Rosetta Stone is also US owned.

I pay for a family plan and share it with a bunch of people. Several are government workers and use it in addition to traditional training, so it is actually an important subscription.

It’s one of my last US subscriptions.

    • wise_pancakeOP
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      6 hours ago

      Awesome, we have the same goal and I’ve been looking at European alternatives wherever Canadian one doesn’t exist.

      Subscribed

  • sik0fewl
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    16 hours ago

    For ebooks, Kobo is a Canadian subsidiary of a Japanese company (Rakuten).

    Edit:

    Apparently Kobo does audiobooks as well, but not sure what the selection looks like.

    Also, you can check out books from your library and read them on Kobo devices (probably - check out your local library).

    • wise_pancakeOP
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      16 hours ago

      I’ll check out Kobo’s audiobooks. My wife has been very into our library’s audiobooks, though I’m not sure how that works.

  • n2burns
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    1 day ago

    Mauril seems pretty good for English or French and is published by the CBC.

    • yarn
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      1 day ago

      I read about this app here and checked it out. I’m a French noob, and I’m so happy they start their lessons with small conversations instead of theory! This is what my schooling has missed my whole life.

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      Woah that looks perfect.

      My wife watches French CBC shows to keep practiced already, never heard of this app

  • doylio
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    1 day ago

    The best language learning app IMO is Anki. It’s FOSS and very powerful (although the UI isn’t great).

    Seriously, once you learn how to use it, it’s incredible how well it works. However it is also much less forgiving than Duolingo. You really need to use it everyday. If you skip more than 1 day, you’ll be so behind that it gets tough to catch up

    • GameGod
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      6 hours ago

      Does Anki come with content? Like where do I get the flash cards from for a certain language? The website makes no mention of this

      • deo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 hours ago

        You can download shared decks. On the mobile app, there’s a little floating button with a plus sign that takes you to the shared decks, but I find it better to use the desktop app to import so that I can go ahead and fix any formatting issues I have too (i find the default font size to often be too small).

    • small44@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I like memorion on android, it looks like a more user friendly anki with ability to import deck from it and many other language apps

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    1 day ago

    Lingodeer is Chinese owned

    Innovative language (languagepod101) appears to be Japanese (address listed as tokyo)

    Not Canadian but it gives you non-US options depending on your needs

    • mintiefresh
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      5 hours ago

      I’ve been using Lingodeer to learn Korean and have been pretty happy with it.

      +1