Tus primeras 1.000 palabras cubren el 75 % del habla real
La palanca es la frecuencia, no el tema. Las 1.000 palabras correctas te dan cobertura útil más rápido que cualquier libro.
Bhada Yun · Founder, TalkToDia
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How many words do you need? For comfortable conversation, roughly 2,000–3,000 word families. For reading novels without a dictionary, 8,000–9,000 (Nation 2006). But the most important number is smaller: your first 1,000 words — if they're the right ones — cover about 75% of everything said around you. Picking them by frequency instead of by textbook topic is the single highest-leverage decision a beginner can make.
How much does each layer of vocabulary actually cover?
Word frequency in every studied language follows Zipf's law: a tiny set of words does most of the work. Zipf gives the shape; corpus studies (Nation 2006; Schmitt 2008) give the percentages, and they repeat across English, Spanish, Mandarin, Japanese:
| Vocabulary size | Coverage of everyday speech |
|---|---|
| Top 100 words | ~50% (varies 45–52% by corpus) |
| Top 1,000 words | ~75% (children's-book corpora land near 80%) |
| Top 2,000 words | ~85% — most conversations followable with context |
| Top 5,000 words | ~90–95% of casual TV and conversational text |
| ~6,000 word families | Nation's strict 95% threshold for unsimplified text |
| ~9,000 word families | The 98% needed to read novels comfortably |
This table explains the beginner experience better than any motivational talk: the first 1,000 words are linear pain, and then everything accelerates, because with 75% coverage you can context-guess most of the rest.
How many words do you need to be "fluent"?
For conversational fluency, aim at 2,000–3,000 well-chosen word families plus the few hundred specific to your life — your job, your hobbies, your in-laws' favorite complaints. The 8,000–9,000 figure scares people, but it's the literary reading bar, not the conversation bar. Most learners drastically overestimate the vocabulary needed to start living in a language and drastically underestimate how much retrieval practice the words they "know" still need. (That second problem is the intermediate plateau.)
Why is frequency-first better than topic-first?
Because topics don't transfer; connectors do. Most apps and textbooks organize by theme — "food," "travel," "family" — which feels orderly and is statistically backwards. Spend a week on "fruits and vegetables" and you can discuss salad. Spend the same week on the connectors of speech — however, although, even though, in fact, basically, kind of — and you can suddenly discuss anything you already know nouns for. Textbooks front-load "colors" because they're concrete and teachable, but "would," "if," "even," and "actually" are vastly more common in real speech.
What's the right way to learn the first 1,000?
If you have 30 minutes a day, spend your first 90 days almost entirely here. Three rules:
- Use a frequency-ordered source, not a chapter-ordered one. Free: Wiktionary's frequency lists; Mark Davies's COCA lists for English. Paid: the Routledge Frequency Dictionaries cover most major languages.
- Learn every word inside a real sentence — never as a bare card with one translation. Words live in collocations.
- Say each word out loud, 5–10 times, in different sentences. Speaking a word creates a measurably stronger memory trace than reading it silently — the production effect (MacLeod et al. 2010). This is also where spaced repetition alone falls short: cards show you the word; your mouth has to learn it too.
How TalkToDia applies this
Every word you actively use in conversation with Dia is tracked in your personal word bank. Dia recycles the words you've already made yours into your next conversations — retesting them in real dialogue, which is where retention actually consolidates — and stretches you toward new words at the edge of your level. You don't study a list; the list assembles itself from how you actually speak. (Per-word frequency-rank coverage — "you've used 612 of the top 1,000" — is on the roadmap; today the engine tracks what you use, not what you're missing.)
Frequency is free leverage. Use it.
FAQ
- How many words does a fluent speaker actually know?
- Educated native speakers know on the order of 15,000–20,000 word families, but conversational fluency in a second language needs far less: roughly 2,000–3,000 well-chosen word families covers ~85% of everyday speech, with context filling much of the gap. Reading literature comfortably is the expensive goal — about 9,000 families (Nation 2006).
- Can I hold a conversation with only 1,000 words?
- A basic one, yes — the right 1,000 words cover about 75% of everyday speech. You will paraphrase a lot and miss nuance, but you can genuinely communicate, which is exactly the practice that pulls the next thousand words in. The mistake is waiting until you "know enough" to start speaking.
- Which frequency list should I use?
- Any reputable corpus-based list beats any textbook order. Wiktionary frequency lists are free and decent for major languages; Routledge Frequency Dictionaries are the gold standard if you want curated entries with example sentences. For English specifically, Mark Davies's COCA-based lists are excellent.
- Should beginners study grammar or vocabulary first?
- Vocabulary, by a wide margin, in the first 90 days — with grammar absorbed through example sentences rather than drilled in the abstract. With 1,000 high-frequency words and rough grammar you can communicate; with perfect conjugation tables and 200 words you cannot.
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