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AI Flashcard Generator in Swahili
Turn your Swahili notes into study-ready cards with the AI Flashcard Generator in Swahili
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Frequently Asked Questions
The AI Flashcard Generator is an Evernote assistant feature that converts your notes into study-ready flashcards. It detects language segments, extracts key phrases and example sentences, and produces card templates such as basic, cloze, and audio-enabled cards for review.
When you run the generator on notes containing Swahili, it identifies Swahili content, segments sentences, suggests translations, and creates pronunciation hints. It uses linguistic rules for noun classes and verb morphology so cards reflect natural usage and useful grammar points.
Yes. The assistant can suggest cloze deletions by identifying target vocabulary or grammar chunks and generating masked versions of example sentences. You can adjust cloze aggressiveness before saving cards to ensure they match your learning goals.
The generator adds phonetic hints by default and will attach audio links when audio exists in your note or linked repository. If no audio is available, it can create phonetic guidance to help with pronunciation practice.
Absolutely. Preview the cards before saving and edit front/back content, tags, or phonetics. Evernote preserves the original note, so edits to exported cards won't change the source text unless you choose to sync updates back to the note.
The assistant recognizes common regional variants and loanword orthography when present in your note, and it flags ambiguous cases for review. You can tag cards by dialect or region to keep variants separated for targeted study.
Yes. Generated cards can be exported in common formats or copied into templates that integrate with other study tools. You can also keep decks inside Evernote notebooks and use tags to organize exports by topic or study priority.
Yes. The AI can propose a spaced-repetition schedule using recommended intervals and your available daily study time. You can customize intervals, review frequency, and which tags receive priority in scheduling.
You can select multiple notes or an entire notebook for batch processing. The assistant will produce card groups per note and attach source references so you can review or filter outputs by origin before finalizing.
Translations are generated using linguistic models and curated corpora; they aim to be accurate for common phrases and everyday usage. For specialized or ambiguous text, the assistant flags low-confidence items and recommends human review within Evernote.
Generated cards and their metadata are saved alongside or linked to the originating note in Evernote so you can trace cards back to source material. This makes iterative improvement and review straightforward within your workspace.
If your notes include audio files or linked recordings, the assistant will attach those to cards. You can also add downloaded native-speaker audio and tag cards as audio-enabled for listening-focused reviews.
The generator works with text content in Evernote notes and common attachments such as plain text, PDFs with selectable text, and linked audio files. For special file types, export the text into a note and run the generator on that note.
The assistant may flag very long documents or highly technical texts for staged processing to ensure quality. It recommends splitting very long notes into topic-focused sections so generated cards remain coherent and reviewable.
Add context-rich example sentences in your notes, attach native audio when possible, and tag items with part-of-speech or difficulty markers. These cues help Evernote's assistant create clearer translations, targeted cloze deletions, and better-prioritized review schedules.