The idea

Spend five minutes looking for resources to learn Spanish, French, or Japanese and you'll find more than you could work through in a lifetime — apps, textbooks, YouTube channels, formal exams, entire industries built around a handful of languages. Look for the same depth of material on Bulgarian, Kazakh, Serbian, or Mongolian, and you'll find scattered forum posts, outdated PDFs, and a lot of "does anyone know a good resource for this?"

Lingo Uncharted is an attempt to close that gap for four languages specifically: Bulgarian, Kazakh, Serbian, and Mongolian. Each one gets the full treatment — grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation, travel phrases, real proficiency exams, curated resources, and book recommendations — plus a searchable dictionary and flashcard decks to actually practise with.

Why these four languages

They're connected by more than just being under-resourced. All four are genuinely useful to Australians specifically: strong migrant communities (Serbian and Bulgarian in particular), growing trade and resources ties (Kazakhstan and Mongolia), and travel destinations that reward more than a phrasebook's worth of effort. None of them are "easy" languages by the usual difficulty rankings, and none of them deserved to be this hard to find good material for.

What you'll find here

  • 36 in-depth guides — nine per language, covering everything from your first week to formal exam preparation.
  • A dictionary of core vocabulary per language, searchable and filterable by category.
  • Flashcard decks you can study directly in the browser — no app download required.
  • A blog covering the cultural and linguistic quirks that don't fit neatly into a grammar guide.

A note on accuracy

We fact-check the specifics — proficiency exam names, official bodies, FSI difficulty ratings — against real sources rather than guessing. If you spot something that's out of date or just wrong, we'd genuinely like to know; languages and the institutions around them change, and a site like this is only useful if it stays accurate.

What this site isn't

It's not a replacement for a tutor, a structured course, or time spent with native speakers — nothing really is. Think of it as the reference and practice layer underneath whichever of those you choose: the grammar explanation you come back to, the vocabulary you drill between lessons, the phrase you look up before a trip.