English Reels
Infinite Scroll for English Learning
What users say
"Reviewers keep saying the same thing: it makes daily English practice easy and, somehow, fun. The warmest comments go to the bite-sized exercises, the smooth flow from one to the next, and the way streaks and small rewards keep people coming back."
Read all 40 English Reels reviewsOverview
I keep English Reels on my home screen because it turns dead time into practice. You scroll an endless feed of quick grammar, vocabulary and listening exercises, and a daily streak keeps you honest. It's a general English app that suits IELTS, TOEFL and Cambridge learners alike, and the format genuinely makes study feel light.
My full review of English Reels
English Reels: practice that fits between the cracks of your day
I've tried a lot of apps that promise to make English study painless, and most of them just repackage the same drills. English Reels, from Shining Apps LLC, does something different. Instead of video, it borrows the infinite-scroll feel of social feeds and fills it with short interactive exercises. You open it for two minutes on the bus and come away having done ten little challenges without noticing the effort.
It's worth being clear about scope: this is a general English app, not a single-exam tool. It's built for anyone prepping for IELTS, TOEFL or Cambridge English exams (B1 Preliminary, B2 First, C1 Advanced, C2 Proficiency), so the grammar and vocabulary you practise here carries across all of them.
Grammar and structure that actually stick
The grammar reels are where I noticed the fastest gains. Rapid-fire challenges push you to build sentences and handle word formation quickly, and the "Build the Sentence" drag-and-drop mechanic drills syntax until it feels automatic. The Key Word Transformation exercises are the same skill Cambridge tests directly in the Use of English section, so this is practical carryover, not busywork.
Vocabulary you can reach for under pressure
Lexical range is where a lot of learners stall, and the gamified modules here keep you meeting new words. "Magic Words" that fit several contexts, synonyms and opposites, and even "Emoji Descriptions" all nudge you to think flexibly about vocabulary, collocations and expression rather than memorising flat lists.
Listening, reading and logic in the same feed
What surprised me is how much sits in one scroll. Listening and pronunciation tasks drop you into audio challenges and tongue twisters where you make real-time choices from what you hear, which sharpens your ear for spoken English. Reading and logic come through Open Cloze and Notice exercises, plus True or False and Multiple Choice quizzes that explain why an answer is right the moment you tap.
Features I lean on most
- Grammar sentences and quizzes: core rules and structures practised through quick interactive rounds.
- Magic Word and Open Cloze: contextual puzzles that build the intuition Reading and Use of English reward.
- Word Formation and Key Word Transformation: the exact advanced skills Cambridge-level exams lean on.
- Synonyms and opposites: fast, repeated exposure to widen your word choice.
- Pronunciation and tongue twisters: audio reels aimed at phonetics and listening accuracy.
- Verb conjugations: focused work on irregular past and participle forms.
- Notices and emojis: practical reading comprehension paired with creative word association.
Why the format works
The streak and gamification aren't gimmicks for me; they're the reason I keep opening it. Each reel is a small win, and stringing wins together across a week does more for consistency than any study plan I've written and abandoned. With thousands of unique challenges behind a clean, fluid interface, it turns a daunting goal into a stack of tiny achievements.
English Reels runs on iOS and Android, and there's a web version at englishreels.app if you'd rather practise on a bigger screen. If you want daily English practice that you'll actually stick with while working toward a Cambridge, IELTS or TOEFL goal, this is one I recommend without hesitation.
