want streaks, achievements, or an app to tell them they did a good job today. Flor assumes you'll do the work because you want to live in the language, not because something's rewarding you for showing up.
Join the alpha
Flor is in private alpha. Invites go out in small batches — first round in the next few weeks. If anything on this page resonated, drop your email and I'll send you a code when there's room.
Built by Liam. One-person project, twelve languages. Reach me at hello@florlang.app.