Step Into A New Era of English Learning
- Practice real-world conversations
- Learn with personalized lessons and games
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All designed to match your goals and level.
Try it for FREE nowStep Into A New Era of English Learning
- Practice real-world conversations
- Learn with personalized lessons and games
- Get instant, bilingual feedback
All designed to match your goals and level.
Try it for FREE nowMeet ELSA - Your personal AI-powered English speaking coach
Speak English in short, fun dialogues. Get instant feedback from our proprietary artificial intelligence technology.
Start LearningBy 7:30 AM, the kitchen counter looks like an assembly line. Three different tiffin boxes are being packed. The father’s is low-carb (he is trying to lose the wedding weight). The son’s is loaded with fried chicken (teenage metabolism). The daughter, who is vegan for the last three months (a phase, the mother insists), gets a separate box of chana salad.
The children return from school. The mother transforms into a warden/tutor. "Did you finish your math? Show me your diary." Meanwhile, the grandmother sits with the younger child, feeding them mashed khichdi while telling the story of the Ramayana for the fiftieth time. Education is the god of the Indian household, and homework is its scripture. By 7:30 AM, the kitchen counter looks like an assembly line
The daily life stories of an Indian family are written in the arguments over the bathroom. "I have a board exam!" shouts the teenage son. "I have a meeting!" yells the father, hopping on one leg trying to find his sock. The grandmother, unbothered, uses the western toilet because the knees can’t handle the Indian one anymore. This controlled pandemonium is the heartbeat of the lifestyle. Part II: The Hierarchy of the Kitchen No article on Indian family lifestyle is complete without a pilgrimage to the kitchen. It is not just a room; it is the family’s equity bank. The son’s is loaded with fried chicken (teenage
In a classic multigenerational home (still the gold standard for Indian lifestyle), the day belongs to the elders. By 5:00 AM, Dadaji (grandfather) is in the pooja room. The scent of camphor and sandalwood incense snakes through the corridors. His low chanting of the Gayatri Mantri is the white noise of the household. The mother transforms into a warden/tutor
ELSA, English Language Speech Assistant, is a fun and engaging app specially designed to help you improve your English-speaking communication skills. ELSA's artificial intelligence technology was developed using voice data of people speaking English with various accents. This allows ELSA to recognize the speech patterns of non-native speakers, setting it apart from most other voice recognition technologies.
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Strict but caring, the ELSA AI Coach pays close attention to every bit of progress you make along the way, and reminds you when you go off track. You will be rewarded for your hard work.
Real-Time Speech Recognition Feedback
We are the first and best speech recognition app designed to evaluate and give immediate, detailed feedback on pronunciation and fluency. This enables you to quickly identify and learn the correct pronunciation.
An Intelligent, Adaptive Learning Platform
ELSA gets smarter every day! Traditional language learning is transformed by our personalized English teaching technology. Our self-evolving AI analyzes your performance and behavioral data to personalize your daily curriculum.
27 hours of studying with ELSA is equivalent to an ESL speaking course at an American university
90%
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pronunciation
95%
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in speaking English
68%
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interesting
/ˈɪn.trɪ.stɪŋ/
Sentence Delivery
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Would you like to try?
/wʊd ju laɪk tə traɪ/
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your speech.
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Get The API Learn more about API DocumentationBy 7:30 AM, the kitchen counter looks like an assembly line. Three different tiffin boxes are being packed. The father’s is low-carb (he is trying to lose the wedding weight). The son’s is loaded with fried chicken (teenage metabolism). The daughter, who is vegan for the last three months (a phase, the mother insists), gets a separate box of chana salad.
The children return from school. The mother transforms into a warden/tutor. "Did you finish your math? Show me your diary." Meanwhile, the grandmother sits with the younger child, feeding them mashed khichdi while telling the story of the Ramayana for the fiftieth time. Education is the god of the Indian household, and homework is its scripture.
The daily life stories of an Indian family are written in the arguments over the bathroom. "I have a board exam!" shouts the teenage son. "I have a meeting!" yells the father, hopping on one leg trying to find his sock. The grandmother, unbothered, uses the western toilet because the knees can’t handle the Indian one anymore. This controlled pandemonium is the heartbeat of the lifestyle. Part II: The Hierarchy of the Kitchen No article on Indian family lifestyle is complete without a pilgrimage to the kitchen. It is not just a room; it is the family’s equity bank.
In a classic multigenerational home (still the gold standard for Indian lifestyle), the day belongs to the elders. By 5:00 AM, Dadaji (grandfather) is in the pooja room. The scent of camphor and sandalwood incense snakes through the corridors. His low chanting of the Gayatri Mantri is the white noise of the household.
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