Create Your Own Wordlists

Stackz List Import Wizard

The Stackz List Import Wizard allows to convert any well-formatted text representing a list of words with translations into a Stackz document, following three simple steps:

   1) Insert wordlist text to the wizard (e.g. copy/paste your own content, or from a website),
   2) 
Define separators that mark the elements in the text (e.g. a TAB or comma), and map the resulting chunks to Stackz attributes,
   3) Preview the result
to either fine-tune, or save as new Stackz List.

The formatted wordlist text can come from any source.

Typically you have your own content, maybe from your language class. Alternatively you can find such content in the internet, as shown here below.

Dedicated Language Learning Web Resources

Below is a collection with interesting sites to illustrate the possibilities of finding wordlists in the internet.
Study material found in these or other sites can be easily imported into Stackz!

General

German

Japanese

Chinese

English

Find Specific Content on the Web Yourself

Finding relevant content for importing into Stackz is straighforward with the right search strategy.
Below we offer two search tools that assist performing google searches based on dedicated strategies.

Method 1: Search list names

Wordlists are often advertised with languages and purpose, e.g. "English Japanese JLPT words". Use language names of the concerned language!

Method 2: Search list content

Google is good at directly finding occurrences of text, and collections of words in two languages very often appear in translation lists.

Generate content with Artificial Intelligence (AI)

With the right prompt, ChatGPT does a good job in generating wordlists that can be easily imported in Stackz.

Good prompts could be:

Generate a wordlist with vocabulary typically used in JLPT1.
Generate a table with 100 advanced english business terms and Japanese and German translations. Specify Japanese kanji and reading in Hiragana in specific columns.