Last year I didn’t find Duolingo’s yearly report because it was only available through Duolingo’s mobile app and I had had many years pause using it. I still use almost exclusively a browser version of Duolingo on Linux with Chrome as browser.

The screenshots above are taken with OnePlus Pad Go, I bought second-hand just a couple of weeks ago. It is much more usable than my old tablet, and I might use Duolingo on it more frequently.

That report omits all the important stuff. I finished three language courses last year and the latest with all the lessons done at the legendary level. The first was Italian, next Latin, and the third was Dutch. Last year, Duolingo introduced LinkedIn Language Scores and that makes it easier to compare different courses.

I had finished Portuguese, but it has gotten additions after that and I believe that it’s score goes now up to 60.

Another way of comparing language results is how many XP points I have collected practicing them.

Swedish is an interesting case. I had started it years ago and collected only about 800 XP points. Three days ago I returned to it and found that I had jumped quite a lot and was at score level 30 once it got activated. It took me a better half of a long Nordic night to raise it to 45 or finish the course. Forty years ago I was living and working in Sweden, but that lasted only for a year. Actually, I should remove Swedish from my LinkedIn scores to avoid someone thinking, that I am a beginner, when I am fluent.

Here is also my profile page:

I reached 3 million XP points before New Year’s Eve.