Knowing a Russian word means knowing its 12 noun forms, its conjugation table, its aspect pair. Here's how to learn vocabulary the way the language actually works.
In Spanish or French, learning a word is mostly done once you know its translation. In Russian, a single noun has 12 forms (6 cases × 2 numbers). A verb has two aspects, each with its own conjugation table. An adjective agrees in gender, number, and case.
This means "learning a word" in Russian is really learning a system. A flashcard that shows you "книга = book" teaches you roughly 8% of the word. You need the other 92% to actually use it in a sentence.
That's what Slova is built for. Every word comes with its full paradigm: declension tables for nouns, conjugation tables for verbs, and AI-generated sentences that drill each form in context.
Drill all 6 Russian cases with fill-in-the-blank sentences. Type the correct form of each noun and adjective in context.
Learn about Russian cases ›Full conjugation tables for every verb. Practice present, past, and future tense forms with sentences that test each one.
Explore Russian verbs ›530+ words across 23 topics - family, food, transport, professions, and more. Tagged A1 through B1 so you learn in order.
Browse word topics ›Russian verbs come in pairs: imperfective and perfective. Slova links them and tests you on choosing the right one in context.
SM-2 algorithm schedules reviews at the optimal moment. Words you struggle with come back sooner. Words you know fade into longer intervals.
No multiple choice. You type the answer - the correct case form, the right conjugation, the accurate spelling. That's what builds real recall.
All 6 cases on one printable page - noun endings for masculine, feminine, and neuter, key prepositions, example sentences, and 5 rules that cover 80% of usage. Pin it next to your desk.
Get the free cheat sheet530+ words with full grammar depth. Cases, conjugation, aspect pairs, and spaced repetition - built for Russian from the ground up.
Start training - it's free