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815

Source. (pjmedia.com)

But there was another thing I noticed early on about Duolingo: there was an awful lot of gayness in the lessons and exercises. I wrote about it last May:

Here’s an example: on Saturday morning, I did a speaking lesson. The way those work is that you have 10 sentences that you have to listen to and speak back. Duolingo has these cartoon characters (which are politically correct enough that one of them wears a burka) that you encounter throughout your journey on the app or website, and they’re the ones to speak what you must speak back.

In this particular lesson, two of the exercises had male characters talking about “mi novio” (my boyfriend). Another male character spoke about “mi esposo” (my husband), while a female character said something about “mi esposa” (my wife). If you’re keeping score, that’s four out of 10 exercises dealing with same-sex relationships.

[Source.](https://pjmedia.com/chris-queen/2024/03/11/you-thought-you-were-learning-a-new-language-but-theres-a-different-agenda-afoot-n4927194) > But there was another thing I noticed early on about Duolingo: there was an awful lot of gayness in the lessons and exercises. I wrote about it last May: >> Here’s an example: on Saturday morning, I did a speaking lesson. The way those work is that you have 10 sentences that you have to listen to and speak back. Duolingo has these cartoon characters (which are politically correct enough that one of them wears a burka) that you encounter throughout your journey on the app or website, and they’re the ones to speak what you must speak back. >> In this particular lesson, two of the exercises had male characters talking about “mi novio” (my boyfriend). Another male character spoke about “mi esposo” (my husband), while a female character said something about “mi esposa” (my wife). If you’re keeping score, that’s four out of 10 exercises dealing with same-sex relationships.

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt (edited )

I used Duolingo on and off a long time ago. At first, it was good, not exactly mastering a new language with a 15-minutes-a-day app but, helpful for those looking to improve.

I had come to a complete stop when they threw in ads between "lessons" it, used to be only at end of "lessons"

I did also notice more depressing sentences. What started as "Can I have a menu please?" (common phrase) went on "I don't want to live anymore."