Languages · Brazil
Learn Portuguese with music
Conjugations that stick—not silent flashcard drills.
Brazilian Portuguese, built for real use.
Over 260 million people speak Portuguese across Brazil, Portugal, and the Lusophone world. Rhythmica teaches Brazilian Portuguese—turning verb patterns, nasal sounds, and high-frequency vocabulary into musical tracks so you learn by rhythm and ear.
Available nowWhy tables fade. Songs stick.
Conjugation table · silent
Endings and nasal vowels blur
- Stress and nasality with no sound hook
- Irregulars and personal infinitive pile on fast
- Easy to forget once you close the app
Same pattern · on a loop
Forms land on the beat
- Eu, você, ele repeat with rhythm and melody
- Your ear picks up stress and endings naturally
- Review feels like replaying a track—not cramming
Familiar words, unfamiliar rhythm
Portuguese shares Romance roots with Spanish and Italian—many words look familiar. The friction is pronunciation and conjugation: nasal vowels, rhythmic stress, three verb classes (-ar, -er, -ir), and patterns like the personal infinitive (para eu falar). Brazilian Portuguese uses você for “you” with its own endings. Irregulars like ser, estar, ir, and ter need repetition that actually sticks.
What you get for Portuguese
Conjugation-first lessons designed for Romance-language learners.
Every major tense
Present, past, future, conditional, and subjunctive—for -ar, -er, and -ir verbs you actually use.
Brazilian Portuguese
Você forms and Brazilian patterns—ideal for travel, business, and the wider Lusophone world.
One pattern, one song
Each conjugation map gets its own AI-generated track with forms locked to the beat.
Built-in review
Rhythm Journey XP and favorites so nasal sounds and endings stick between sessions.
Start with the verbs you’ll use every day
Dive into full conjugation maps for four essentials—or open the app and pick your tense.
Tips for learning Portuguese with music
- Focus on Brazilian patterns—you’ll be understood across most Portuguese-speaking contexts.
- Loop each track until eu / você / ele feel automatic—then move on.
- Daily contact beats a weekend cram — five minutes or an hour of background listening both count.
- Pair tracks with Brazilian music, podcasts, or telenovelas to hear forms in context.
Practice Portuguese free
No download required on the web. Pick a tense, loop a track, and build the habit.
Rhythmica is a strong complement to classes, tutors, or immersion—especially for mastering verb forms and high-frequency vocabulary. It won’t replace conversation, but it makes the drill layer less miserable.