Learn Bicol App: Your Friendly Passage to Bicolano

Wanted to give you the 411 on Learn Bicol, the app and web tool I’ve poured my heart into. It’s now live on iOS, Android, and the web—no matter your setup, you can start learning in minutes!

Where to find it

  • App Store & Google Play – search Learn Bicol Language by Kanto Projects.
    • Android installs hover over 1K+ with steady growth—about 210 last month.
    • iOS version is sized at ~19.5 MB and free on iPhone/iPad/Mac.
  • Web Version – pop open your browser and visit.

What It Does:

Learn Bicol combines interactive features that make learning fun and effective—without overwhelming you:

  1. Flashcards – brightly colored and organized by topic: greetings, numbers, food, and more.
  2. Multiple-choice quizzes, fill-in-the-blanks, true/false questions—gamified learning at its best.
  3. Picture‑word matching – keep your memory sharp with visual pairing.
  4. Word of the Day – learn a new vocab word every day, with examples.
  5. Built-in search/dictionary – lookup words anytime.
  6. Progress tracking – watch yourself grow as you learn.

Why I Made It

As someone from Honolulu with Bicolano roots, I wanted a way to preserve and share the language—not just for me, but for anyone else who wants to connect deeper with Bicol culture. It’s built to be approachable: no ads blocking your flow, no paywalls—just good, practical learning tools.

What’s New

  • Android: recently updated (v1.00009) with flashcard, UI, and ad placement improvements.
  • iOS: version 1.0.4 adds performance tweaks and smarter ad timing to keep things smooth.

Who It’s For

  • Heritage learners or balikbayans reconnecting with roots
  • Travelers headed to Bicol who want key phrases
  • Language nerds who love regional Filipino dialects
  • Folks dating up or making new Bicolano friends 😏

How You Can Help

  • Download & dive in — iOS, Android, or web.
  • Share it – with anyone curious about Bicol.
  • Got suggestions? Want more dialects (like Naga, Partido, Viracnon?), more audio, or deeper phrase sets? I’m all ears—especially from people who actually speak Bicol!

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