How to Learn Vocabulary That Actually Sticks
8 June 2026 · Stuart
Memorising word lists rarely works. Learn words the way your brain actually keeps them: in context, with spacing, and with a reason to recall.
Most learners "study" vocabulary by staring at a list the night before. A week later it''s gone. Here''s how to make words stay.
Learn phrases, not words
Don''t learn make. Learn make a decision, make friends, make a mistake. Words live in the company they keep, and chunks are easier to recall and far more natural to say.
Use spaced repetition
Review a new word after a day, then three days, then a week, then a month. Each well-timed review tells your brain "keep this." A flashcard app like Anki automates the schedule, but even a simple notebook with dated columns works.
Give every word a hook
- A picture in your head
- A personal example sentence (about you, not a textbook character)
- A word it rhymes with or sounds like in your language
The weirder the hook, the better it sticks.
Aim for use, not recognition
You don''t know a word until you can produce it. After learning five new words, immediately write or say three sentences using them. Recall beats re-reading every time.
Keep it small and daily
Five words a day, learned properly, is 1,800 words a year — more than enough for confident everyday conversation. Ten words crammed once a week is mostly forgotten by Friday.
Bring your new words to a lesson and put them to work — using them with a teacher who can correct and stretch them is what turns "recognised" into "owned".