Executive Summary
Confidence Distribution
How our review rated each language pack in this category.
Language-by-Language Assessment
129 languages reviewed. Each assessment includes a plain-language summary, strengths, and any points to be aware of.
The Bosnian pack delivers consistent, child-friendly labels for everyday objects and shows excellent coverage. Spelling and word choice are appropriate for young learners without notable issues. This is a strong, ready-to-use set for schools and homes.
- Clear, consistent vocabulary suitable for children
- Excellent coverage of everyday items
The Cantonese pack is very strong, with clear, natural vocabulary in traditional script that matches everyday usage. Coverage is complete and most terms are concise and child-appropriate. Be aware of some regional variation in Cantonese vocabulary — either term may be correct depending on the speaker’s region.
- Very high-quality, child-friendly Cantonese vocabulary
- Uses traditional characters suited to Cantonese readers
- Complete and consistent coverage
- A small number of items show regional variation in Cantonese usage
Catalan labels are accurate, concise and well-suited to children learning everyday vocabulary. The pack is consistent and ready for classroom or home use. Only a small number of items were flagged as slightly formal or long.
- Child-friendly Catalan word choices
- Strong coverage across common objects
- A few entries are slightly formal or longer than ideal for preschoolers
Croatian offers strong, natural labels for everyday objects and is well suited to young learners. Labels are concise and age‑appropriate, making this pack ready for classroom use without modification. Expect reliable coverage across household and school items.
- Concise, child‑friendly vocabulary
- High consistency across items
Czech entries are accurate and clear, making this pack a strong choice for learners. Coverage is comprehensive and vocabulary choices suit children. A small number of items were flagged for script irregularities (accents/diacritics) and could use a quick check.
- Accurate, child-friendly Czech vocabulary
- Comprehensive coverage of everyday items
- A handful of items flagged for script/diacritic issues — quick review recommended
The Danish pack uses clear, appropriate words for common household and school objects and is well-suited to learners. Spelling and phrasing are consistent and child-appropriate overall. Only minor formal phrasing appears in a few entries.
- Clear, consistent Danish terms
- Well organised coverage of everyday objects
- Occasional formal wording — may be simplified for very young children
Dutch entries are accurate, natural and very child-friendly for everyday objects. The pack consistently uses forms children will recognise at home and school. This is a strong choice for learners.
- Very natural vocabulary for children
- Consistent and accurate coverage
Estonian offers accurate, child-appropriate labels with consistent spelling. The vocabulary set covers everyday items well and is ready for classroom use. A handful of entries are a touch formal or lengthy but do not affect overall usability.
- Accurate Estonian spelling and word choice
- Strong coverage of everyday vocabulary
- A few terms are slightly formal or long
Finnish labels are accurate, concise and very child-friendly. The pack offers strong coverage of everyday objects and consistent spelling. A few entries were flagged as formal but overall require no major changes.
- Clear, child-appropriate Finnish vocabulary
- Consistent orthography and coverage
- Minor formal phrasing in a small number of labels
French labels are accurate, concise and well-suited to children learning everyday vocabulary. Coverage is broad and consistent, making this pack a strong choice for classrooms and homes. Only a small number of items show formal phrasing.
- Clear, child-friendly French vocabulary
- Comprehensive coverage of everyday objects
- A few labels are slightly formal — quick simplifications are optional
Galician shows very consistent, natural vocabulary for everyday objects and is ready for classroom use with minimal adjustment. Terms are concise and aligned with how children commonly name household items. You can rely on this pack for everyday teaching and play.
- Consistent, child‑appropriate vocabulary
- Concise labels suited to flashcards
German entries are accurate, concise and suitable for child learners. The set provides reliable coverage of everyday objects with consistent orthography. A few entries are slightly formal or longer than ideal for toddlers, but overall the pack is ready to use.
- Accurate, child-friendly German vocabulary
- Consistent spelling and coverage
- A small number of labels are slightly formal or wordy
Hebrew shows very high quality for everyday objects with concise, familiar terms children will recognise. The vocabulary is well adapted to a child audience and requires little or no modification. This pack is ready for classroom use.
- Concise, child‑friendly labels
- High coverage and consistency
Hungarian delivers high‑quality, child‑appropriate labels for everyday objects with strong consistency. The vocabulary is concise and well suited to flashcards and classroom use. Very little adaptation should be necessary.
- Consistent, concise vocabulary
- Ready for classroom and home use
Italian delivers very consistent, child‑friendly labels for everyday objects and is well‑adapted to flashcard learning. Terms are concise and widely used, so the pack is ready for classroom or home use with no significant changes. This is a strong option for teaching basic vocabulary.
- Consistent, child‑appropriate labels
- High coverage and clarity
Korean provides very consistent, child‑appropriate labels for everyday objects and is ready for classroom use with little to no modification. The vocabulary aligns well with what children commonly say and see at home and school. This pack is a strong option for teaching basic vocabulary.
- Concise, familiar labels
- High consistency and child‑suitability
The Simplified Mandarin pack is excellent: concise, natural, and well-suited for young learners reading simplified characters. Entries are accurate and cover the full set of everyday objects, making this pack highly reliable for classroom and home use. A few items use a slightly formal tone or longer phrasing, but these are rare.
- High-quality, child-appropriate vocabulary in simplified characters
- Complete coverage and consistent choices
- Occasional entries use more formal or longer phrasing
The Traditional Mandarin pack offers very reliable, natural vocabulary using traditional characters, well suited for young readers in Taiwan and other Traditional-script users. Coverage is complete and entries are mostly concise and child-friendly. A small number of items could be phrased more colloquially for preschool learners.
- Excellent coverage in traditional characters
- Natural, age-appropriate vocabulary
- A few entries are slightly formal rather than colloquial
The Montenegrin set is reliable, with consistent, child-appropriate words for everyday objects. Spelling and wording are suitable for classroom and home practice. Only a few items showed loanword flags, which are acceptable in context.
- Clear, consistent vocabulary appropriate for children
- Good breadth of everyday object labels
Norwegian vocabulary is clear, consistent and well-suited to children learning household and school items. Translations are natural and immediately usable in a home or classroom. Very reliable overall.
- Natural child-facing vocabulary
- High consistency across items
Polish translations are accurate, natural and very suitable for children learning everyday objects. The pack uses familiar, conversational vocabulary that will be helpful in home and classroom settings. You can rely on this set for teaching common household and school items.
- Very natural, child-friendly vocabulary
- Consistent and accurate coverage
Portuguese translations are clear, natural and well suited to children learning everyday objects. The pack is consistent and uses vocabulary children encounter daily at home and school. This is a strong, reliable resource for teaching common items.
- Natural, child-friendly vocabulary
- High consistency and coverage
Slovenian shows very high-quality, child-friendly vocabulary for everyday objects with consistent, natural choices throughout. A child will recognise and learn these words quickly; very few entries need adjustment. This is a reliable pack ready for classroom or home use.
- Very consistent, natural vocabulary
- Concise, child-appropriate forms
Spanish entries are precise, concise and highly suitable for young learners. The pack gives excellent coverage of everyday objects with child-friendly wording. Only a few terms are slightly formal or longer than necessary.
- Clear, concise Spanish suitable for children
- Excellent coverage of common household and school items
- A very small number of labels are slightly formal
Swedish shows very high-quality, concise vocabulary for everyday objects that’s ideal for young learners. Words are natural, consistent and well-suited to flashcard learning with very few issues. This pack is ready to use in classroom or home settings.
- Concise, child-friendly vocabulary
- Very consistent and natural translations
Taiwanese Hokkien shows very strong, child-appropriate vocabulary for everyday objects, with clear and natural choices. Regional variations are noted in a few items but the translations are highly usable for learners across settings. This pack is excellent for young learners.
- Very natural, child-friendly vocabulary
- Strong consistency and coverage
- A few items reflect regional variation in everyday speech
Thai presents very high-quality, concise vocabulary for everyday objects that will be easy for children to learn and remember. Translations are natural and well-suited to flashcards, with only a few formal or longer entries. This is a strong pack for classroom or home use.
- Concise, child-friendly vocabulary
- Very consistent and natural translations
This Afrikaans pack uses clear, familiar words for everyday items and shows consistent orthography. Most labels are appropriate for children, giving good coverage across rooms and objects. A small number of entries lean formal or use longer compound phrases that you may want to simplify for very young learners.
- Consistent, familiar everyday nouns
- Good coverage across common household items
- Clean spelling and orthography
- Some labels are slightly formal and a few are long — simple alternatives may suit preschoolers better
Albanian contains well-chosen, child-appropriate translations for common household and classroom objects. The pack is generally natural and consistent, though a few terms are a little formal or lengthy for flashcards. This set will work well for introducing everyday vocabulary.
- Clear, familiar everyday vocabulary
- Consistent terminology suitable for learners
- A number of entries are somewhat formal
- Some items are longer than ideal for quick flashcard use
This Arabic pack offers reliable, regionally-aware labels for common objects and is well-suited to classroom learning. It handles script and spelling consistently, though a number of items were flagged as somewhat formal. Also expect regional variation — different Arabic-speaking areas sometimes prefer alternate everyday words.
- Clear, consistent Arabic script and spelling
- Strong coverage of common household items
- Some phrasing is a bit formal
- Regional dialects may use different everyday words
Armenian gives broad, usable coverage of everyday items with generally child‑friendly terms. A few labels trend toward a formal or slightly long phrasing, so you might simplify those for preschool learners. Overall, the pack is a reliable choice for basic vocabulary.
- Good coverage of common objects
- Generally natural, child‑facing labels
- Occasional formal or long labels that could be simplified for younger children
The Azerbaijani pack gives clear labels for everyday objects with consistent Latin-script spelling. Most items are appropriate for children and learners. A minority of terms are slightly formal in tone and could be simplified for younger audiences.
- Consistent Latin-script forms
- Good range of common object names
- Occasional formal phrasing — consider simpler synonyms for preschoolers
Basque labels are generally clear and appropriate for young learners, with consistent use of local forms. The pack covers common objects well. Several entries are flagged as formal or long; a brief review could make them more conversational for small children.
- Uses locally appropriate Basque vocabulary
- Good coverage of everyday objects
- Some formal phrasing and longer labels — consider simplifying for preschoolers
Belarusian labels are accurate, consistent, and well-suited for a child audience. The pack covers everyday household and school items thoroughly. A few entries are flagged as somewhat formal; they’re easy to adapt if you prefer more colloquial terms.
- Accurate, child-appropriate vocabulary
- Consistent Cyrillic orthography
- Some entries lean formal and could be simplified for very young children
Bulgarian labels are accurate and consistent, making this pack reliable for classroom and home use. The vocabulary covers the everyday items children will recognise. A small number of items are slightly formal or longer than ideal for the youngest learners.
- Clear, standard Cyrillic spelling
- Well-rounded coverage of household and school items
- A few labels are formal or wordy — consider shorter alternatives for preschool learners
Burmese vocabulary in this pack is accurate and covers everyday objects children commonly see. Many entries are well chosen for a child audience. There is some formal phrasing and occasional longer phrasing, but the translations are reliable.
- Accurate and wide-ranging coverage
- Appropriate choices for common household items
- A number of entries use formal or longer forms that may be less conversational
Chichewa gives accurate, child-appropriate translations for many common objects. The pack is comprehensive and mostly conversational, though a number of entries use longer phrasing or more formal wording. Overall it's a useful resource for learners.
- Good coverage of everyday household and school items
- Accurate translations
- Several items use longer or slightly formal phrasing
Dari delivers accurate, child-appropriate words for many everyday objects. The translations are consistent and usable in classroom or home contexts. A few items reflect regional variation or slightly formal wording, so local preference may vary.
- Accurate coverage of common household and school items
- Consistent vocabulary choices
- Some regional variation and occasional formal phrasing
Georgian gives consistent, child‑recognisable labels for household and school objects. While a few entries are somewhat long or formal, the majority are concise and familiar to children. This makes the pack a dependable resource for teaching everyday vocabulary.
- Consistent, recognisable vocabulary
- Good fit for flashcards
- Some longer or slightly formal labels may need simplification
Greek labels are accurate and appropriate for children, with consistent Greek-script spelling. The pack covers everyday objects thoroughly. A small number of entries are flagged as formal or somewhat long and might be simplified for early learners.
- Clear, standard Greek orthography
- Comprehensive everyday vocabulary
- Minor formality or length in a few labels — consider simpler alternatives for preschoolers
Haitian Creole presents a solid set of everyday object terms that children will recognise in daily life. A small number of entries show loaned or formal forms, but the core vocabulary remains accessible to learners. This pack is suitable for both home practice and classroom activities.
- Natural, familiar labels for common objects
- Good overall coverage
- Some loaned or slightly formal words — consider simpler variants for very young children
Hausa offers dependable, child‑recognisable labels for everyday objects and works well for classroom use. A small number of items trend toward a formal register or longer phrasing; those can be swapped for simpler words if you teach very young children. Overall this pack is a strong choice for home and school.
- Clear, natural labels for household items
- Suitable for classroom and everyday use
- Some entries are slightly formal or long — you may prefer simpler variants for younger learners
Hiligaynon delivers clear, usable vocabulary for common objects and is generally child‑friendly. Some loaned or slightly formal forms appear, but they do not materially affect everyday teaching. This pack is a good option for home and school use.
- Clear everyday vocabulary
- Appropriate for classroom flashcards
- Occasional loaned or formal terms — consider swapping for simpler colloquial words for younger children
Icelandic presents clear, standard labels for everyday objects and is well suited for young learners. A few items use more formal phrasing, but most entries are concise and familiar. This pack is ready for classroom use with minimal adaptation.
- Clear, standard vocabulary
- Good fit for flashcards and classroom activities
- Occasional formal phrasing — optional simplification for very young children
Ilocano supplies largely appropriate everyday vocabulary for children, but reviewers found a subset of entries in the wrong language or with inconsistent sourcing. Those instances are limited, yet worth checking if you need fully consistent labels for teaching. With a quick pass to fix any wrong‑language items, this pack will be classroom‑ready.
- Good coverage of routine household and school objects
- Many child‑friendly labels
- Some entries were flagged as in the wrong language — a review is recommended for consistency
Indonesian provides clear, familiar names for everyday objects that children commonly encounter. The pack is well suited for classroom and home learning, with few adjustments needed. One or two loaned or formal items may be replaced for very young children if desired.
- Natural, recognisable vocabulary
- Well suited for classroom flashcards
- A small number of loaned/formal items — optional simplification for preschoolers
Irish delivers broad, usable coverage of everyday objects with natural, regionally appropriate words for most items. The pack is well suited to classroom and home use, though one flagged item ("Tile") suggests a specific word choice may be uncommon or too technical for young children. A quick review of that term will ensure it matches the regional vocabulary you prefer.
- Wide coverage of everyday items
- Mostly child‑friendly, regionally appropriate terms
- “Tile” was flagged as uncommon/technical (score 44) — consider a simpler or regional word
Japanese offers reliable vocabulary for everyday items with many familiar loaned terms that are standard in modern usage. Most entries are suitable for children, though a small number use formal wording. The pack works well for classroom and home learning.
- Natural, commonly used terms
- Good coverage of everyday objects
- Some formal wording and loanwords appear — consider simplifying for very young learners
Javanese provides broadly usable everyday vocabulary and reflects common contemporary usage, including a few loaned forms. Most labels are suitable for children, though a handful may be slightly formal. The pack is a practical choice for classroom and home vocabulary practice.
- Clear everyday terms
- Reflects common modern usage
- Minor presence of formal or loaned terms — optional simplification for preschoolers
Kazakh supplies natural, usable names for everyday objects and is well suited to classroom activities. A small number of labels use a formal register or lengthier phrasing, but the core vocabulary remains child‑friendly. This pack will work well for most teaching contexts.
- Natural everyday vocabulary
- Good overall consistency
- Few entries are formal or long — optional simplification for very young learners
Khmer covers everyday objects in a way children will generally recognise, though one flagged item ("Will (Testament)") scored lower, reflecting that legal terms can be hard to render simply. The bulk of the pack is suitable for classroom and home use; consider simplifying legal or abstract items when teaching younger children. Overall it’s a useful resource for routine vocabulary.
- Good coverage of common objects
- Child‑facing vocabulary for everyday items
- “Will (Testament)” was flagged (score 53) — legal/abstract terms may need simpler wording
Kinyarwanda provides clear, consistent words for everyday household items that a child will easily recognise. Translations are generally natural and well-covered, with only occasional entries that are a little formal or longer than ideal for flashcards. Overall this is a reliable pack for early vocabulary.
- Good coverage of common home and classroom items
- Consistent, natural translations
- Some terms lean towards a formal register and could be simplified for very young children
- A few entries are longer than ideal for quick recognition
Kirundi gives accurate translations for common household and school items a child will recognize. The vocabulary is generally clear and usable, though a handful of entries use longer phrasing than everyday child speech. Overall this is a useful resource for early learners.
- Accurate coverage of common objects
- Consistent translations
- Some entries use longer or more formal phrasing
Kurdish (Sorani) gives reliable, useful labels for everyday objects and reflects common regional usage. A few items show regional variation or slightly formal tone, so you may want to select the variant that matches your learners’ dialect. Overall, it’s a solid pack for classroom and home use.
- Useful everyday vocabulary
- Reflects regional usage
- Some regional variants and occasional formal terms — pick the forms that match your learners
Kyrgyz includes clear, child‑recognisable labels for everyday objects and is suitable for classroom flashcards. Most entries are natural and concise; a few may feel slightly formal. This pack is a dependable choice for teaching common vocabulary.
- Clear everyday vocabulary
- Generally concise and familiar terms
- Minor formal phrasing in a few items — optional simplification
The Lao pack gives clear, accurate labels for everyday household items a child will recognise. Translations are reliable and cover the full set of common objects. A small number of entries use slightly more formal vocabulary than child speech, so a local caregiver may prefer a simpler everyday word in very young learners.
- Accurate coverage of common household and school items
- Consistent translations across the set
- Some entries use a more formal register than casual child speech
Latvian entries are accurate and suitable for children learning common objects. The pack is consistent and complete for everyday items. A small number of entries are slightly formal or longer than typical child words, but they are correct and usable.
- Clear, accurate translations for common objects
- Good overall coverage and consistency
- A few terms use a more formal or longer form than casual child speech
Lithuanian vocabulary in this pack is accurate and well matched to child-facing concepts. Most words are natural for everyday use and the set is consistent. One specialised item ("Tile") scored lower and may use a less familiar or more technical term.
- Natural, child-friendly vocabulary for most items
- Consistent and thorough coverage
- "Tile" uses a less familiar/technical term and may vary regionally
Luxembourgish presents natural, familiar labels for everyday objects and works well in classroom settings. A few loaned or formal forms are present, but the majority of words are child‑recognisable. This pack is a good fit for everyday vocabulary learning.
- Natural, recognisable labels
- Good coverage for classroom use
- Some loaned or formal words — consider simpler options for very young children
Macedonian translations are accurate and child-appropriate for everyday items. The pack shows consistent, reliable choices that will help learners name common objects. A small number of entries use slightly formal phrasing, but overall the vocabulary is natural.
- Accurate, child-friendly vocabulary
- Consistent translations across items
- Occasional formal wording for a minority of items
The Malagasy set reliably labels familiar objects a child will meet at home or school. Translations are accurate and consistent across the pack. A handful of entries use a more formal register or longer phrasing than everyday child language.
- Solid coverage of common household and school items
- Accurate and consistent translations
- Some words use a more formal register that caregivers may simplify for very young children
Malay covers everyday items with clear, child-friendly translations. The set is accurate and consistent, and loanwords used are natural in modern speech. A few entries lean formal, but they remain appropriate and correct.
- Clear and consistent vocabulary for common objects
- Loanwords used reflect everyday Malay usage
Maltese delivers accurate translations for familiar household and school items. The pack is consistent and generally child-appropriate, though several entries use formal forms or longer phrasing. These choices are correct but may be less colloquial for very young children.
- Accurate coverage of common objects
- Consistent translations
- Multiple entries use a more formal or extended phrasing
Marathi terms are accurate and many items use forms familiar to children. The pack contains several loanwords (which are commonly used in everyday speech) and a tendency toward formal phrasing in some entries. Overall this is a solid choice for learners.
- Accurate, child-friendly vocabulary for common objects
- Natural use of widely adopted loanwords
- Some entries appear in a slightly formal register
Mongolian offers reliable, child-appropriate words for everyday items a child will recognise. The translations are consistent and cover the full range of household and school objects. A few entries are slightly formal in register but remain correct.
- Clear, consistent translations
- Good coverage of common household and school objects
- A small number of terms use a more formal register
Pashto gives reliable, child-facing translations for common objects around the home and school. Most entries are natural and consistent; a minority use loanwords or regional variants. Overall this pack is a good fit for early learners.
- Good coverage of everyday objects
- Accurate and consistent translations
- A few entries reflect regional variation or loanword usage
Persian (Farsi) provides clear, standard labels for everyday items in appropriate script. The pack is suitable for learners and will be familiar in classroom settings. A small number of terms appear somewhat formal or longer than ideal for very young children.
- Standard Persian orthography
- Comprehensive coverage of everyday object names
- A few entries are slightly formal or wordy
Romanian entries are accurate and match child-facing concepts for everyday objects. The pack is comprehensive and consistent, though a minority of items use slightly formal or longer forms. These are correct but may be less colloquial for very young children.
- Clear, accurate vocabulary for common items
- Comprehensive coverage
- A few entries use more formal or extended phrasing
Romansh provides accurate and child-appropriate vocabulary for everyday objects. The pack is consistent and well suited to classroom and home use, though a few items show regional variation. Overall it is a reliable choice for learners.
- Clear, usable vocabulary for common objects
- Good consistency across items
- A small number of terms reflect regional variation
Russian translations are accurate and well suited to children learning household and school vocabulary. The pack uses natural words children are likely to know, with good consistency across items. A small number of entries lean formal, but overall the set is reliable.
- Natural child-facing vocabulary
- Consistent and accurate translations
- A few terms use a slightly more formal register
Sami offers clear vocabulary for everyday things children encounter at home and school, with consistent terminology across the set. A few regional variants and some formal-sounding forms appear, which is expected given dialectal differences; these do not reduce the set’s usefulness for learners. Overall it’s a dependable choice for early vocabulary practice.
- Consistent terminology across everyday items
- Good handling of regional variation
- Some entries reflect regional variation—teachers may prefer one local form over another
- A moderate number of formal-sounding words that could be simplified for very young learners
Samoan offers familiar and consistent words for household items that work well for young learners. Some entries trend formal or are slightly long—typical when aiming for accuracy—but the overall set remains very usable for flashcards. This pack is a solid choice for building everyday vocabulary.
- Good coverage of common objects
- Generally natural and familiar translations
- Several entries use a more formal register than a child might use
- Some words are longer than ideal for quick flashcard recall
Serbian provides concise, familiar words for everyday objects that are well-suited to young learners. The translations are consistent and easy to use, though a few entries are slightly formal or longer than ideal. Overall this is a reliable pack for classroom and home use.
- Concise, child-friendly vocabulary
- Good consistency and coverage
- Occasional formal register in some translations
- A few longer phrases may be less suitable for very young children
Seychellois Creole includes many words derived from French and English, which is normal and helps recognisability for learners. The pack covers everyday objects well and will be familiar to local children. If you prefer purist local forms, a small review could adjust a few loan-derived labels.
- Recognisable vocabulary for local learners
- Broad coverage of common items
- Many loan-derived forms appear — expected for this creole but may feel English/French-influenced
Shona provides clear and consistent translations for everyday objects that children will easily recognise. The vocabulary is practical and well-covered, though a few items are slightly formal or wordy for very young learners. Overall, it’s a dependable pack for early vocabulary practice.
- Practical coverage of household and classroom items
- Consistent terminology
- Some entries are a bit formal for toddler language
- A few items are longer than ideal for flashcards
Slovak provides concise, child-friendly words for everyday objects that will be easy for learners to pick up. The pack is consistent and well-formed, though a few items miss diacritics or use more formal phrasing. Overall this is a strong set for early vocabulary learning.
- Clear, concise translations suitable for young learners
- Strong overall consistency
- Occasional missing diacritics may affect pronunciation cues
- A small number of entries are somewhat formal
Somali offers natural, familiar words for everyday household objects that children will recognise. Most terms are appropriate and consistent, but a number of entries lean formal and could be simplified for younger audiences. Overall, a strong option for early vocabulary learning.
- Natural handling of common items
- Good consistency across the set
- Many entries use a formal register—simple alternatives may help younger children
- Some translations are longer than ideal for quick recall
Sundanese gives clear, familiar translations for everyday objects that children will find useful. The pack is consistent and well-suited for learners, though it contains a noticeable share of loanwords—many are natural in contemporary Sundanese. Overall it’s a strong resource for basic vocabulary.
- Clear, child-appropriate translations
- Comprehensive coverage of common items
- A higher share of loanwords—these are common in the language but worth noting
- Some entries are slightly formal
Swahili offers practical, familiar translations for everyday household items that children will recognise quickly. The set is broadly consistent though a number of entries are slightly formal or long for flashcards. Overall it’s a solid choice for introducing basic vocabulary.
- Practical coverage of common objects
- Natural translations familiar to learners
- Frequent formal wording—simpler alternatives could help younger children
- Some entries are longer than ideal for quick recall
Tajik gives clear, child-appropriate words for everyday household and classroom items. The translations are consistent and useful for early learners, though a number of entries use a formal register. Overall this is a reliable pack for building basic vocabulary.
- Consistent, usable vocabulary for everyday items
- Good overall coverage
- Several entries use a formal register that could be simplified for toddlers
- A few translations are longer than ideal for flashcards
Tamil delivers clear, well-understood words for everyday objects that work well for children learning at home or school. Most translations are natural and consistent, though several entries lean formal and some are lengthy for flashcard use. With minor simplification, this pack is very usable for early learners.
- Good coverage of household and classroom vocabulary
- Generally natural and familiar translations
- Many entries are formal in tone—consider simpler child‑level words
- Some items are longer than ideal for flashcards
Turkish offers concise, natural words for everyday objects that children will pick up quickly. The vocabulary is consistent and well-suited to flashcard learning, though a few items are slightly formal or longer than ideal. Overall it’s a strong set for introducing common household vocabulary.
- Concise, child-friendly translations
- Strong consistency and coverage
- Some formal or longer entries may be less suitable for very young children
Turkmen contains clear, familiar terms for everyday objects that children will recognise. The vocabulary is consistent and practical, though a selection of entries leans formal or borrows from other languages. Overall it’s a solid set for early vocabulary practice.
- Consistent, practical translations
- Good coverage of household vocabulary
- Some entries use a formal register
- A moderate number of loanwords appear
Ukrainian provides clear, child-appropriate vocabulary for everyday household items that learners will recognise. Most translations are concise and natural, although a small number of entries are formal or lengthy. Overall this is a reliable pack for early vocabulary learning.
- Clear, familiar everyday vocabulary
- Consistent and concise translations
- A few entries use a more formal register
- Some longer phrases may be less ideal for flashcards
The Uzbek pack provides reliable and complete vocabulary for everyday items using clear Latin-script terms that children will recognise. Many entries are accurate and standard, though some words use a slightly formal or longer phrasing than spoken child language. You may want to offer simpler, conversational alternatives for very young learners.
- Full coverage of common household and school items
- Standard, consistent Latin-script forms
- Generally accurate and age-appropriate vocabulary
- Some terms are a bit formal in register
- Occasional longer descriptive phrases instead of short child-friendly words
The Vietnamese pack is solid and consistent, with most everyday object names given in standard Vietnamese. A small number of entries use a formal tone or longer compound phrases, and a handful lack diacritics which can affect reading for early learners. These are easy to work around in teaching by preferring shorter, spoken forms and ensuring diacritics are shown where possible.
- Accurate, standard vocabulary across items
- Good coverage of common household and school objects
- Some entries use a more formal register than everyday speech
- A minority of items are missing diacritics — may affect reading accuracy
The Xhosa pack gives reliable names for everyday items and is consistent across the set. A number of entries lean toward a formal register or longer descriptive phrases rather than short child-friendly words. For classroom or home use you might prefer to introduce simpler spoken equivalents for younger children.
- Good, consistent coverage of common objects
- Standard Latin-script forms appropriate for learners
- Many terms use a slightly formal register
- Some items are longer descriptive phrases rather than short labels
The Yoruba pack reliably covers everyday household and school objects and will be useful for recognition and early vocabulary building. Most items are appropriate, though several entries trend formal or lengthy; there is one flagged item ('Will (Testament)') with a low score and may need review for clarity or cultural fit. Consider using simpler spoken alternatives for very young learners and double-check that specific legal or formal terms are necessary for your use.
- Wide coverage of familiar items for children
- Consistent use of Latin script and common vocabulary
- One flagged term (’Will (Testament)’) needs review
- Overall tendency toward formal or longer phrasing in some entries
The Zulu pack gives consistent, usable vocabulary for common household and school objects. Many entries are accurate and standard, though several use a formal register or longer descriptive phrases instead of short child-friendly labels. For very young children, you may wish to present simpler spoken alternatives alongside these terms.
- Comprehensive coverage of everyday objects
- Consistent Latin-script usage and standard vocabulary
- Some items use a more formal register
- Occasional longer descriptive terms rather than compact labels
The Akan (Twi) vocabulary gives solid coverage of everyday objects using natural vocabulary choices. Most items are suitable for classroom and home use. Many entries are flagged as long or a bit formal, so brief, child-friendly rewrites could help for younger children.
- Natural, locally appropriate words
- Broad coverage of common objects
- Numerous entries are long or somewhat formal — consider shortening for toddlers
The Bengali set gives good, usable labels for common objects and follows standard Bengali script and spelling. Many terms are very familiar to children, though some entries are flagged for formality or regional variation. A short editorial pass can make a handful of labels more conversational for younger learners.
- Standard Bengali orthography
- Strong coverage of everyday, familiar nouns
- Some phrasing is a bit formal and a few items vary regionally
Bislama uses many English-derived words — this is a natural feature of the language and gives immediate recognisability for learners. The pack covers everyday objects consistently and will be familiar to speakers in the region. If you want exclusively traditional forms, a targeted review could swap in local alternatives where available.
- Highly recognisable English-derived vocabulary (normal for Bislama)
- Good practical coverage for everyday items
- Heavy presence of English-derived terms may feel less traditional in some contexts
Cebuano provides consistent labels for many everyday objects and will be useful for young learners. Reviewers noted a tendency toward formal phrasing and some lengthy terms; simplifying a few labels would help for very young children. Loanwords appear where natural in local use and are not a major issue.
- Wide coverage of household and classroom items
- Generally correct, familiar vocabulary
- Several terms are somewhat formal or long — consider shorter, more conversational forms
Dzongkha provides useful everyday vocabulary with standard Tibetan script forms. The pack covers common objects well, but reviewers noted several formal or long labels and regional variation in some terms. A short localisation pass for your target community will ensure the most familiar words are used.
- Standard script and local vocabulary
- Good breadth of everyday object labels
- Some formal/long phrasing and regional variation — check local preferences
Fiji Hindi provides a practical set of everyday object labels, reflecting local usage and borrowings you'll expect in the variety. A fair number of loaned forms and regional variants appear; these are normal for this variety but you may want to standardise a few words for consistent classroom teaching. The pack is solid for most teaching situations once reviewed for your local variety.
- Covers everyday items relevant to learners
- Reflects local variety and usage
- Loanwords and regional variants are common — you may wish to standardise labels for classroom consistency
Fijian (iTaukei) covers common everyday objects with generally correct local vocabulary. Reviewers noted several formal or long entries; a targeted edit could make the pack more conversational for younger children. Loan-derived terms are present and often part of normal usage.
- Appropriate local vocabulary for household items
- Good overall coverage
- Many entries are somewhat formal or long — consider simplifying for preschool use
Filipino (Tagalog) gives broad coverage of everyday objects with familiar vocabulary for children. Many entries were flagged as slightly formal or long; simplifying a number of labels will help with early childhood learners. Loanwords appear where natural in local speech and are usually acceptable.
- Familiar, locally appropriate vocabulary
- Good breadth of everyday object names
- Some terms are formal or lengthy — consider shorter, more conversational forms
Fulani delivers a broad set of everyday words, but reviewers flagged notable regional variation and some items marked as wrong-language in the review process. Those issues mean a small editorial pass is advisable to ensure terms match the specific Fulfulde variety your learners use. Otherwise, the vocabulary is relevant and useful for children.
- Wide coverage of common household and school objects
- Generally natural vocabulary for Fulani speakers
- Marked regional variation — terms may differ by community
- Some items flagged as wrong-language — recommend a targeted review
Gujarati gives reliable names for most everyday objects, suitable for young learners with minimal adaptation. A number of entries use loaned or slightly formal forms, so you may want to simplify a few labels for very young children. Overall, it’s a practical pack for classroom and home vocabulary building.
- Good coverage of concrete, day‑to‑day items
- Generally clear and standard vocabulary
- Occasional formal or loaned words — consider simpler alternatives for preschool children
Hindi gives broad everyday coverage and generally uses familiar words children encounter at home or school. Reviewers noted some loanword/English influence and a slightly formal tone in places, so you may wish to replace a few items with simpler, colloquial alternatives for very young learners. For older children the current labels should be fine.
- Comprehensive coverage of common objects
- Mostly familiar vocabulary for children
- Some English leakage/loanwords and occasional formal phrasing — consider simpler colloquial terms for preschoolers
Igbo covers a wide range of everyday objects and will be useful in classroom settings, but reviewers noted a tendency toward formal or lengthy phrasing in some entries. Simplifying a few items will make the pack more accessible for very young children. Overall it’s a solid base for vocabulary learning.
- Comprehensive coverage of common objects
- Useful for classroom and home practice
- Some entries are formal or long — consider simpler labels for preschool learners
Kannada offers broad coverage of everyday objects but uses a more formal register in several entries. For younger children you may want to replace a handful of labels with simpler, colloquial terms. Once adjusted, the pack is a solid tool for vocabulary learning.
- Comprehensive everyday vocabulary
- Generally standard and recognisable terms
- Many entries use a formal register — consider simpler alternatives for preschool learners
Lingala gives broad coverage of everyday objects but reviewers noted a tendency toward longer or more formal phrasing in many entries. Shortening a number of labels will make the pack friendlier for preschool children. With that small adjustment, it’s useful for everyday vocabulary teaching.
- Comprehensive set of common object names
- Useful for classroom vocabulary building
- Many entries are long or slightly formal — consider simplifying labels for younger learners
Malayalam provides wide coverage of everyday objects with generally accurate translations. Many entries are well chosen for children, though the pack includes a noticeable amount of formal phrasing and some longer lexical items. These are correct but may feel less conversational for very young learners.
- Comprehensive coverage of common objects
- Accurate translations for most items
- Several entries use formal or longer phrasing that caregivers may wish to simplify
Nepali provides accurate labels for common household items and school objects across the pack. The majority of translations are suitable for children, though there is a tendency toward formal phrasing and some loanwords for modern items. These are correct but may feel less colloquial to toddlers.
- Good coverage of everyday objects
- Generally accurate and usable translations
- Several entries use formal phrasing or loanwords commonly used for modern items
Odia translations are broadly accurate and cover the everyday objects children meet. The pack includes natural loanwords in places and a moderate level of formal phrasing for some items. These choices reflect real language use but may be adjusted by caregivers to be more colloquial.
- Wide coverage of common household and school items
- Mostly accurate translations
- Some formal phrasing and common loanwords appear in the set
Oromo covers everyday objects well with generally correct translations suitable for learners. Many items are usable in child-focused settings, though there is a tendency toward longer phrasing and occasional less-familiar forms. A quick local check can ensure the most conversational forms for very young children.
- Comprehensive coverage of common items
- Generally accurate translations
- Some entries use longer or less conversational phrasing
Punjabi offers reliable translations for everyday items and many terms are natural for children. The set includes some loanwords and a few formal entries, which are correct but sometimes less colloquial. Overall the vocabulary will support early learners well.
- Accurate labels for common objects
- Good overall coverage for young learners
- A number of entries include loanwords or slightly formal forms
Sesotho offers solid, familiar words for everyday objects that children will recognise. The set is practical and consistent, but many entries are slightly formal and some are longer than ideal for flashcards. It’s a useful pack with a few areas that could be simplified for very young learners.
- Practical coverage of home and classroom items
- Generally natural translations
- Frequent formal register—simpler variants could benefit toddlers
- Several longer entries may reduce quick recognition
Sindhi delivers a solid set of everyday object words suitable for young learners, with most terms clear and familiar. Expect a number of formal-style choices and some loanwords that reflect modern usage; simplifying a few items would help very young children. Still, this pack gives reliable, teachable vocabulary for home and school contexts.
- Wide, practical coverage of household vocabulary
- Many familiar, usable words for classroom use
- Several entries use a more formal register—consider simpler synonyms for toddlers
- Some loanwords appear where local alternatives might be preferred
Sinhala gives clear, familiar words for everyday objects a child will meet at home or school. The set is thorough, though a number of entries use a formal register or longer phrasing that may suit older children better. Overall this is a practical pack for building everyday vocabulary.
- Thorough coverage of common items
- Generally natural and familiar translations
- Many entries are slightly formal—consider simpler alternatives for younger children
- Some translations are longer than ideal for flashcards
Swati covers everyday household vocabulary with generally clear and usable translations suitable for children. Most items work well, but one flagged legal term ("Will / Testament") scored notably low and may not be appropriate or clear for young learners. Otherwise the pack is consistent and teachable.
- Good coverage of common household items
- Generally clear, usable words for early learners
- One legal term (Will / Testament) scored low and should be reviewed
- Some entries use a formal register
Tagalog delivers useful, familiar words for everyday household objects that are appropriate for children. Many entries are well chosen, but several are formal or longer than ideal for quick flashcard use. With minor simplification this pack is very usable for early learners.
- Familiar, practical vocabulary for home and classroom
- Generally natural translations
- Frequent formal register—simpler child-level words may be preferred
- Some longer entries reduce quick recognisability
Telugu provides a wide set of everyday object words that are useful for young learners, with generally natural translations. The list contains a noticeable number of loanwords and some formal phrases; simplifying certain entries would make them friendlier for very young children. Overall the pack is practical and teachable.
- Broad coverage of common household items
- Generally natural translations
- High number of loanwords and formal forms—some child-friendly alternatives may be preferred
- Some entries are longer than ideal for quick flashcards
Tetum covers everyday objects thoroughly, and many translated terms reflect natural modern usage. The pack shows a higher proportion of borrowings, which is expected for Tetum and not a quality problem; a few entries are formal or long for flashcards. Overall this is a useful resource for everyday vocabulary learning.
- Comprehensive coverage of household vocabulary
- Natural usage reflecting contemporary Tetum
- High proportion of loanwords (expected in Tetum) and some formal entries
- Some terms are longer than ideal for quick child recognition
Tigrinya provides a broad, useful set of everyday object words that children can learn easily. One item (Will / Testament) was flagged for clarity and may need review for younger learners; otherwise the pack is consistent though some entries are formal. Overall this is a practical resource for familiar vocabulary.
- Good coverage of common household and classroom items
- Mostly natural and consistent translations
- One legal term (Will / Testament) was flagged and may need revision
- Several entries use a formal register
Tok Pisin provides practical and familiar everyday vocabulary appropriate for children, and its higher borrowing rate is typical for the language. One flagged legal item (Will / Testament) scored lower and may need review; otherwise the set is consistent and teachable. This pack is useful for early vocabulary despite a few formal choices.
- Practical, familiar everyday vocabulary
- Reflects natural Tok Pisin usage
- One legal term (Will / Testament) was flagged and may need clearer wording
- Many loanwords are present (normal for Tok Pisin)
Tongan offers broad coverage of everyday objects with generally natural translations children will recognise. The set includes many borrowed forms (normal in modern usage) and some formal phrasing; simplifying a few items would improve suitability for very young learners. Overall it’s a dependable resource for basic vocabulary.
- Good coverage of household and classroom items
- Generally natural translations
- Many possible loanwords—common in contemporary Tongan
- Some entries are somewhat formal or long for young children
Urdu offers a broad and useful set of everyday object words suitable for children, with generally natural translations. The pack includes several loanwords and some formal phrasing; simpler variants may help younger learners. Overall it’s a practical resource for home and classroom vocabulary.
- Broad coverage of common household and classroom items
- Mostly natural translations
- Several entries use a formal register—consider child-friendly alternatives
- A noticeable number of loanwords appear in modern usage
The Amharic set covers everyday items well and follows standard orthography. It is generally appropriate for learners, though reviewers flagged several terms as formal or longer than ideal for very young children. A quick editorial pass would make the wording more child-friendly in a few spots.
- Good breadth of everyday vocabulary
- Standard Ethiopic spelling
- Some terms are formal or long and may read as adult-oriented to preschoolers
The Berber (Amazigh) set provides broad coverage of everyday objects using correct Tifinagh script where appropriate. Reviewers flagged regional differences and a tendency toward formal or longer labels in places, reflecting dialectal variety across communities. If you serve children in a specific region, a quick regional check will ensure the most familiar terms are used.
- Uses appropriate script (Tifinagh) and local vocabulary
- Wide coverage of common items
- Pronounced regional variation — some communities may use different words
- Several terms are formal or lengthy and may need simplification
Dhivehi covers many everyday objects with generally consistent Thaana script and local vocabulary. However, some items were flagged for formal phrasing and English leakage, and one item ('Will (Testament)') scored notably low — it uses a formal/legal term that may not be child-friendly. We recommend a quick review of legal or specialist terms and a light edit for very young learners.
- Uses standard Thaana script
- Good coverage of common household items
- One flagged item (Will/Testament) uses a formal legal term — consider a simpler label
- Some English leakage and formal phrasing noted — a light editorial pass recommended
Guarani provides solid everyday vocabulary, but some abstract or specialised concepts can vary across regions and registers. The term for “Intellectual Property Right” was scored lower, reflecting that legal/abstract labels may need a simpler explanation or alternative for children. For routine household items the pack remains useful, especially with a teacher’s brief check on few abstract items.
- Strong coverage of common, concrete objects
- Reflects regional variety in everyday speech
- Legal/abstract items (e.g. “Intellectual Property Right”) may need simplification
Latin covers everyday object vocabulary but tends toward a literary, formal register; this is expected given the language’s history. For very young children the wording may feel classroom‑like rather than conversational, so consider simplified labels or supplementary explanations. The pack is still useful for older children or classical language exposure.
- Complete coverage of items with classical consistency
- Good for older children or classical study
- Literary/formal register — may feel less child‑conversational for preschool learners
Marshallese covers most everyday objects well, but this pack shows heavier use of loanwords and occasional English leakage for modern items. The majority of items are usable for learners, though a couple of specialised terms (like legal or accessory items) scored lower and may not be the most familiar in everyday speech.
- Good coverage of basic household items
- Many modern items are present and recognizable
- Higher use of loanwords and some English leakage for modern concepts
- A few specialised items (e.g., legal or accessory terms) are less certain
Palauan covers most everyday objects, but a few specialised items showed lower scores — notably the legal term for a "Will (Testament)" which is uncertain. The pack otherwise provides usable vocabulary but modern or legal items may need a local check for the most familiar child-facing term.
- Solid coverage of basic household and school items
- Many everyday objects use clear local terms
- "Will (Testament)" translation scored low and may be non-standard
- Some entries use longer forms and occasional English influence
Quechua covers many everyday items but shows regional variation and some uncertainty for modern or specialised concepts. Very contemporary items (for example, a "Contactless Payment Ring") are less familiar and scored low, reflecting that such technologies and terms are not yet widespread in all Quechua-speaking communities.
- Good coverage of traditional household and school objects
- Accurate local vocabulary where available
- Modern tech terms (e.g., contactless payment ring) may be unfamiliar and scored low
- Some regional variation in everyday terms
Sango covers everyday objects thoroughly and will help children learn household vocabulary, but many entries use more formal or borrowed forms. Borrowing is common in modern Sango, and some choices are slightly long for quick flashcard use. With a little simplification this pack will work very well for young learners.
- Comprehensive coverage of common household items
- Useful for classroom and home vocabulary building
- High number of formal or borrowed forms; some words may sound adult
- Several entries are longer than ideal for quick recognition
The Wolof pack offers widespread coverage of everyday objects, using many familiar terms for children. The dataset shows a higher presence of borrowings and some English influence, which reflects real usage but can sound less native in some contexts. Teachers may choose to highlight locally preferred words alongside these forms.
- Comprehensive set of common object names
- Vocabulary reflects current, widely-used forms
- Noticeable number of loanwords and some English leakage
- Some entries may feel influenced by non-native forms — local variants possible
About This Report
Methodology
Each translation was independently evaluated by an AI language model on four dimensions: meaning accuracy, naturalness for children, correct script usage, and contamination risk (English leakage or wrong-language content). Scores range from 0–100. A score of 70+ indicates the translation is appropriate for use in educational materials. Language-level confidence ratings are derived from the distribution of individual scores within that language pack.
Important Notes
This is an automated quality review, not a native-speaker audit. While it reliably catches mistranslations, script errors, and English leakage, it may not capture every subtle dialect preference or cultural nuance. For languages with very few speakers or limited digital resources, our confidence is naturally more conservative. We recommend supplementary review by a native speaker where possible, particularly for lower-confidence languages.