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r/languagelearning PUBLIC

A community for anybody interested in learning other languages. Whether you are just starting, a polyglot or a language nerd, this is the place for you!

3,362,869 members
Created: Mar 2010
Language: EN
POSITIVE SENTIMENT
Last analyzed: May 27, 2026 00:01
Marketing Summary

r/languagelearning is a PUBLIC community on Reddit with over 3,362,869 members. It currently has a positive sentiment with an engagement rate of 0.0%. With a community friendliness score of 80, this subreddit presents a low conversion potential for authentic brand participation. Self-promotion is generally allowed according to recent analysis.

80
Friendliness Score
0.0%
Engagement Rate
30
Conversion Potential
2.0%
Monthly Growth
Marketing Analytics
27.9
Avg Post Score
28.6
Avg Comments
25
Brand Mentions
0
Posts/Hour
Top Post Types
text 88.0% (44)
link 12.0% (6)
Peak Activity Hours
Times shown in UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) Local times are automatically converted based on your browser's timezone
12AM UTC
High
~20 active
8AM UTC
Medium
~10 active
Community Culture
Community Sentiment POSITIVE
Friendliness Score: 80/100
6.7K
Avg User Karma of Top Posts
70%
Commercial Acceptance
Content Preferences
Moderation Patterns
Rules & Compliance
9
Total Rules
Images
Videos
Self Promotion
Require Flairs
Public
Posting Requirements & Restrictions
3
Minimum Karma
30
Min Account Age (days)
ANY
Submission Type
Disabled
Flair System
Subreddit Rules
  1. Be mature and respectful to others: We're all here in our own time, so please help us enjoy that time by keeping discussion civil, this includes using insults or writing derogatory comments. We don't remove posts simply for being brash.
  2. Read the wiki and FAQ before asking basic questions: For cases where user makes a vague and unhelpful "What language should I learn?" post or asks an already-answered question. FAQ are usually removed.
  3. Do not submit self-owned content too frequently: Users may only post self-owned content (apps, videos, blogs) if it is good quality (no AI wrappers), and posting is infrequent (no more than once a month). Please report violations, and see our [moderation policy](https://www.reddit.com/r/languagelearning/wiki/moderation_policy#wiki_guidelines_for_posting_owned_content.3A) for more guidelines.
  4. Do not post disallowed content: These include: posts focused on one language, language exchange requests, videos similar to "polyglot speaks 19 languages", language tutors, homework help, achievement posts, pictures of resources, and AI language learning tools or chatbots.
  5. Do not focus your post on a specific language: Posts about popular languages belong in their subs. Posts about rarer languages are usually okay. Posts about learning techniques/schedules are sometimes okay--check the longer rules.
  6. Do not post low-quality content: We only remove very low-quality posts. Please only use this for incoherent ranting, tasteless or unfunny attempts at humour, and boring translation requests.
  7. Do not generalise large groups of people: This includes spreading conspiracy theories or isolated or misleading statistics regarding groups of people.
  8. Do not target individuals with threats or slander: This means targeting users with threats, slander or spurious accusations
  9. Post requests for resources in the dedicated subreddit: For example, requests for French textbook recommendations go in /r/french
Marketing Data Updated
May 27, 2026
Rules Updated
May 26, 2026
Compliance Updated
May 26, 2026
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