Edgur.ai

Edgur.ai

Meet Edgur: your witty AI tool for mastering GRE vocabulary

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Think Duolingo, but for GRE vocab — built to make learning words active, fun, and unforgettable. Edgur mixes microlearning, spaced repetition, and quirkiness to help you master 1,000 GRE words that actually stick. Guided by your witty AI study cat 🐈‍⬛, you’ll learn through context, quizzes, and smart review sessions instead of dull flashcards.
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Wispr Flow: Dictation That Works Everywhere
Wispr Flow: Dictation That Works Everywhere
Stop typing. Start speaking. 4x faster.
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What do you think? …

Aboozar Hadavand
Hey everyone 👋 I’m part of the team behind Edgur, and this project started from a simple frustration — most GRE vocab prep feels like a grind. You flip flashcards, memorize a definition, forget it a week later. We thought there had to be a better way to actually learn and remember words. So we built Edgur around three ideas: Learning should feel active, not passive. Short, focused sessions beat long, painful ones. A little personality and humor go a long way in keeping you motivated. Our process evolved a lot during testing. Early prototypes were just AI flashcards, but users wanted more context and variety. That led to what Edgur is now — a mix of microlearning, spaced repetition, and AI-graded recall questions, all guided by our mischievous study cat 🐈‍⬛ who gives hints, jokes, and moral support. We’d love feedback from the Product Hunt community — what features would make vocab learning even more fun and effective for you? 👉 Try the free first unit and tell us what you think — we’re all ears (and whiskers).
Sarah Thomas

Hi everyone! Sarah here 👋

A big part of my work on Edgur has been rethinking how to help learners build a durable, flexible understanding of new words. Flashcards alone often lead to surface-level familiarity with new concepts, so our courses present each term in a range of contexts: comparisons, contrasts, sentence-creation tasks, nuance checks, and connections to words learners already know.

Another big focus has been building spaced repetition and recall directly into our course flow. Even when you move on to new words, Edgur keeps resurfacing older ones, especially those that are similar in meaning or easy to confuse. That's something we're actively refining, and we'd love feedback on how we're doing.

If you try the first unit, I'd love to hear what made the words feel more memorable for you. Or if you're someone struggling to learn new vocabulary (in English or other languages), I'd love to know what challenges you've faced and what learning methods you've found most helpful!