Czech words with audio
Learning Czech words is much easier when you can hear them. Audio helps you connect written vocabulary with real pronunciation, repeat words correctly and remember them better. In Flunio, you can learn Czech vocabulary through short lessons, audio and practice exercises.
This page is for beginners who want to build Czech vocabulary with pronunciation from the start. You can begin with basic A0–A1 words, listen to them, repeat them aloud and then review them in exercises.
Everyday Czech words
Start with simple words for people, home, food, transport, time and daily situations. These words appear often and are useful in real conversations.
Czech pronunciation practice
Listening helps you notice sounds that are difficult to guess from spelling alone, especially ř, č, š, ž, ě and long vowels.
Words and short phrases
Vocabulary becomes stronger when you hear words inside short phrases. This helps you remember meaning, rhythm and natural usage.
Why learn Czech vocabulary with audio?
Czech spelling is more regular than English, but pronunciation still needs practice. If you only read word lists, you may remember the meaning but pronounce words incorrectly. Audio gives you a model to copy and helps you build listening habits from the beginning.
- You hear how Czech words actually sound.
- You notice long and short vowels more easily.
- You can repeat words aloud after listening.
- You connect vocabulary with listening practice.
- You build better pronunciation habits from A0.
How audio fits into a Czech beginner roadmap
Beginners should not learn Czech only from written word lists. Audio should come early, together with pronunciation, first words and short phrases. This helps you avoid building bad pronunciation habits and makes vocabulary easier to remember.
If you are starting from zero, the beginner roadmap explains what to learn in the first 7 days, how to plan the first 30 days and how to choose the first 100 useful Czech words.
Czech sounds beginners should hear early
Some Czech sounds are difficult to understand from text only. Learners should hear them many times in real words and short phrases. This is especially true for letters and combinations such as ř, č, š, ž, ě, ou and long vowels like á, é, í, ó, ú and ý.
Soft and sharp sounds
Words with č, š, ž and ř are much easier to learn when you hear them instead of only reading them.
Long vowels
Czech uses long vowels, and the difference can matter. Audio helps you feel the rhythm of the word.
How to practice Czech words with audio
The best method is simple: listen, repeat, check meaning and review. Do not try to memorize too many words at once. A small group of words with audio and exercises is more useful than a long list you read only once.
- Choose a short Czech lesson.
- Listen to each word carefully.
- Repeat the word aloud after the audio.
- Check the meaning and example usage.
- Complete vocabulary exercises.
- Return to older words later for review.
Learn Czech words, then use them
Audio is only one part of learning. After you hear and repeat a Czech word, you need to use it in practice. Flunio connects vocabulary with lessons, dictionary search and exercises so that words do not stay as isolated items in a list.
FAQ
Can I learn Czech words with audio in Flunio?
Yes. Flunio includes Czech vocabulary lessons with audio so you can listen to pronunciation, repeat words and practice them in exercises.
Why is audio important when learning Czech words?
Audio helps you connect spelling with pronunciation. This is important in Czech because learners need to hear long vowels, soft sounds and letters such as ř, č, š and ž.
Should beginners learn Czech vocabulary with audio?
Yes. Beginners should listen to words from the start because pronunciation habits are easier to build early than to fix later.
How many Czech words should I learn per day?
A good starting point is 10–20 words per day with audio, repetition and short practice exercises.
