The honest answer: how learning a single word should look, from the first encounter to long-term recall. With a checklist.
You don't memorise a word. You build a memory around it. Here's what that actually looks like, step by step.
When you see a new word, don't just read its translation. Ask:
A 5-second hesitation builds more memory than 5 passive reads.
A definition alone is abstract. A sentence makes it concrete:
"The pandemic forced us to adapt to remote work."
Now "adapt" is anchored in something real. Save the sentence with the word.
Review the word tomorrow, then in 3 days, then in 7. Each time, try to recall first and check the answer after. This is non-negotiable for long-term retention.
Write your own sentence. Out loud is even better. The act of producing the word — even badly — converts it from "recognised" to "owned".
Read articles where the word appears naturally. Watch shows where it gets used. Each natural encounter is a free review.
If you tick all four for a word, it's yours. Forever.