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Love and Relationships Poetry: Analyzing Love Poems

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N

nevaeh

14/12/2025

English Literature

love & relationships poetry anthology- love poems analysis

96

14 Dec 2025

11 pages

Love and Relationships Poetry: Analyzing Love Poems

N

nevaeh

@nevaeh_cwvpq

Ever wondered how poets capture the messy, complicated world of... Show more

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1 / 10
THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

When We Two Parted by Lord Byron

This poem hits you right in the feels with its tale of secret heartbreak. Byron's speaker is devastated after ending an illicit affair, and the pain is still raw years later.

The syllable structure 555pattern5-5-5 pattern mimics a broken heartbeat, showing how the relationship literally broke his heart. Words like "cold" and "pale" create a semantic field of death, suggesting their love has completely died.

Direct address makes this feel intensely personal - he's speaking directly to his lost lover. The cyclical structure traps us in his endless regret, just like he's trapped in his memories.

Key insight: The poem's sibilance ("share in its shame") reflects the hushed, secretive nature of their forbidden relationship.

Notice how Byron uses rhetorical questions to show the speaker questioning his own decisions. The contrast between the intimate past and shameful present creates the poem's emotional punch.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Neutral Tones by Thomas Hardy

Hardy paints a brutal picture of love's aftermath through a winter landscape that mirrors the couple's dead relationship. Everything here screams emotional emptiness.

The pathetic fallacy is everywhere - the "white" sun suggests God has abandoned their romance, whilst "starving sod" and "gray" leaves create a world drained of life. Even nature reflects their relationship's decay.

Oxymorons like "alive enough to have strength to die" capture the speaker's internal turmoil perfectly. The woman's smile is described as the "deadest thing" - talk about crushing!

Key insight: The cyclical structure shows he's stuck replaying this painful memory, unable to move forward.

Hardy's four equal stanzas suggest neutrality, but the bitter imagery tells a different story. The final stanza's repetition of opening images proves some wounds never heal.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Winter Swans by Owen Sheers

Finally, a poem where love actually survives! Sheers shows us a couple working through their problems, using swans as symbols of loyalty and partnership.

The opening pathetic fallacy ("two days of rain") mirrors their relationship troubles, but notice how the weather improves as they reconnect. The swans become their teachers in love.

Metaphors are everywhere - the couple's problems are "weights" dragging them down, whilst their reconciliation feels like "boats righting in rough weather". The swans show them how to move in harmony.

Key insight: The poem's present tense suggests hope and renewal, unlike the past-focused heartbreak of other poems.

That beautiful ending where their hands become "like a pair of wings" shows they've learned from nature. The couplet structure emphasises unity - they're literally completing each other again.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Love's Philosophy by Percy Bysshe Shelley

Shelley's speaker is basically the ultimate smooth-talker, using nature imagery to convince his beloved that snogging him is practically a law of the universe. Seriously!

The personification is relentless - fountains "mingle", mountains "kiss", waves "clasp". He's building a case that everything in nature pairs up, so why shouldn't they?

Rhetorical questions ("Why not I with thine?") make his argument feel logical rather than desperate. The consistent structure shows his determination - he won't give up easily.

Key insight: Those imperative verbs reveal his controlling nature - this isn't really about mutual love.

The rhyme scheme creates harmony, but notice the half-rhymes that suggest imbalance. His smooth words can't hide that this might be unrequited love dressed up as philosophical argument.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

The Farmer's Bride by Charlotte Mew

This poem gets seriously dark, showing how forced marriage destroys both people involved. The farmer's "bride" is literally a prisoner in her own home.

Animal imagery dominates - she's compared to a "frightened lamb", "mouse", and "hare". This shows how the farmer sees her as something to be captured rather than loved.

The narrative structure reveals his growing obsession. Starting with practical concerns "morestodoatharvesttime""more's to do at harvest-time", it spirals into disturbing fixation on her physical features.

Key insight: The nature imagery ironically shows she's more at peace with animals than humans - they represent the freedom she's lost.

That final stanza where he obsesses over "the brown of her" whilst she sleeps alone upstairs? Absolutely chilling. The enjambment shows his thoughts spiralling out of control.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Porphyria's Lover by Robert Browning (Part 1)

Welcome to Victorian horror at its finest! Browning creates a dramatic monologue where the speaker's madness unfolds gradually, making us complicit in his twisted logic.

The opening pathetic fallacy sets a violent mood - the wind tears at trees "for spite" and tries to "vex the lake". This mirrors the speaker's internal turmoil perfectly.

Notice how Porphyria takes control initially - she lights the fire, removes her clothes, positions his head. Browning subverts gender roles, making her the active partner.

Key insight: The polysyndeton (repeated "and"s) creates breathless excitement as the speaker watches her every move.

That moment when he realises "Porphyria worshipped me" becomes the turning point. His narcissistic joy at being desired will soon turn deadly - the power balance is about to shift dramatically.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Porphyria's Lover by Robert Browning (Part 2)

The murder happens with chilling matter-of-factness. Three times he winds her hair around her throat - premeditated and deliberate, not a crime of passion.

His delusions are terrifying - claiming "No pain felt she" and seeing her eyes still "laugh" after death. The simile comparing her to "a shut bud that holds a bee" shows his twisted romantic view.

Repetition of "mine, mine" reveals his possessive nature. In death, she finally belongs completely to him - the ultimate expression of toxic ownership.

Key insight: That final line "And yet God has not said a word!" suggests even he knows this is wrong, despite his justifications.

The single stanza structure reflects the one-sided nature of their "love". Browning forces us to see how obsession masquerades as devotion - a masterclass in psychological horror.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sonnet 29: 'I Think of Thee' by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Finally, some healthy passion! Elizabeth Barrett Browning flips the script with a female speaker expressing bold sexual desire - scandalous for Victorian times.

The extended metaphor of vines and trees shows their relationship dynamic. She's the clinging vine, he's the strong tree - but she wants physical presence, not just thoughts.

Imperatives like "Renew thy presence" show her taking control of the relationship. Those nature images become increasingly sensual as her desire builds.

Key insight: The extra syllable in the final line shows how love makes her lose control - but in a joyful way.

That beautiful paradox at the end - "I do not think of thee - I am too near thee" - captures perfect union. When you're truly with someone, conscious thought disappears into pure being.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

How to Write Comparative Essays

Writing about poetry doesn't have to be scary! Think of yourself as a detective, uncovering how poets use language techniques to create emotional impact.

Your introduction should establish the topic, viewpoint, tone, and chosen comparison poem. Don't just summarise - dive straight into analysis that shows your understanding.

Structure paragraphs work brilliantly for comparing poems. Look at rhyme schemes, metre, stanzas - how does the poem's shape support its meaning?

Key insight: Always use the T-E-A framework: Techniques, Evidence, Analysis. This keeps your writing focused and analytical.

Remember to embed quotations smoothly within sentences rather than dropping them in awkwardly. Your job is showing how specific words create specific effects - be that language detective!

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were


We thought you’d never ask...

What is the Knowunity AI companion?

Our AI Companion is a student-focused AI tool that offers more than just answers. Built on millions of Knowunity resources, it provides relevant information, personalised study plans, quizzes, and content directly in the chat, adapting to your individual learning journey.

Where can I download the Knowunity app?

You can download the app from Google Play Store and Apple App Store.

Is Knowunity really free of charge?

That's right! Enjoy free access to study content, connect with fellow students, and get instant help – all at your fingertips.

Most popular content: Literary Analysis

Most popular content in English Literature

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This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.

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Best app on earth! no words because it’s too good

Thomas R

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Just amazing. Let's me revise 10x better, this app is a quick 10/10. I highly recommend it to anyone. I can watch and search for notes. I can save them in the subject folder. I can revise it any time when I come back. If you haven't tried this app, you're really missing out.

Basil

Android user

This app has made me feel so much more confident in my exam prep, not only through boosting my own self confidence through the features that allow you to connect with others and feel less alone, but also through the way the app itself is centred around making you feel better. It is easy to navigate, fun to use, and helpful to anyone struggling in absolutely any way.

David K

iOS user

The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!

Sudenaz Ocak

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Greenlight Bonnie

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very reliable app to help and grow your ideas of Maths, English and other related topics in your works. please use this app if your struggling in areas, this app is key for that. wish I'd of done a review before. and it's also free so don't worry about that.

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I know a lot of apps use fake accounts to boost their reviews but this app deserves it all. Originally I was getting 4 in my English exams and this time I got a grade 7. I didn’t even know about this app three days until the exam and it has helped A LOT. Please actually trust me and use it as I’m sure you too will see developments.

Xander S

iOS user

THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE THE SCHOOLGPT. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮

Elisha

iOS user

This apps acc the goat. I find revision so boring but this app makes it so easy to organize it all and then you can ask the freeeee ai to test yourself so good and you can easily upload your own stuff. highly recommend as someone taking mocks now

Paul T

iOS user

The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.

Stefan S

iOS user

This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.

Samantha Klich

Android user

Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.

Anna

iOS user

Best app on earth! no words because it’s too good

Thomas R

iOS user

Just amazing. Let's me revise 10x better, this app is a quick 10/10. I highly recommend it to anyone. I can watch and search for notes. I can save them in the subject folder. I can revise it any time when I come back. If you haven't tried this app, you're really missing out.

Basil

Android user

This app has made me feel so much more confident in my exam prep, not only through boosting my own self confidence through the features that allow you to connect with others and feel less alone, but also through the way the app itself is centred around making you feel better. It is easy to navigate, fun to use, and helpful to anyone struggling in absolutely any way.

David K

iOS user

The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!

Sudenaz Ocak

Android user

In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.

Greenlight Bonnie

Android user

very reliable app to help and grow your ideas of Maths, English and other related topics in your works. please use this app if your struggling in areas, this app is key for that. wish I'd of done a review before. and it's also free so don't worry about that.

Rohan U

Android user

I know a lot of apps use fake accounts to boost their reviews but this app deserves it all. Originally I was getting 4 in my English exams and this time I got a grade 7. I didn’t even know about this app three days until the exam and it has helped A LOT. Please actually trust me and use it as I’m sure you too will see developments.

Xander S

iOS user

THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE THE SCHOOLGPT. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮

Elisha

iOS user

This apps acc the goat. I find revision so boring but this app makes it so easy to organize it all and then you can ask the freeeee ai to test yourself so good and you can easily upload your own stuff. highly recommend as someone taking mocks now

Paul T

iOS user

 

English Literature

96

14 Dec 2025

11 pages

Love and Relationships Poetry: Analyzing Love Poems

N

nevaeh

@nevaeh_cwvpq

Ever wondered how poets capture the messy, complicated world of love and relationships? From heartbreak that feels like death to obsessive passion that turns deadly, these classic poems explore every shade of romantic experience you can imagine.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sign up to see the contentIt's free!

Access to all documents

Improve your grades

Join milions of students

By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

When We Two Parted by Lord Byron

This poem hits you right in the feels with its tale of secret heartbreak. Byron's speaker is devastated after ending an illicit affair, and the pain is still raw years later.

The syllable structure 555pattern5-5-5 pattern mimics a broken heartbeat, showing how the relationship literally broke his heart. Words like "cold" and "pale" create a semantic field of death, suggesting their love has completely died.

Direct address makes this feel intensely personal - he's speaking directly to his lost lover. The cyclical structure traps us in his endless regret, just like he's trapped in his memories.

Key insight: The poem's sibilance ("share in its shame") reflects the hushed, secretive nature of their forbidden relationship.

Notice how Byron uses rhetorical questions to show the speaker questioning his own decisions. The contrast between the intimate past and shameful present creates the poem's emotional punch.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sign up to see the contentIt's free!

Access to all documents

Improve your grades

Join milions of students

By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

Neutral Tones by Thomas Hardy

Hardy paints a brutal picture of love's aftermath through a winter landscape that mirrors the couple's dead relationship. Everything here screams emotional emptiness.

The pathetic fallacy is everywhere - the "white" sun suggests God has abandoned their romance, whilst "starving sod" and "gray" leaves create a world drained of life. Even nature reflects their relationship's decay.

Oxymorons like "alive enough to have strength to die" capture the speaker's internal turmoil perfectly. The woman's smile is described as the "deadest thing" - talk about crushing!

Key insight: The cyclical structure shows he's stuck replaying this painful memory, unable to move forward.

Hardy's four equal stanzas suggest neutrality, but the bitter imagery tells a different story. The final stanza's repetition of opening images proves some wounds never heal.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sign up to see the contentIt's free!

Access to all documents

Improve your grades

Join milions of students

By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

Winter Swans by Owen Sheers

Finally, a poem where love actually survives! Sheers shows us a couple working through their problems, using swans as symbols of loyalty and partnership.

The opening pathetic fallacy ("two days of rain") mirrors their relationship troubles, but notice how the weather improves as they reconnect. The swans become their teachers in love.

Metaphors are everywhere - the couple's problems are "weights" dragging them down, whilst their reconciliation feels like "boats righting in rough weather". The swans show them how to move in harmony.

Key insight: The poem's present tense suggests hope and renewal, unlike the past-focused heartbreak of other poems.

That beautiful ending where their hands become "like a pair of wings" shows they've learned from nature. The couplet structure emphasises unity - they're literally completing each other again.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sign up to see the contentIt's free!

Access to all documents

Improve your grades

Join milions of students

By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

Love's Philosophy by Percy Bysshe Shelley

Shelley's speaker is basically the ultimate smooth-talker, using nature imagery to convince his beloved that snogging him is practically a law of the universe. Seriously!

The personification is relentless - fountains "mingle", mountains "kiss", waves "clasp". He's building a case that everything in nature pairs up, so why shouldn't they?

Rhetorical questions ("Why not I with thine?") make his argument feel logical rather than desperate. The consistent structure shows his determination - he won't give up easily.

Key insight: Those imperative verbs reveal his controlling nature - this isn't really about mutual love.

The rhyme scheme creates harmony, but notice the half-rhymes that suggest imbalance. His smooth words can't hide that this might be unrequited love dressed up as philosophical argument.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sign up to see the contentIt's free!

Access to all documents

Improve your grades

Join milions of students

By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

The Farmer's Bride by Charlotte Mew

This poem gets seriously dark, showing how forced marriage destroys both people involved. The farmer's "bride" is literally a prisoner in her own home.

Animal imagery dominates - she's compared to a "frightened lamb", "mouse", and "hare". This shows how the farmer sees her as something to be captured rather than loved.

The narrative structure reveals his growing obsession. Starting with practical concerns "morestodoatharvesttime""more's to do at harvest-time", it spirals into disturbing fixation on her physical features.

Key insight: The nature imagery ironically shows she's more at peace with animals than humans - they represent the freedom she's lost.

That final stanza where he obsesses over "the brown of her" whilst she sleeps alone upstairs? Absolutely chilling. The enjambment shows his thoughts spiralling out of control.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sign up to see the contentIt's free!

Access to all documents

Improve your grades

Join milions of students

By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

Porphyria's Lover by Robert Browning (Part 1)

Welcome to Victorian horror at its finest! Browning creates a dramatic monologue where the speaker's madness unfolds gradually, making us complicit in his twisted logic.

The opening pathetic fallacy sets a violent mood - the wind tears at trees "for spite" and tries to "vex the lake". This mirrors the speaker's internal turmoil perfectly.

Notice how Porphyria takes control initially - she lights the fire, removes her clothes, positions his head. Browning subverts gender roles, making her the active partner.

Key insight: The polysyndeton (repeated "and"s) creates breathless excitement as the speaker watches her every move.

That moment when he realises "Porphyria worshipped me" becomes the turning point. His narcissistic joy at being desired will soon turn deadly - the power balance is about to shift dramatically.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sign up to see the contentIt's free!

Access to all documents

Improve your grades

Join milions of students

By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

Porphyria's Lover by Robert Browning (Part 2)

The murder happens with chilling matter-of-factness. Three times he winds her hair around her throat - premeditated and deliberate, not a crime of passion.

His delusions are terrifying - claiming "No pain felt she" and seeing her eyes still "laugh" after death. The simile comparing her to "a shut bud that holds a bee" shows his twisted romantic view.

Repetition of "mine, mine" reveals his possessive nature. In death, she finally belongs completely to him - the ultimate expression of toxic ownership.

Key insight: That final line "And yet God has not said a word!" suggests even he knows this is wrong, despite his justifications.

The single stanza structure reflects the one-sided nature of their "love". Browning forces us to see how obsession masquerades as devotion - a masterclass in psychological horror.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sign up to see the contentIt's free!

Access to all documents

Improve your grades

Join milions of students

By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

Sonnet 29: 'I Think of Thee' by Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Finally, some healthy passion! Elizabeth Barrett Browning flips the script with a female speaker expressing bold sexual desire - scandalous for Victorian times.

The extended metaphor of vines and trees shows their relationship dynamic. She's the clinging vine, he's the strong tree - but she wants physical presence, not just thoughts.

Imperatives like "Renew thy presence" show her taking control of the relationship. Those nature images become increasingly sensual as her desire builds.

Key insight: The extra syllable in the final line shows how love makes her lose control - but in a joyful way.

That beautiful paradox at the end - "I do not think of thee - I am too near thee" - captures perfect union. When you're truly with someone, conscious thought disappears into pure being.

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sign up to see the contentIt's free!

Access to all documents

Improve your grades

Join milions of students

By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

How to Write Comparative Essays

Writing about poetry doesn't have to be scary! Think of yourself as a detective, uncovering how poets use language techniques to create emotional impact.

Your introduction should establish the topic, viewpoint, tone, and chosen comparison poem. Don't just summarise - dive straight into analysis that shows your understanding.

Structure paragraphs work brilliantly for comparing poems. Look at rhyme schemes, metre, stanzas - how does the poem's shape support its meaning?

Key insight: Always use the T-E-A framework: Techniques, Evidence, Analysis. This keeps your writing focused and analytical.

Remember to embed quotations smoothly within sentences rather than dropping them in awkwardly. Your job is showing how specific words create specific effects - be that language detective!

THEMES: Separation, sadness, pain, illicit love, sorrows

ary,

CLEAN COPY ANNOTATION:
Annotate the poem from memory
could implies they were

Sign up to see the contentIt's free!

Access to all documents

Improve your grades

Join milions of students

By signing up you accept Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

We thought you’d never ask...

What is the Knowunity AI companion?

Our AI Companion is a student-focused AI tool that offers more than just answers. Built on millions of Knowunity resources, it provides relevant information, personalised study plans, quizzes, and content directly in the chat, adapting to your individual learning journey.

Where can I download the Knowunity app?

You can download the app from Google Play Store and Apple App Store.

Is Knowunity really free of charge?

That's right! Enjoy free access to study content, connect with fellow students, and get instant help – all at your fingertips.

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Most popular content: Literary Analysis

Most popular content in English Literature

English - inspector calls quotes and analysis

Quotes from every main character

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10

Most popular content

English - inspector calls quotes and analysis

Quotes from every main character

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Can't find what you're looking for? Explore other subjects.

Students love us — and so will you.

4.9/5

App Store

4.8/5

Google Play

The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.

Stefan S

iOS user

This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.

Samantha Klich

Android user

Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.

Anna

iOS user

Best app on earth! no words because it’s too good

Thomas R

iOS user

Just amazing. Let's me revise 10x better, this app is a quick 10/10. I highly recommend it to anyone. I can watch and search for notes. I can save them in the subject folder. I can revise it any time when I come back. If you haven't tried this app, you're really missing out.

Basil

Android user

This app has made me feel so much more confident in my exam prep, not only through boosting my own self confidence through the features that allow you to connect with others and feel less alone, but also through the way the app itself is centred around making you feel better. It is easy to navigate, fun to use, and helpful to anyone struggling in absolutely any way.

David K

iOS user

The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!

Sudenaz Ocak

Android user

In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.

Greenlight Bonnie

Android user

very reliable app to help and grow your ideas of Maths, English and other related topics in your works. please use this app if your struggling in areas, this app is key for that. wish I'd of done a review before. and it's also free so don't worry about that.

Rohan U

Android user

I know a lot of apps use fake accounts to boost their reviews but this app deserves it all. Originally I was getting 4 in my English exams and this time I got a grade 7. I didn’t even know about this app three days until the exam and it has helped A LOT. Please actually trust me and use it as I’m sure you too will see developments.

Xander S

iOS user

THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE THE SCHOOLGPT. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮

Elisha

iOS user

This apps acc the goat. I find revision so boring but this app makes it so easy to organize it all and then you can ask the freeeee ai to test yourself so good and you can easily upload your own stuff. highly recommend as someone taking mocks now

Paul T

iOS user

The app is very easy to use and well designed. I have found everything I was looking for so far and have been able to learn a lot from the presentations! I will definitely use the app for a class assignment! And of course it also helps a lot as an inspiration.

Stefan S

iOS user

This app is really great. There are so many study notes and help [...]. My problem subject is French, for example, and the app has so many options for help. Thanks to this app, I have improved my French. I would recommend it to anyone.

Samantha Klich

Android user

Wow, I am really amazed. I just tried the app because I've seen it advertised many times and was absolutely stunned. This app is THE HELP you want for school and above all, it offers so many things, such as workouts and fact sheets, which have been VERY helpful to me personally.

Anna

iOS user

Best app on earth! no words because it’s too good

Thomas R

iOS user

Just amazing. Let's me revise 10x better, this app is a quick 10/10. I highly recommend it to anyone. I can watch and search for notes. I can save them in the subject folder. I can revise it any time when I come back. If you haven't tried this app, you're really missing out.

Basil

Android user

This app has made me feel so much more confident in my exam prep, not only through boosting my own self confidence through the features that allow you to connect with others and feel less alone, but also through the way the app itself is centred around making you feel better. It is easy to navigate, fun to use, and helpful to anyone struggling in absolutely any way.

David K

iOS user

The app's just great! All I have to do is enter the topic in the search bar and I get the response real fast. I don't have to watch 10 YouTube videos to understand something, so I'm saving my time. Highly recommended!

Sudenaz Ocak

Android user

In school I was really bad at maths but thanks to the app, I am doing better now. I am so grateful that you made the app.

Greenlight Bonnie

Android user

very reliable app to help and grow your ideas of Maths, English and other related topics in your works. please use this app if your struggling in areas, this app is key for that. wish I'd of done a review before. and it's also free so don't worry about that.

Rohan U

Android user

I know a lot of apps use fake accounts to boost their reviews but this app deserves it all. Originally I was getting 4 in my English exams and this time I got a grade 7. I didn’t even know about this app three days until the exam and it has helped A LOT. Please actually trust me and use it as I’m sure you too will see developments.

Xander S

iOS user

THE QUIZES AND FLASHCARDS ARE SO USEFUL AND I LOVE THE SCHOOLGPT. IT ALSO IS LITREALLY LIKE CHATGPT BUT SMARTER!! HELPED ME WITH MY MASCARA PROBLEMS TOO!! AS WELL AS MY REAL SUBJECTS ! DUHHH 😍😁😲🤑💗✨🎀😮

Elisha

iOS user

This apps acc the goat. I find revision so boring but this app makes it so easy to organize it all and then you can ask the freeeee ai to test yourself so good and you can easily upload your own stuff. highly recommend as someone taking mocks now

Paul T

iOS user