Skip to content

Top 3,000 Most Common English Words Flashcards — 300 Words

Push past the basics with 300 English words from the top-3,000 frequency band. This tier covers most everyday writing and conversation. Aim for 20 cards a day for one to two months. Pair with the CEFR B1 deck for an effective layered approach.

Practice all 300 Top 3,000 words

1/300
Tap or press Space to flip
Press Space to flip · 1 = Try again, 2 = Got it, 3 = Easy

Why Frequency-Based Study Beats Random Vocabulary Lists

Frequency studies of English corpora consistently show a small core vocabulary doing the bulk of the work. Roughly 100 words make up half of typical conversation; the top 1,000 cover three-quarters. That means every word you learn from the top tiers compounds — you encounter it, recognise it, and reinforce it dozens of times a week without trying. Words at the bottom of the frequency curve might appear once a month. Studying both tiers with the same intensity wastes effort.

Each card here pulls its data — definition, IPA, example sentences, common mistakes — from the same dictionary entry. Tap the dictionary link on the back of any card to see all meanings, synonyms, etymology, and word forms.

First 20 Words at the Top 3,000 Tier

again /əˈɡɛn/ When something happens or is done another time, or when you repeat an action you did before. alive /əˈlaɪv/ Living and able to move, breathe, and feel; not dead. alone /əˈloʊn/ By yourself with no one else there; without friends, family, or other people. along /əˈlɔːŋ/ Next to something and moving beside it from one end toward the other, or spread out all over its length. also /ˈɔːlsoʊ/ Plus another thing; in addition to something already mentioned. angry /ˈæŋɡri/ Having a feeling of strong displeasure or rage about something. You show this emotion with your face and voice. apple /ˈæpəl/ A sweet fruit that comes in red, green, or yellow colors and grows on trees. awake /əˈweɪk/ When someone is not asleep and can see, hear, and think clearly. away /əˈweɪ/ At a distance from here or from someone; not in a place. baby /ˈbeɪbi/ A very young child who cannot walk or talk yet, usually between birth and two years old. back /bæk/ The part of your body behind you, opposite your front or face. ball /bɔːl/ A round object you throw, kick, or hit in sports and games. band /bænd/ A group of people who play music together, or a thin circular piece of material. bank /bæŋk/ A place where you keep your money safely and borrow money when needed. bath /bɑːθ/ A tub filled with water where you sit and wash your body. bathroom /ˈbɑːθruːm/ A room in a house where you wash and use the toilet. beach /biːtʃ/ the sandy or rocky area next to the ocean where people swim and relax beer /bɪr/ An alcoholic drink made from grain that people drink socially; usually served cold. begin /bɪˈɡɪn/ To start something; to make something start; to commence an action or event. bell /bɛl/ A ringing object made of metal that makes a sound when it's hit or moved.

FAQ

Why study by frequency rank?

Frequency-tier study delivers the fastest comprehension gains. The top 1,000 English words cover roughly 75% of conversational text; the top 3,000 cover ~90%. Drilling these first means almost everything you read becomes more accessible.

How long should I spend on the Top 3,000 tier?

Plan for 20 cards per day. At that rate the deck takes 3 to 5 weeks. Mix in CEFR-level decks to add structure to topical learning alongside frequency.

Should I do all five tiers?

Top 1,000 and top 3,000 are essential for everyone. Top 5,000 is high-value for serious learners. Top 10,000 and rare entries are diminishing returns — skip unless you read widely or work in language-heavy fields.

Other Frequency Tiers