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.
This Afrikaans pack is clear and natural for young children — words are familiar and easy to say. Coverage is complete for everyday garden items, so a child will recognise the things they see outdoors. The phrasing is suitable for classroom and home use.
- Natural, child-friendly vocabulary
- Complete coverage of common garden items
Albanian translations are accurate and use familiar child-facing vocabulary for garden items. The set is reliable for classroom or home use, though a few entries are slightly formal and could be simplified in speech.
- Accurate, natural Albanian terms
- Complete coverage of garden vocabulary
- Minor formality in a small number of entries
The Arabic pack uses familiar, everyday words that children will recognise in most regions. A small number of items can vary by dialect, but the translations chosen are widely understood. This makes it a reliable pack for schools and families.
- Natural, child-friendly vocabulary
- Broad dialect coverage
Armenian translations are accurate and well suited to young learners, offering familiar words for common garden items. The pack is consistent and culturally appropriate. A few labels are longer or more formal than necessary for toddlers.
- Clear Armenian vocabulary for garden items
- Consistent and reliable translations
- A small number of entries are formal or long
Azerbaijani labels are clear and suit young learners well, covering common plants, tools and insects found in gardens. The vocabulary feels natural and is easy for children to repeat. It’s a strong choice for building early outdoor vocabulary.
- Clear, familiar words
- Good coverage of garden concepts
Basque translations are natural and appropriate for children, using everyday words for plants, insects and tools. A few items are longer, but overall the set is very usable and matches local speech. It’s suitable for schools and families.
- Natural, local vocabulary
- Good coverage of common items
Belarusian translations are natural and well-matched to everyday speech, so children will easily connect words to objects. The set covers garden basics thoroughly and uses simple phrasing suitable for young learners. It’s ready for classroom and home use.
- Simple, child-appropriate wording
- Complete garden vocabulary
Bengali translations are natural and appropriate for young learners, with clear labels for plants, tools and small animals. A few loanwords appear but they’re commonly used in everyday speech. This pack works well for early vocabulary learning.
- Common, child-friendly words
- Complete and natural coverage
The Bosnian pack uses familiar everyday words that children will easily connect with garden objects. Phrasing is natural and suitable for classroom activities and flashcards. It’s a dependable option for teaching garden vocabulary.
- Natural, easy-to-say wording
- Good coverage of common garden items
Bulgarian entries are natural and short, which helps young children learn and remember them. The pack covers garden items clearly and uses vocabulary that matches everyday speech. It’s well suited to both home and classroom contexts.
- Concise, child-friendly words
- Thorough coverage of garden items
Burmese delivers a thorough and child-appropriate garden vocabulary set. Translations are consistent and should be familiar to young speakers. Some entries are slightly formal or longer than colloquial speech.
- Comprehensive, familiar vocabulary
- Consistent translation choices
- A few items use a more formal or longer phrasing
Cantonese (written in traditional characters here) is excellent for garden vocabulary — concise, natural and very child-ready. The translations are comprehensive and idiomatic, though a few entries reflect regional variation in word choice and a tiny number show script inconsistencies. These differences are minor and normal across Cantonese-speaking areas.
- Very natural, concise Cantonese labels
- Comprehensive and child-focused vocabulary
- Some regional variation in terms; a few rare script inconsistencies
Catalan entries are concise and child-friendly, making them easy for young learners to pick up. The vocabulary covers everyday garden items and uses natural phrasing. This pack is well-suited for both home and school use.
- Short, accessible words
- Thorough garden vocabulary
Cebuano provides good, familiar labels for garden items; most words match what children hear at home. A few entries are slightly longer or formal, but overall the set is approachable and useful for early learners. It’s a practical choice for Filipino-speaking families.
- Familiar everyday terms
- Works well for classroom and home
Chichewa delivers strong, child-friendly garden vocabulary with good coverage of plants, tools and small animals. Translations are generally natural and suitable for young learners. A few items are longer phrases or slightly formal.
- Well-rounded Chichewa vocabulary
- Appropriate for young learners
- Occasional longer or slightly formal phrasing
The Croatian pack is reliable and provides natural, straightforward words for plants, insects and simple tools. Translations are appropriate for children and display strong internal consistency. A few items are more formal or longer than ideal for toddlers.
- Natural Croatian terms for common garden concepts
- Consistent and accurate translations
- A small number of entries use formal wording or longer phrases
Czech terms are natural and concise, which helps children learn quickly. The set covers common garden objects and uses vocabulary familiar from everyday Czech. It’s classroom-ready and child-friendly.
- Clear, concise words
- Complete garden coverage
Danish translations are natural and well-suited for young learners, with short and familiar labels. The pack covers garden terms parents and teachers commonly use with children. It’s strong for vocabulary building.
- Short, familiar wording
- Good for early learners
Dari (Persian/Dari) provides clear, natural vocabulary for garden items and is highly consistent across the pack. Children will recognise most plant and tool names easily. A few plant names have regional alternatives, which is normal for this language area.
- High consistency and natural phrasing
- Good coverage of plants and tools
- Some names have regional variants
Dutch shows very high-quality translations for everyday garden words that will be familiar to children. The labels are concise and consistent across the pack. A couple of entries prefer a slightly formal tone.
- Excellent accuracy and consistency
- Concise, child-friendly phrasing
- A few items use a slightly formal register
Dzongkha offers natural, well-chosen words for garden items that will be familiar to children in Bhutan. The set covers plants, tools and small animals with simple phrasing. It’s a good match for classroom and family learning.
- Natural, locally-appropriate vocabulary
- Good coverage of common garden concepts
Estonian entries are clear and child-friendly, making them easy for young learners to remember. The vocabulary covers garden basics and uses familiar phrasing. It’s a solid pack for early vocabulary building.
- Simple, memorable words
- Comprehensive garden coverage
Fiji Hindi presents clear and usable garden vocabulary that reflects local usage. The choices are generally natural for children and include some commonly used loanwords that are part of everyday speech. A few regional variants appear, which is expected for this language community.
- Natural, familiar terms for garden items
- Reflects local Fiji Hindi usage
Filipino (Tagalog) entries are familiar and child-friendly, covering common garden items with clear wording. Some loanwords appear but they’re widely used locally and won’t confuse learners. This pack is practical for classroom and home learning.
- Familiar everyday terms
- Clear, usable phrasing for children
Finnish translations are concise and well-suited for children, with vocabulary that matches everyday speech. The set covers garden items clearly and is easy for learners to pronounce. It’s a reliable resource for early vocabulary practice.
- Concise, child-appropriate wording
- Comprehensive garden coverage
French entries are natural and easy for children to learn, with concise labels for plants, animals and tools. The pack covers typical garden vocabulary comprehensively and works well in both home and school environments. It’s a strong, child-friendly option.
- Concise, age-appropriate wording
- Thorough garden vocabulary
The Galician pack is very strong: clear, concise vocabulary that young learners will recognise. Translations are natural and culturally appropriate for garden themes. A few entries lean toward formal wording, but they remain correct and usable for most learners.
- Natural, child-friendly Galician vocabulary
- Excellent coverage of core garden items
- Occasional entries use slightly formal wording
Georgian translations are accurate and well suited to young learners, giving clear words for plants, insects and garden tools. The set is consistent and easy to use in teaching. A few entries are slightly formal or longer than ideal for preschoolers.
- Clear Georgian vocabulary for common garden items
- Consistent and accurate translations
- Occasional formal or lengthy labels
German entries are clear, accurate and child-appropriate — most labels are short and easy to say. The pack offers reliable coverage of garden vocabulary and suits classroom flashcard activities. It’s a dependable choice for German-speaking children.
- Accurate, child-friendly terms
- Strong, consistent coverage
Greek entries are clear and suitable for young learners, using familiar everyday words for garden things. The vocabulary is easy to pronounce and matches common usage. This pack is reliable for both home and school settings.
- Everyday, child-friendly wording
- Complete garden vocabulary
Guarani provides solid, usable labels for plants, tools and creatures found in a garden. The pack is consistent and accurate; regional variants appear in a few places but they reflect real local differences. A few terms are more formal in tone, so for very young children you may prefer simpler synonyms if available.
- Good coverage of common garden vocabulary
- Reflects regional language variety where appropriate
- Some labels are somewhat formal for preschool usage
Gujarati delivers clear, accurate labels that work well for teaching garden vocabulary to children. Most words are natural and familiar, giving good support for recognition and speaking practice. A few regional variants appear and there are some loanwords that are common in everyday Gujarati, which is normal and not problematic.
- Reliable, familiar Gujarati terms for plants and tools
- Consistent translations suited to classroom use
Haitian Creole gives clear, usable labels for garden items with vocabulary that will be familiar to children. The set is consistent and culturally appropriate, using a few common loanwords that fit everyday speech. A handful of entries are slightly formal in tone.
- Familiar, child-friendly Haitian Creole vocabulary
- Accurate translations for common garden items
- Some labels are a bit formal
The Hausa pack is accurate and covers the expected garden items with natural vocabulary. It’s well suited for young learners, though a number of labels are somewhat formal in tone. A few longer labels might be simplified when used with preschool children.
- Clear Hausa vocabulary for common garden items
- Accurate and culturally appropriate terms
- Some labels are a bit formal or lengthy for the youngest learners
Hebrew translations are concise and child-appropriate for most garden concepts, with strong accuracy across the set. The words chosen are commonly used and easy for children to recognise. A small number are slightly formal, but they remain correct and usable.
- Concise, natural Hebrew labels
- Strong coverage of core garden vocabulary
- A few entries are more formal in tone
Hiligaynon provides accurate and child-appropriate labels for garden vocabulary. Most translations are familiar to speakers and suitable for classroom activities. A small number of entries are longer or use slightly formal phrasing, so you may prefer shorter forms for very young children.
- Clear Hiligaynon vocabulary for everyday garden items
- Good consistency across the set
- Some labels are somewhat formal or longer than ideal
Hindi gives accurate, familiar words for garden items that will be recognizable to young learners. The pack uses common usage, including some everyday loanwords that are normal in modern Hindi. A few items are slightly formal in tone and could be simplified for very young children.
- Familiar, natural Hindi vocabulary
- Good coverage of plants, insects and tools
- Occasional labels are a bit formal for preschool use
Hungarian offers concise, native-sounding labels for garden vocabulary; most items are straightforward and child-appropriate. The set is consistent and easy to use in lessons. A few entries use a more formal register than is typical for preschool materials.
- Concise, natural Hungarian vocabulary
- Strong coverage of plants and tools
- Occasional formal wording
Icelandic provides clear and accurate labels for garden vocabulary with natural wording that children can learn easily. The translations are consistent and culturally appropriate. A few items are a touch formal or lengthy for preschool cards.
- Accurate, child-friendly Icelandic terms
- Consistent translations across the set
- Occasional formal or long entries
Ilocano translations are largely accurate and suit child learning of garden words. Most labels are appropriate, though a few long forms appear and a small number of entries were detected in the wrong language — these have been flagged for review. You can still rely on the pack for most classroom and home uses.
- Natural Ilocano vocabulary for everyday garden items
- Good consistency across most entries
- A small number of items were detected in the wrong language and are under review
- Some labels are longer than ideal for very young learners
Indonesian provides natural, child-friendly labels that work well for teaching garden vocabulary. Translations are concise and commonly used, with just a few items reflecting more formal wording. Overall it’s a very usable pack for home or school.
- Natural, everyday Indonesian labels
- Concise and easy to recognise
- Some entries are slightly formal
The Irish pack gives accurate, child-appropriate words for common garden items and plants. It is consistent and reliable, with natural vocabulary across the set. A small number of labels read a bit formal or longer than ideal for preschoolers, so you may prefer to use shortened forms when introducing items.
- Accurate, native Irish terms for everyday garden items
- Consistent translations across the set
- Some labels are slightly formal or longer than ideal for very young children
Italian labels are concise, natural and well suited to young learners exploring garden vocabulary. The pack shows strong consistency and good coverage of plants, insects and tools. A small number of entries use slightly formal phrasing.
- Concise, natural Italian vocabulary
- Strong coverage of core garden items
- A few labels are a bit formal
Japanese translations are accurate and appropriate for children, with familiar words for plants, insects and garden tools. A number of loanwords appear — many are standard in modern Japanese and do not harm usability. A few entries are slightly formal or long for preschool flashcards.
- Accurate Japanese vocabulary for garden concepts
- Familiar terms suitable for classroom use
- Some entries are a bit formal or lengthy for the youngest learners
Javanese offers natural, child-friendly labels for common garden items and plants. The pack is consistent and culturally appropriate, with a few expected loanwords that fit everyday speech. Overall it’s a strong choice for teaching garden vocabulary.
- Natural Javanese terms for plants and tools
- Consistent translations across items
Kannada provides mostly concise and familiar garden vocabulary suitable for children. The set is accurate and consistent for classroom and home use. A number of entries trend formal in register, so you may prefer simplified alternatives for very young children.
- Familiar Kannada vocabulary for plants and tools
- Good consistency across items
- Several labels use a formal register
Kyrgyz provides clear, natural labels that work well for children learning garden vocabulary. The translations are concise and consistent across the set. A small number of entries use a more formal register than typical child-facing materials.
- Concise Kyrgyz vocabulary for garden items
- Strong internal consistency
- A few labels are somewhat formal
Khmer gives accurate, child-appropriate vocabulary for everyday garden items and plants. The pack is consistent, though several entries are a bit long or formal for preschool flashcards. These can be shortened in teaching contexts without losing meaning.
- Accurate Khmer labels for common garden items
- Good overall coverage
- Some labels are lengthy or formal for the youngest learners
This Kinyarwanda set gives clear, natural words for common garden items and covers the full list of 41 terms. The vocabulary is accurate and appropriate for children, though a few entries use slightly formal phrasing or longer words that you might shorten when reading aloud.
- Complete coverage of basic garden vocabulary
- Natural, child-friendly Kinyarwanda terms
- Consistent orthography in Latin script
- Some translations are a bit formal for very young listeners
- A few items use longer phrases that can be shortened when speaking
Kirundi offers reliable, child-appropriate garden vocabulary covering plants, insects and tools. The translations are consistent and suitable for early learners. A small number of items are longer phrases or have regional alternatives.
- Complete and natural Kirundi vocabulary
- Good consistency for children
- Occasional longer phrasing and some regional variation
Korean translations are very natural and well-suited to young learners, with concise labels for common garden concepts. The set shows excellent consistency and child-friendly wording overall. Only a few entries trend toward formality.
- Very natural, concise Korean vocabulary
- Strong consistency across the set
- A very small number of labels are slightly formal
Kurdish (Sorani) provides clear, usable labels for garden items that will be familiar to children in the community. The translations are consistent and accurate. A few regional variants are present, which reflect real differences in usage across areas.
- Accurate Sorani Kurdish vocabulary
- Reflects local/regional usage where appropriate
- Some regional variation in terms may exist
Kyrgyz (listed earlier as kk) — this Kyrgyz pack is clear and child-appropriate, with accurate words for garden plants and tools. Vocabulary choices are consistent and usable in a classroom setting. A few items are slightly formal in tone.
- Clear Kyrgyz vocabulary for garden items
- Consistent translations
- Some labels are a bit formal
The Lao set gives clear, child-friendly words for plants, tools and garden creatures, and covers the full list consistently. Most items use natural Lao vocabulary and will be recognisable to young learners. A small number of entries read a bit more formal than everyday speech.
- Complete coverage of common garden items
- Natural Lao wording suitable for children
- A handful of entries use a slightly formal register
The Latvian pack reliably covers garden vocabulary with natural, easy-to-understand labels for young children. Translations are consistent across the set. A few words can be somewhat formal or longer compounds than everyday speech.
- Clear, consistent vocabulary
- Good coverage of tools, plants and small animals
- Some items use a slightly formal or longer form
Lithuanian translations are accurate and consistent, with well-chosen child-facing words for plants and tools. The pack is thorough and will be useful for learners building outdoor vocabulary. A few labels are longer or slightly formal in tone, which can be normal for compound terms.
- High accuracy and consistency
- Good, child-appropriate plant and tool names
- Occasional longer or slightly formal phrasing
Luxembourgish offers clear, native-sounding terms for garden items that will be familiar to children in the region. The pack is consistent and easy to use in teaching. A few entries show possible loanword influence but fit common everyday speech.
- Natural Luxembourgish vocabulary
- Well-suited for classroom and home use
Macedonian translations are accurate and child-appropriate, providing consistent labels for plants, tools and insects. The pack reads naturally for young learners. A very small number of items lean towards a formal register.
- High-quality, consistent translations
- Clear, child-friendly wording
- A couple of entries are slightly formal
Malagasy provides a solid, child-friendly set of garden words that will help young learners name plants, insects and tools. Most vocabulary choices are natural and locally appropriate. A small number of translations skew formal or are longer phrases.
- Complete set of common garden terms
- Natural Malagasy vocabulary for children
- A few entries are a bit formal or long
The Malay pack is accurate and uses everyday words children will recognise when they play in a garden. Labels are consistent and appropriate for early learners. A few translations are slightly formal in tone.
- Natural, child-friendly Malay terms
- Full coverage of expected garden items
- Some entries use a slightly formal register
Malayalam offers a reliable, well-rounded vocabulary set for a garden-themed pack, with good coverage of tools, plants and little creatures. Most terms are appropriate for children, though a few use a slightly formal register.
- Thorough coverage of garden vocabulary
- Generally child-appropriate Malayalam terms
- Some items use a more formal register
Maltese translations cover the garden vocabulary well with clear, reliable labels for plants, tools and insects. The content is suitable for young learners. A few items may feel formal or are longer phrases.
- Good coverage of common garden items
- Clear, reliable Maltese wording
- Occasional formal or longer phrasing
Simplified Mandarin offers clear, concise names for garden items that are easy for children to learn. The pack is thorough and uses everyday words, though a few entries read slightly formal or longer than a single-word label, and a small number show script inconsistencies. Overall this is a top-quality set for Mandarin learners.
- Clear, everyday Mandarin vocabulary
- Comprehensive coverage of garden items
- A few items are slightly formal or longer than ideal for very young children
- Rare script inconsistencies in a small number of entries
Traditional Mandarin entries are natural and well-suited to child-facing cards, with wide coverage of plants, tools and insects. Most labels feel familiar to Taiwanese and other traditional-script readers; a few items are marginally formal or longer than a short flashcard label. Script and regional choices are minor and expected differences.
- Natural, familiar Traditional Chinese vocabulary
- Thorough and child-appropriate
- Some terms are slightly formal or verbose for very young children
- Minor regional/script variations may appear
Marathi provides accurate and natural vocabulary for garden items that will be easy for children to recognise. The set is consistent and comprehensive. A few entries show English influence, which reflects common usage in some regions.
- Complete and natural Marathi vocabulary
- Consistent choices across items
- A small number of items show English-influenced forms
Mongolian translations are clear and consistent, giving young learners natural words for flowers, trees, insects and garden tools. The vocabulary choices are suitable for child-facing flashcards. A small number of labels are longer or somewhat formal.
- Consistent, natural vocabulary
- Good coverage of everyday garden items
- Occasional longer or slightly formal phrasing
Montenegrin (Crnogorski) labels are natural and child-appropriate, covering the essentials of garden vocabulary. Words are easy to pronounce and match common usage. This makes the pack reliable for young learners.
- Natural everyday vocabulary
- Good pronunciation for children
Nepali translations are accurate and consistent, offering natural words for flowers, trees, small animals and gardening tools. The set is well-suited for children learning outdoor vocabulary. A small number of items are slightly formal or longer.
- Complete, natural Nepali vocabulary
- Consistent across items
- Occasional slightly formal or longer wording
Norwegian translations are clear, natural and very well suited to young learners learning garden vocabulary. Most items use everyday words children will recognise. A small number of terms are slightly formal.
- High-quality, natural Norwegian vocabulary
- Consistent and child-facing
- Some entries are marginally formal
Odia provides accurate, child-friendly translations for garden items, suitable for early learners. Most labels use natural local vocabulary. A few entries show English influence in common usage.
- Good coverage of plants, tools and insects
- Natural, child-appropriate Odia terms
- A small number of items show English-influenced forms
Oromo offers consistent and natural-sounding garden vocabulary that will be useful for children. The pack covers common plants, tools and insects well. A small number of labels are longer or more formal than everyday speech.
- Natural, child-appropriate terms
- Complete coverage of common garden items
- Some items use longer or slightly formal wording
Pashto offers accurate, child-appropriate garden vocabulary that will be familiar to young learners. The translations are consistent and complete. A small number of plant names may vary by region.
- Clear, consistent Pashto vocabulary
- Good coverage of everyday garden items
- A few plant names show regional variation
Farsi labels are natural and familiar, making it easy for children to connect words to garden objects. The vocabulary is appropriate for both home and classroom settings and covers typical garden items. It’s a dependable pack for early learners.
- Familiar everyday words
- Broad coverage of garden vocabulary
Polish translations are very strong: accurate, concise and suitable for children learning garden vocabulary. The pack uses natural Polish terms familiar to young speakers. A few entries may require correct diacritics to display properly on all devices.
- Very high accuracy and natural phrasing
- Concise, child-friendly Polish words
- Some labels rely on diacritics — ensure correct display on devices
Portuguese translations are accurate, concise and very well suited to children learning garden vocabulary. Labels use familiar everyday words and are consistent across the pack. A small number of entries use slightly longer phrasing.
- Very high accuracy and child-friendly wording
- Complete coverage of garden concepts
- Occasional slightly longer phrasing
Punjabi translations are accurate and consistent, giving children clear words for garden plants, tools and small animals. The vocabulary will be familiar to young learners. A few entries are slightly formal or use common loan forms.
- Clear, consistent Punjabi vocabulary
- Good child-facing choices
- Some items are a bit formal or use common loan forms
Romanian translations are very accurate and use natural, familiar words for garden items that will be clear to children. The pack is consistent and comprehensive. A few entries use slightly longer phrasing.
- Very high-quality Romanian wording
- Comprehensive coverage of garden vocabulary
- A small number of items use longer phrasing
Romansh translations are accurate and use natural terms that children will recognise, with solid coverage of garden plants and tools. The set is consistent and child-friendly. A few items have regional variants across Romansh dialects.
- Natural, child-facing Romansh vocabulary
- Consistent across items
- Some plant names vary regionally
Russian shows excellent coverage with highly accurate, child-friendly words for plants, tools and small creatures. The pack is consistent and ready for early learners. A tiny fraction of labels use a slightly formal tone.
- Excellent accuracy and consistency
- Natural, child-appropriate Russian vocabulary
- A very small number of items have a slightly formal register
Sami vocabulary for the garden set is reliable and uses regionally appropriate words for everyday outdoor items. Most cards are excellent for children, though some regional variation exists — families in different Sami communities may use alternative local words.
- Accurate, regionally appropriate Sami terms
- Good child-facing vocabulary for outdoor items
- Some regional variation in word choice — local forms may differ
Serbian (Cyrillic) cards are consistent and accurate, using natural words children will recognise. The vocabulary works well for teaching basic garden concepts; only a few items are a touch formal and may be simplified when spoken.
- High accuracy in Cyrillic script
- Child-friendly Serbian vocabulary
- A small number of translations are slightly formal
Seychellois Creole uses familiar, locally-used words that children recognise, with some loanwords present as expected. The vocabulary matches what children see in gardens and is easy to say. It’s a solid choice for teaching outdoors words in Seychelles.
- Local, recognisable vocabulary
- Child-friendly phrasing
Shona translations are accurate and use familiar vocabulary for garden objects, suitable for classroom or home use. A small number of entries are slightly formal or longer; using shorter spoken alternatives will make them easier for small children.
- Complete set of common garden words in Shona
- Natural vocabulary suitable for children
- Some translations are a bit formal
- A few items use longer phrases that can be shortened when read aloud
Sindhi translations are accurate and consistent across the 41 garden words, written in the Arabic script used by children who read Sindhi. Most terms are natural, though a small number read slightly formal and could be simplified for preschool use.
- Accurate, child-appropriate Sindhi vocabulary
- Good coverage of garden-related items
- Clear presentation in Arabic script
- A few words are slightly formal; informal spoken forms may be simpler
The Sinhala cards use clear, age-appropriate words in Sinhala script for garden items and are consistently accurate across the set. A few items trend formal or are longer phrases; using shorter spoken forms when reading to young children will make them easier to learn.
- Accurate Sinhala script and vocabulary
- Comprehensive coverage of garden concepts
- Some translations are slightly formal
- A few items are longer than ideal for early learners
Slovak translations are highly accurate and use natural, child-friendly words for garden objects. The set is consistent and reliable; only a small number of entries show formality or minor diacritic issues that are easy to correct.
- Very high accuracy and natural Slovak vocabulary
- Complete coverage of garden items
- A few terms are slightly formal for toddler-level speech
- Minor diacritic inconsistencies appear in a small number of items
Slovenian items are accurate, concise and well-suited for young learners learning garden vocabulary. The majority of words are natural in everyday speech; only a handful read a bit formal or long for preschool flashcards.
- Very accurate Slovenian vocabulary
- Clear, child-appropriate phrasing for most items
- Some translations skew slightly formal
- A few longer phrases may be simplified for young children
Spanish translations are natural, familiar and well-suited for children learning garden words. Labels are concise and align with everyday speech in many Spanish-speaking areas. This pack is classroom-ready and easy to use at home.
- Natural, concise vocabulary
- Wide regional understandability
Sundanese translations are accurate and appropriate for teaching garden vocabulary to children. The list is complete and uses common words; a few loanwords appear but are typical in everyday Sundanese usage.
- Accurate, child-friendly Sundanese terms
- Complete coverage of garden vocabulary
- A small number of loanwords appear — they’re common in everyday speech
Swahili translations here are reliable and use familiar everyday words for garden items, making them suitable for children. A few items are slightly formal or longer; using short spoken alternatives will help maintain engagement.
- Natural, child-friendly Swahili vocabulary
- Complete coverage of common garden objects
- Some translations feel a bit formal
- A few entries are longer than ideal for young learners
Swati vocabulary in this pack reliably covers garden items with clear, natural words suitable for children. A number of translations lean a bit formal; using everyday spoken forms during reading will make them easier to learn.
- Complete, familiar Swati garden vocabulary
- Clear, consistent wording for learners
- Some entries are slightly formal and could be simplified for preschoolers
Swedish cards are precise, concise and well suited for young learners of garden words. The translations are natural and consistent; only very few entries are slightly formal or longer than ideal.
- Very high accuracy and natural Swedish vocabulary
- Clear, concise phrasing good for children
- A tiny number of entries are a bit formal or lengthy
Tagalog translations are natural and child-friendly, covering all garden items with familiar words. A few entries include loanwords or are longer than ideal, but the set is overall excellent for teaching garden vocabulary.
- Natural, familiar Tagalog vocabulary
- Complete coverage of garden items
- Some loanwords and longer phrases appear; informal spoken forms may be simpler
Taiwanese Hokkien provides very strong coverage of garden vocabulary with clear, child-friendly labels. The pack is consistent and well-suited to young learners. Be aware that a few plant names have regional variants, which is normal for this language.
- Very high accuracy and consistency
- Child-appropriate wording
- Some plant names show regional variation
Tajik translations are accurate and use familiar terms for garden objects in Cyrillic script. The vocabulary is child-friendly overall; a few entries are slightly formal, but the set is solid for teaching basic outdoor words.
- Clear, accurate Tajik terms in Cyrillic
- Good coverage of garden vocabulary
- A small number of translations are slightly formal
Tamil entries are accurate and use familiar words in Tamil script for garden items, well suited to classroom or home learning. A number of terms are slightly formal; simplifying them when speaking will help younger children.
- Accurate Tamil script and vocabulary
- Comprehensive garden word coverage
- Several items are somewhat formal and may be simplified for toddlers
Telugu translations in this garden set are accurate and child-appropriate, using familiar words in Telugu script. A few loanwords and some formal phrasing appear, but overall the vocabulary is consistent and dependable.
- Clear, accurate Telugu script and vocabulary
- Complete garden-related word list
- A small number of loanwords and formal terms appear
Tetum covers all garden items with natural, commonly used words; borrowing is present and expected in Tetum, and many loanwords reflect everyday speech. The set is well-suited to children, though some entries are slightly formal and could be simplified in spoken use.
- Complete and natural Tetum vocabulary for garden items
- Loanwords reflect normal everyday Tetum usage
- Several entries include loanwords — this is typical for Tetum
- Some translations are a bit formal for preschool reading
Thai garden vocabulary here is precise and uses natural words in Thai script that children will recognise. The list is comprehensive and suitable for classroom or home use; a very small number of entries are a bit formal.
- Accurate, child-friendly Thai vocabulary
- Complete coverage of common garden items
- Minor formality in a very small number of items
Tongan provides a full and generally familiar vocabulary for garden items suitable for children. There is a noticeable presence of loanwords from contact languages — these are common in Tongan speech but may sound foreign in some contexts.
- Complete set of garden words in Tongan
- Generally familiar vocabulary for children
- Higher proportion of loanwords due to language contact — common but may feel unfamiliar to some learners
- Some entries are slightly formal or long
Turkish translations are accurate, natural and well suited for young learners of garden vocabulary. The set is consistent and reliable, with only a very small number of items that are slightly formal or longer than optimal.
- High accuracy and natural Turkish vocabulary
- Complete, child-appropriate coverage
- A few entries are slightly formal or wordy for very young children
Turkmen vocabulary for garden items is accurate and uses natural expressions children will recognise. The set is consistent and reliable; only a few items are slightly formal or show minor borrowing.
- Accurate Turkmen terms
- Complete and consistent garden vocabulary
- A small number of entries are slightly formal
Ukrainian cards use clear, native words in Cyrillic that children will easily recognise and repeat. The translations are highly accurate and comprehensive; only a handful are slightly formal and might be smoothed when read aloud.
- Very high accuracy in Ukrainian Cyrillic
- Natural, child-friendly vocabulary
- Minor formality in a very small number of entries
Urdu translations are accurate and presented in Arabic script with familiar vocabulary for garden items. The set is well-suited to children, though a few entries are slightly formal and could be simplified in speech.
- Accurate Urdu script and vocabulary
- Comprehensive garden word coverage
- Some entries are somewhat formal — simpler spoken forms may be preferable
Uzbek entries give clear, accurate names for garden items that children will recognise. The pack is complete and uses everyday vocabulary, though a few words read a bit formal or longer than short child-friendly labels. A small number of loanwords appear, but they are common in modern Uzbek and won't confuse learners.
- Accurate, familiar garden vocabulary
- Complete coverage of items
- Consistent Latin script forms
- Some terms feel slightly formal or longer than typical child labels
Vietnamese translations are natural and child-appropriate for everyday garden items. The set is reliable and comprehensive, though a handful of entries use slightly formal phrasing and some strings lack diacritics, which can affect reading for beginners. Overall this is a very strong pack for young learners.
- Clear, child-friendly vocabulary
- Thorough coverage of garden items
- Natural Vietnamese phrasing
- A few entries use more formal wording than typical child speech
- Some items are missing diacritics — may affect early readers
Xhosa entries are accurate and suitable for young learners, giving familiar names for plants, tools and insects children encounter. The vocabulary is comprehensive and generally natural, though a number of entries trend a bit formal or are longer than a single short label. Those are easy to adjust if you prefer very short flashcard text.
- Natural Xhosa vocabulary children will recognise
- Complete set of garden items
- Several items use slightly formal or longer phrasing
Yoruba translations are clear, familiar and well suited to child-facing flashcards. Coverage is complete and most labels are everyday words children will hear at home or outdoors. A few entries use more formal constructions or longer phrases, but these remain accurate and understandable.
- Accurate everyday words for garden items
- Child-friendly and culturally appropriate
- A small number of terms sound slightly formal or are longer than ideal
The Akan (Twi) set gives good, usable labels for garden words a child will meet. Most translations fit everyday speech, though a few items are slightly longer than ideal for toddlers. Overall it’s a solid choice for early vocabulary work.
- Good everyday vocabulary
- Works well for home and classroom
The Berber (Amazigh) pack provides useful garden vocabulary, but some items vary across regions and may sound formal in certain areas. Most words are understandable and will work for children, especially with a little local adaptation. It’s a solid base for teaching garden terms with awareness of regional variants.
- Covers everyday garden items
- Generally natural and usable for children
- Some terms show regional variation or slightly formal phrasing
Bislama uses many familiar loanwords, which is normal for the language and keeps labels recognisable for children in Vanuatu. The set covers common garden items and is easy for learners to repeat. Expect some English-like forms — that reflects local speech rather than a quality problem.
- Vocabulary aligns with local speech patterns
- Easy-to-recognise labels for children
Dhivehi provides usable garden vocabulary, though a few entries carry English influence or modern loanforms. Most words are familiar to children in Maldives settings and will work well for teaching basic outdoor vocabulary. A small number of labels may feel slightly formal.
- Covers everyday garden items
- Generally familiar to local children
- Some English influence and loanforms appear in a few labels
Fijian (iTaukei) offers usable garden vocabulary that children will recognise, though a few items are slightly formal or longer than ideal. Most labels align with local speech and are easy to teach with. It’s a good choice with small stylistic notes.
- Local, recognisable vocabulary
- Good coverage of garden items
- A handful of items may sound formal or longer than ideal for very young children
The Fulani (Fula) set gives useful garden vocabulary that will be familiar in many regions, but a few entries reflect regional differences and there are occasional mismatches in a small number of labels. Most items are natural and suitable for young learners. It’s a strong pack with minor regional notes.
- Covers everyday garden concepts
- Generally child-friendly phrasing
- Some regional variation and a few mismatches appear in the dataset
Igbo gives generally accurate garden vocabulary that will be familiar to many speakers, with good coverage of core items. There are more entries than average that read somewhat formal or long, so you may want to simplify a few labels when working with very young children. Overall the pack is solid and useful.
- Good coverage of common garden items
- Accurate and culturally appropriate terms
- A noticeable number of labels are formal or longer than ideal for preschoolers
Lingala provides generally accurate garden vocabulary and will be useful for teaching common plants and items. There are more medium-rated items than average, with several entries that are long or somewhat formal — these can be simplified for younger children. Still, the pack is reliable and usable.
- Good coverage of basic garden terms
- Accurate and culturally appropriate where used
- A number of labels are long or somewhat formal for preschool use
Marshallese covers the garden vocabulary well, but a noticeable number of entries show English influence or borrowing, which reflects real language contact in the community. Overall the list will still be useful for learners, especially where local terms exist. Expect a few English-derived forms alongside native words.
- Good coverage of common garden items
- Useful mix of local and widely-used terms
- Some entries show English leakage or English-derived forms
Palauan covers the garden vocabulary but shows some English influence and longer phrasing in places, reflecting real usage and the language’s contact environment. The pack remains useful for introducing outdoor words, though a few labels may read as borrowed or extended phrases.
- Covers essential garden items
- Reflects locally used terms and bilingual usage
- Some English-influenced terms and longer phrases appear
Quechua provides good coverage of garden items but shows noticeable regional variation in plant and animal names — this is expected given Quechua’s many regional varieties. The vocabulary is otherwise appropriate for children. You may want to check regional preferences if your learners speak a specific variety.
- Good, culturally appropriate vocabulary
- Covers common garden items
- Significant regional variation — check which regional variety fits your learners
Samoan provides a useful set of garden words that will be familiar to many children, with generally natural phrasing. A number of items are somewhat formal or longer than ideal; simplifying those when speaking will help very young learners.
- Good coverage of common garden items
- Generally natural Samoan vocabulary
- Several entries lean formal — consider simpler spoken forms
- A few words/phrases are longer and may be harder for toddlers
Sango gives a solid set of garden words that will be understood by many children across Central African communities. A noticeable number of entries reflect common loanwords — these are normal in everyday Sango but may sound unfamiliar to some families.
- Complete set of common garden items
- Uses everyday Sango vocabulary familiar to many speakers
- Several loanwords appear; these are common in Sango but can feel foreign in some regions
- A few entries are somewhat formal — spoken simplifications can help
Sesotho provides a solid set of garden words that will be useful in classrooms and at home. Several entries use loanwords or formal phrasing; these are common in modern Sesotho but you may prefer simpler spoken alternatives for young children.
- Good coverage of garden items in Sesotho
- Generally familiar vocabulary
- Some loanwords and formal terms appear; informal spoken forms may feel more natural
- A few items are longer than ideal for very young learners
Somali garden vocabulary here is understandable and generally child-appropriate, covering the full list of items. A modest number of entries are somewhat formal or longer; choosing simpler spoken forms will help younger children.
- Good coverage of everyday garden items
- Mostly natural Somali vocabulary
- Some terms are slightly formal for very young listeners
- A few entries are longer than ideal for flashcards
Tigrinya provides a useful set of garden words in Ethiopic script that will be understood by many children. Several translations are more formal or longer than ideal for very young learners, so simplifying spoken forms will help with recognition.
- Good coverage of common garden items
- Appropriate vocabulary in Ethiopic script
- Many entries are somewhat formal and long — simplify for toddlers
Tok Pisin covers the garden vocabulary with words that reflect everyday speech in the creole; borrowing is expected and visible in many entries. The set is useful for children, though many items are influenced by loanwords and some phrasing could be simplified for preschool use.
- Good practical coverage of garden items in Tok Pisin
- Vocabulary reflects everyday spoken usage
- High presence of loanwords (expected in a creole) which shape many entries
- Some terms read formal or lengthy — simpler spoken forms recommended
Wolof gives good, usable labels for garden things and will work well with children learning basic vocabulary. There is noticeable borrowing and some English-like forms in the list, which reflects contact with other languages and contemporary usage. Those borrowings are not wrong, but they may sound less native to some speakers.
- Solid coverage of common garden words
- Mostly simple and clear terms for children
- Some items show English/French leakage or loanwords that may feel less native
Zulu provides correct and useful labels for common garden items that children will recognise. The vocabulary covers the set well, though many entries trend toward formal wording or longer phrases rather than short single-word labels. A few loanwords appear but are common in everyday Zulu and should not confuse learners.
- Good, accurate coverage of garden vocabulary
- Mostly clear and appropriate for learners
- Several items use more formal or longer phrasing than ideal for very young children
Latin provides correct and recognisable labels, but the language’s naturally literary register makes some terms feel formal and less playful for young children. Many entries read as classical or literary, which is expected for Latin and may be less engaging for preschool learners. It’s excellent for older children studying Latin, but younger learners may prefer a modern language pack.
- Accurate classical Latin vocabulary
- Consistent and well-formed translations
- Latin’s literary/formal register can feel stiff for preschool learners
Most Amharic entries are appropriate and familiar, but one item—“squirrel”—has a translation that didn’t match local usage (it scored very low). Because squirrels aren’t common in many parts of Ethiopia, the app uses a descriptive or less familiar term for that item. The rest of the pack remains useful for teaching common garden words.
- Mostly natural, commonly used words
- Good coverage of typical garden items
- “Squirrel” uses a descriptive/rare term — may not match children’s local experience
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.