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Foreign Numbers is a learning tool dedicated to training listening comprehension for numbers in foreign languages. Rather than trying to cover full-language learning, it focuses on a common high-frequency pain point: learners may recognize numbers on paper but struggle to catch prices, phone numbers, times, addresses, or large numbers at natural speaking speed. The page shows that it has 248 ratings on the App Store, with an average score of 4.5/5.
The content covers cardinal numbers, ordinal numbers, phone numbers, and time expressions. Cardinal numbers range from 0 to over 1,000,000, making them useful for scenarios such as shopping prices, quantities, and addresses. Ordinal numbers are used for dates, floors, rankings, and directions. Phone numbers are read according to the real grouping conventions of different languages, such as paired grouping in French and specific grouping patterns in Japanese. Time exercises cover how different languages express clock time. In terms of format, it is closer to a self-study app/web training tool, rather than a live class, recorded course, or 1v1 lesson.
It supports 26 languages plus some regional variants, including English, Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Korean, Russian, Spanish, Turkish, and more. Users can adjust the number range, set the playback speed from 0.5x to 1.5x, and choose practice durations from 10 seconds to 10 minutes. As for the creator’s background, the page only mentions that the developer built the tool after struggling to distinguish numbers while learning Turkish. It does not disclose any teaching team, linguistics credentials, or institutional endorsement.
The captured content does not provide pricing, subscription details, free usage limits, or payment methods. It also does not mention any accreditation, completion certificates, or formal assessment. As such, it is better suited as a supplementary practice tool rather than a course product that can be used for a résumé or exam proof.
Its strengths are a highly focused use case, strong relevance to real-life scenarios, fine-grained difficulty controls, and the fact that it fills a gap often neglected by general-purpose language learning apps: dedicated number-listening practice. Its limitations are that the learning scope is very narrow; it does not cover systematic grammar, spoken interaction, writing correction, or clearly stated customer service or learning support. It is best suited to learners who already have a basic foundation in the target language and want to improve their reaction speed when hearing numbers, especially those preparing for travel, study abroad, workplace communication, or everyday shopping.
The page does not provide information on access from mainland China, network stability, or payment options, so actual usability needs to be tested independently. If access or payment is restricted, alternatives include using Duolingo, Memrise, or Anki together with TTS to create your own number dictation cards, or choosing language-specific listening materials focused on numbers.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on foreignnumbers.com official site.
foreignnumbers.com is an United States Education provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach foreignnumbers.com directly.