Category | Price | Seller | Device |
---|---|---|---|
Education | $2.99 | BUBL GmbH | iPhone, iPad, iPod |
In Bubl ABC every letter is part of a song.
Learn the names of each letter and compose music by mixing and playing
with letters.
Older children can practice writing and reading: whenever a new word
appears on screen, it is instantly recognised and highlighted with a
special effect.
Create a unique song out of your favourite letters and words!
Features:
- Alphabet Acapella: a new way to learn the alphabet by creating music from letters.
- Available in seven languages: English, German, French, Spanish, Italian, Russian and Brazilian Portuguese.
- Interactive word toy: children can play, mix, arrange letters into different words, which are instantly recognised and highlighted.
- Visual delight: Bubl ABC features dynamic visual effects designed
for every letter.
Bubl ABC is a new app in the Bubl series of new-generation educational
apps that foster the development of your child's creative talents.
Check out our other apps:
Bubl Gelato - world's first musical ice cream!
Bubl Draw - creative toolbox for drawing with music.
Bubl Tap - interactive exploratory space for children and parents.
Somehow the u English says screw you , I don’t know if this is necessary, plus it is very inappropriate
I am 10 years old, and I love to play with music. I'm also multilingual, so to put it in many languages was a great idea! Thanks! ?????
My son totally loves this app! Now he wants to buy another bubl app.
I bought this for my grandson. It's really bad. I'm a teacher and see nothing educational here.
This is really a lot of fun for my daughter. She loves making songs out of the letters that spell the 3 and 4 letter words she is learning. We play it together and I find it entertaining and addictive too. I disagree with the reviewer who said it doesn't have educational value. I'm a teacher too and I have found this really gets my daughter engaged in learning new words.
This a very beautiful animated alphabet where you make a song out of letters. Maybe it’s a bit too artsy for some people, maybe too abstract. But it definitely is a new way of learning the alphabet and I don't agree with people saying it has no educational value.