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Updated Mar 17, 2026
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Cells are the fundamental building blocks of all living organisms,... Show more









Ever wondered what makes something "alive"? It all comes down to cells! These microscopic structures are the foundation of all living organisms, from bacteria to humans.
The cell theory has three key principles you need to remember: all living things are made of one or more cells, cells are the basic structural and functional units of life, and all cells come from pre-existing cells. This theory is fundamental to understanding biology.
There are two main types of cells: prokaryotic cells (like bacteria) which are simpler and lack membrane-bound organelles, and eukaryotic cells (like those in plants and animals) which are more complex and contain a true nucleus and various organelles.
Quick Tip: Think of cells as tiny factories, with each organelle being a department that performs a specific job. Together, they keep the "business" of life running smoothly!

Prokaryotic cells are like the original "no-frills" version of cells - simple but incredibly effective. These ancient cells have survived billions of years with their basic design.
The genetic material in prokaryotes isn't housed in a nucleus but instead floats in a region called the nucleoid. They have smaller ribosomes (70S) scattered throughout their cytoplasm that manufacture proteins. The plasma membrane surrounds the cell contents and controls what enters and exits.
Most prokaryotes have a cell wall made of peptidoglycan that provides structural support and protection. Many also have additional features like a sticky capsule for protection and adhesion, flagella for movement, and pili for attachment and DNA transfer between cells.
Remember This: The key defining feature of prokaryotic cells is the absence of membrane-bound organelles - no nucleus, no mitochondria, no chloroplasts!

Eukaryotic cells are like high-tech upgrades of prokaryotes - larger, more complex, and with specialized compartments for different functions. These cells make up your body and those of all plants, animals, and fungi.
The hallmark of eukaryotic cells is the nucleus - a control center surrounded by a double membrane that houses DNA organized into chromosomes. The nuclear envelope has pores that regulate what moves in and out. Inside the nucleus is the nucleolus, where ribosomes are manufactured.
Animal cell organelles include mitochondria (the powerhouse that produces ATP through aerobic respiration), ribosomes (protein factories), and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) which processes proteins and lipids. The Golgi apparatus acts like the cell's post office, packaging and directing molecules to their destinations.
Exam Alert: Remember that eukaryotic cells are typically 10-100 times larger than prokaryotic cells and contain many more components - this complexity allows for the specialization needed in multicellular organisms!

Animal cells contain a fascinating array of specialized structures that work together like a well-oiled machine. Understanding their functions helps explain how our bodies operate at the cellular level.
The mitochondria have a distinctive double membrane structure with the inner membrane folded into cristae to increase surface area for ATP production. Ribosomes can be free-floating in the cytoplasm or attached to the rough ER, determining whether the proteins they produce stay within the cell or are exported. The endoplasmic reticulum comes in two types: rough ER (studded with ribosomes) processes proteins, while smooth ER handles lipids and steroids.
Other crucial organelles include the Golgi apparatus, which modifies and packages molecules, lysosomes containing digestive enzymes that break down cellular waste and invaders, and the cytoskeleton, a network of protein fibers that provides structure and facilitates movement within the cell.
Study Tip: When learning about organelles, associate each with a real-world equivalent - the nucleus is like a manager, mitochondria are power plants, the ER is a manufacturing facility, and the Golgi apparatus is a packaging and shipping center!

Plant cells share many features with animal cells but have evolved unique structures that enable them to harness sunlight and maintain rigidity. These specialized components explain how plants can stand tall and produce their own food.
The cell wall, composed primarily of cellulose, surrounds the cell membrane and provides structural support. This rigid layer prevents the cell from bursting when it absorbs water and helps plants maintain their shape. Unlike the bacterial cell wall, plant cell walls are made of cellulose rather than peptidoglycan.
The large central vacuole can occupy up to 80% of a plant cell's volume and stores water, nutrients, and waste products. It plays a crucial role in maintaining turgor pressure - the outward pressure against the cell wall that gives plants their rigidity.
Perhaps most importantly, plant cells contain chloroplasts - remarkable organelles with double membranes housing stacks of thylakoids called grana. These structures contain the green pigment chlorophyll, which captures sunlight and converts it into chemical energy during photosynthesis.
Connection Point: Notice how plant cell specializations reflect their lifestyle - they need to stand upright (cell wall), store resources (large vacuole), and make their own food (chloroplasts)!

Understanding the differences between cell types is essential for biology exams and builds your foundation for more advanced concepts. Being able to compare and contrast them shows a deeper understanding of cell biology.
Prokaryotic cells are smaller and simpler, with a single circular chromosome in the nucleoid region rather than a true nucleus. They lack membrane-bound organelles but do have smaller ribosomes (70S) and a peptidoglycan cell wall. These ancient cells represent the earliest forms of life on Earth.
Eukaryotic animal cells are larger with multiple linear chromosomes housed in a true nucleus. They contain various membrane-bound organelles including mitochondria, but lack cell walls, chloroplasts, and large central vacuoles. Instead, they have small, temporary vacuoles and specialized lysosomes for digestion.
Eukaryotic plant cells combine features of animal cells with their own specializations. They have a nucleus and mitochondria like animal cells, but also contain chloroplasts for photosynthesis, a cellulose cell wall for support, and a large central vacuole for maintaining turgor pressure.
Exam Focus: Remember that all cells have a plasma membrane, cytoplasm, and genetic material, but the packaging and additional structures differ significantly between types!

Avoid these common pitfalls when studying cell biology to secure those top marks in your exams. Being aware of typical mistakes can help you focus your revision effectively.
Don't confuse the plasma membrane (present in ALL cells and controlling substance passage) with the cell wall (only in plants, fungi, and bacteria for structural support). Another common error is forgetting that plant cells have mitochondria in addition to chloroplasts - plants need both photosynthesis to make glucose AND respiration to release energy from it.
The endosymbiotic theory is worth mentioning in higher-level answers. It proposes that mitochondria and chloroplasts were once free-living prokaryotes that were engulfed by early eukaryotic cells. Evidence includes their own circular DNA, 70S ribosomes, and ability to self-replicate - all prokaryotic characteristics.
When describing organelle functions, be specific. Instead of saying "the Golgi packages things," write that "the Golgi apparatus modifies, sorts, and packages proteins and lipids into vesicles for transport." For cell diagrams, use clear single lines, horizontal labels, and avoid shading.
Confidence Booster: If you can explain why cellular structures evolved as they did, you're thinking like a biologist! Understanding the relationship between structure and function is key to mastering cell biology.

Let's pull everything together into a concise overview that highlights the most essential points you need to remember about cells. These are your go-to facts for quick revision before an exam.
The cell theory establishes that all living things are made of cells, cells are the basic units of life, and all cells come from pre-existing cells. The two main cell types are prokaryotic (simple, no nucleus) and eukaryotic (complex, true nucleus).
Prokaryotes like bacteria have a nucleoid region with a circular chromosome, 70S ribosomes, and a peptidoglycan cell wall, but no membrane-bound organelles. Eukaryotes include plants, animals, fungi, and protists, all with a nucleus containing DNA, mitochondria for energy production, 80S ribosomes for protein synthesis, and various specialized organelles like the ER and Golgi apparatus.
Plant cells have unique structures including a cellulose cell wall for support, a large central vacuole for maintaining turgor pressure, and chloroplasts for photosynthesis. Animal cells lack these plant-specific features but have lysosomes for intracellular digestion.
Final Tip: Understanding cells is like learning a new language - once you grasp the vocabulary of organelles and their functions, you'll be able to "read" the complex processes of life at the cellular level!
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.
You can download the app from Google Play Store and Apple App Store.
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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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 Knowunity AI. 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 Knowunity AI. 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
Cells are the fundamental building blocks of all living organisms, serving as the basic units of life capable of independent replication. Understanding their structure and function is essential to biology as it explains how organisms carry out life processes. The... Show more

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Ever wondered what makes something "alive"? It all comes down to cells! These microscopic structures are the foundation of all living organisms, from bacteria to humans.
The cell theory has three key principles you need to remember: all living things are made of one or more cells, cells are the basic structural and functional units of life, and all cells come from pre-existing cells. This theory is fundamental to understanding biology.
There are two main types of cells: prokaryotic cells (like bacteria) which are simpler and lack membrane-bound organelles, and eukaryotic cells (like those in plants and animals) which are more complex and contain a true nucleus and various organelles.
Quick Tip: Think of cells as tiny factories, with each organelle being a department that performs a specific job. Together, they keep the "business" of life running smoothly!

Access to all documents
Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Prokaryotic cells are like the original "no-frills" version of cells - simple but incredibly effective. These ancient cells have survived billions of years with their basic design.
The genetic material in prokaryotes isn't housed in a nucleus but instead floats in a region called the nucleoid. They have smaller ribosomes (70S) scattered throughout their cytoplasm that manufacture proteins. The plasma membrane surrounds the cell contents and controls what enters and exits.
Most prokaryotes have a cell wall made of peptidoglycan that provides structural support and protection. Many also have additional features like a sticky capsule for protection and adhesion, flagella for movement, and pili for attachment and DNA transfer between cells.
Remember This: The key defining feature of prokaryotic cells is the absence of membrane-bound organelles - no nucleus, no mitochondria, no chloroplasts!

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Eukaryotic cells are like high-tech upgrades of prokaryotes - larger, more complex, and with specialized compartments for different functions. These cells make up your body and those of all plants, animals, and fungi.
The hallmark of eukaryotic cells is the nucleus - a control center surrounded by a double membrane that houses DNA organized into chromosomes. The nuclear envelope has pores that regulate what moves in and out. Inside the nucleus is the nucleolus, where ribosomes are manufactured.
Animal cell organelles include mitochondria (the powerhouse that produces ATP through aerobic respiration), ribosomes (protein factories), and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) which processes proteins and lipids. The Golgi apparatus acts like the cell's post office, packaging and directing molecules to their destinations.
Exam Alert: Remember that eukaryotic cells are typically 10-100 times larger than prokaryotic cells and contain many more components - this complexity allows for the specialization needed in multicellular organisms!

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Animal cells contain a fascinating array of specialized structures that work together like a well-oiled machine. Understanding their functions helps explain how our bodies operate at the cellular level.
The mitochondria have a distinctive double membrane structure with the inner membrane folded into cristae to increase surface area for ATP production. Ribosomes can be free-floating in the cytoplasm or attached to the rough ER, determining whether the proteins they produce stay within the cell or are exported. The endoplasmic reticulum comes in two types: rough ER (studded with ribosomes) processes proteins, while smooth ER handles lipids and steroids.
Other crucial organelles include the Golgi apparatus, which modifies and packages molecules, lysosomes containing digestive enzymes that break down cellular waste and invaders, and the cytoskeleton, a network of protein fibers that provides structure and facilitates movement within the cell.
Study Tip: When learning about organelles, associate each with a real-world equivalent - the nucleus is like a manager, mitochondria are power plants, the ER is a manufacturing facility, and the Golgi apparatus is a packaging and shipping center!

Access to all documents
Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Plant cells share many features with animal cells but have evolved unique structures that enable them to harness sunlight and maintain rigidity. These specialized components explain how plants can stand tall and produce their own food.
The cell wall, composed primarily of cellulose, surrounds the cell membrane and provides structural support. This rigid layer prevents the cell from bursting when it absorbs water and helps plants maintain their shape. Unlike the bacterial cell wall, plant cell walls are made of cellulose rather than peptidoglycan.
The large central vacuole can occupy up to 80% of a plant cell's volume and stores water, nutrients, and waste products. It plays a crucial role in maintaining turgor pressure - the outward pressure against the cell wall that gives plants their rigidity.
Perhaps most importantly, plant cells contain chloroplasts - remarkable organelles with double membranes housing stacks of thylakoids called grana. These structures contain the green pigment chlorophyll, which captures sunlight and converts it into chemical energy during photosynthesis.
Connection Point: Notice how plant cell specializations reflect their lifestyle - they need to stand upright (cell wall), store resources (large vacuole), and make their own food (chloroplasts)!

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Understanding the differences between cell types is essential for biology exams and builds your foundation for more advanced concepts. Being able to compare and contrast them shows a deeper understanding of cell biology.
Prokaryotic cells are smaller and simpler, with a single circular chromosome in the nucleoid region rather than a true nucleus. They lack membrane-bound organelles but do have smaller ribosomes (70S) and a peptidoglycan cell wall. These ancient cells represent the earliest forms of life on Earth.
Eukaryotic animal cells are larger with multiple linear chromosomes housed in a true nucleus. They contain various membrane-bound organelles including mitochondria, but lack cell walls, chloroplasts, and large central vacuoles. Instead, they have small, temporary vacuoles and specialized lysosomes for digestion.
Eukaryotic plant cells combine features of animal cells with their own specializations. They have a nucleus and mitochondria like animal cells, but also contain chloroplasts for photosynthesis, a cellulose cell wall for support, and a large central vacuole for maintaining turgor pressure.
Exam Focus: Remember that all cells have a plasma membrane, cytoplasm, and genetic material, but the packaging and additional structures differ significantly between types!

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Improve your grades
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Avoid these common pitfalls when studying cell biology to secure those top marks in your exams. Being aware of typical mistakes can help you focus your revision effectively.
Don't confuse the plasma membrane (present in ALL cells and controlling substance passage) with the cell wall (only in plants, fungi, and bacteria for structural support). Another common error is forgetting that plant cells have mitochondria in addition to chloroplasts - plants need both photosynthesis to make glucose AND respiration to release energy from it.
The endosymbiotic theory is worth mentioning in higher-level answers. It proposes that mitochondria and chloroplasts were once free-living prokaryotes that were engulfed by early eukaryotic cells. Evidence includes their own circular DNA, 70S ribosomes, and ability to self-replicate - all prokaryotic characteristics.
When describing organelle functions, be specific. Instead of saying "the Golgi packages things," write that "the Golgi apparatus modifies, sorts, and packages proteins and lipids into vesicles for transport." For cell diagrams, use clear single lines, horizontal labels, and avoid shading.
Confidence Booster: If you can explain why cellular structures evolved as they did, you're thinking like a biologist! Understanding the relationship between structure and function is key to mastering cell biology.

Access to all documents
Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Let's pull everything together into a concise overview that highlights the most essential points you need to remember about cells. These are your go-to facts for quick revision before an exam.
The cell theory establishes that all living things are made of cells, cells are the basic units of life, and all cells come from pre-existing cells. The two main cell types are prokaryotic (simple, no nucleus) and eukaryotic (complex, true nucleus).
Prokaryotes like bacteria have a nucleoid region with a circular chromosome, 70S ribosomes, and a peptidoglycan cell wall, but no membrane-bound organelles. Eukaryotes include plants, animals, fungi, and protists, all with a nucleus containing DNA, mitochondria for energy production, 80S ribosomes for protein synthesis, and various specialized organelles like the ER and Golgi apparatus.
Plant cells have unique structures including a cellulose cell wall for support, a large central vacuole for maintaining turgor pressure, and chloroplasts for photosynthesis. Animal cells lack these plant-specific features but have lysosomes for intracellular digestion.
Final Tip: Understanding cells is like learning a new language - once you grasp the vocabulary of organelles and their functions, you'll be able to "read" the complex processes of life at the cellular level!
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.
You can download the app from Google Play Store and Apple App Store.
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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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 Knowunity AI. 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 Knowunity AI. 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