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Updated Mar 19, 2026
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Your body is like a well-coordinated team where different systems... Show more










Think of your body as the ultimate teamwork example - every system depends on others to function properly. The organisation goes from cells (the basic units) → tissues (groups of similar cells) → organs (different tissues working together) → organ systems (organs with a common goal).
Homeostasis is the star concept here - it's how your body maintains a stable internal environment despite what's happening outside. Whether you're sweating in PE class or shivering in winter, your body is constantly adjusting to keep everything balanced.
The key insight? No system works alone. Your digestive system needs your circulatory system to transport nutrients, which needs your respiratory system for oxygen. It's all interconnected, and that's exactly what examiners love to test you on.
Exam Tip: Always think about how systems work together, not just what each one does individually. This interconnection is a favourite topic for longer exam questions.

Your digestive system is basically a sophisticated food processor that turns your lunch into molecules small enough to enter your bloodstream. The four main stages are ingestion (eating), digestion (breaking down), absorption (taking in nutrients), and egestion (removing waste).
Mechanical digestion happens when you chew or when your stomach churns food around. Chemical digestion uses enzymes like amylase in your saliva to break down starch, or pepsin in your stomach to tackle proteins. Your stomach also produces hydrochloric acid - strong enough to kill bacteria and create the perfect pH for pepsin to work.
The small intestine is where the magic happens - most digestion and ALL absorption occurs here. Those tiny finger-like projections called villi massively increase surface area for absorption. Meanwhile, your liver produces bile to break up fats , and your pancreas churns out enzymes for all the major food groups.
Don't confuse egestion (removing undigested food as faeces) with excretion (removing metabolic waste like urea). This mix-up costs students marks every year!

The diagram shows how food travels through your body in a logical sequence. From your mouth where mechanical digestion begins with chewing and chemical digestion starts with salivary amylase, food moves down the oesophagus via wave-like muscle contractions called peristalsis.
Your stomach acts like a muscular bag that churns food while secreting hydrochloric acid and pepsin. The real action happens in the small intestine, where bile from the liver and enzymes from the pancreas complete the breakdown process.
The large intestine has one main job - absorbing water from whatever's left over. This is why you get dehydrated when you have diarrhea - your large intestine isn't doing its water-absorption job properly.
Memory Trick: Remember that the liver produces bile (which emulsifies fats) while the pancreas produces the three main enzymes: amylase, protease, and lipase.

Your circulatory system is the body's transport network, moving oxygen, nutrients, hormones, and waste products around via blood. The heart is a muscular pump with four chambers - two atria (top chambers) and two ventricles (bottom chambers). The right side handles deoxygenated blood to the lungs, while the left side pumps oxygenated blood to the rest of your body.
Arteries carry blood away from the heart and have thick, muscular walls to handle high pressure. Veins bring blood back to the heart, have thinner walls, and contain valves to prevent backflow. Capillaries are where the actual exchange happens - they're only one cell thick to allow easy diffusion.
Your blood contains plasma (the liquid bit that transports everything), red blood cells (packed with haemoglobin to carry oxygen), white blood cells (your immune system's soldiers), and platelets (for blood clotting when you get cut).
This double circulatory system is incredibly efficient - blood goes through the heart twice in each complete circuit, ensuring high pressure delivery of oxygenated blood to your tissues.

Gas exchange is the respiratory system's main job - getting oxygen in and carbon dioxide out. Air travels through your trachea (windpipe), which splits into two bronchi (one for each lung), then branches into smaller bronchioles, finally reaching tiny air sacs called alveoli.
Alveoli are perfectly designed for gas exchange - they have enormous surface area, walls just one cell thick, and rich blood supply. This allows oxygen and carbon dioxide to diffuse efficiently between air and blood.
Breathing involves your diaphragm and intercostal muscles working together. When you breathe in, your diaphragm contracts and moves down while your rib cage moves up and out, increasing chest volume and drawing air in. Breathing out is basically the reverse process.
Common Mistake: Don't confuse breathing (moving air in and out) with respiration (the chemical process that releases energy in cells). They're related but different processes.

The excretory system filters waste from your blood and regulates water content. Your kidneys contain millions of nephrons (filtering units) that use ultrafiltration to force small molecules out of blood, then selective reabsorption to reclaim useful substances like glucose and most water back into your bloodstream.
The nervous system and endocrine system are your body's control networks, but they work very differently. Nervous signals are electrical impulses that travel along neurons - super fast but short-lived, perfect for precise responses like reflexes. Hormones from the endocrine system travel through blood - slower but longer-lasting, ideal for widespread effects.
A reflex arc demonstrates nervous system efficiency: stimulus → receptor → sensory neuron → relay neuron → motor neuron → effector → response. No conscious thought needed! Meanwhile, hormones like insulin from the pancreas control blood glucose, and adrenaline from adrenal glands prepares you for "fight or flight" situations.
Negative feedback maintains homeostasis - when something increases, the body responds to decrease it, and vice versa. Think blood sugar regulation or temperature control.

The table clearly shows why your body needs both control systems. Nervous system signals are electrical impulses along neurons - lightning fast (milliseconds) but brief, perfect for precise targeting like moving a specific muscle. Endocrine system uses chemical messengers (hormones) in blood - slower (seconds to minutes) but longer-lasting with widespread effects.
Key endocrine glands include the pancreas (insulin and glucagon for blood glucose), adrenal glands (adrenaline for stress response), and pituitary gland (the "master gland" controlling other glands). These work alongside your brain and spinal cord (central nervous system) and the nerves connecting everywhere else (peripheral nervous system).
Understanding the reflex arc is crucial - it shows how your nervous system can respond without conscious thought. When you touch something hot, sensory neurons detect the stimulus, relay neurons in your spinal cord process it, and motor neurons trigger muscle contraction to pull your hand away.
Exam Gold: Be able to compare nervous and endocrine systems using the table format - it's a classic exam question that students often mess up.

Exercise perfectly demonstrates how all systems coordinate. When you decide to run, your nervous system sends signals to muscles while telling your brainstem to increase heart and breathing rates. Your respiratory system responds by increasing breathing rate and depth to supply more oxygen and remove carbon dioxide faster.
Your circulatory system kicks into high gear - heart rate increases, blood vessels to muscles dilate (widen) for increased blood flow. The endocrine system joins in as adrenal glands release adrenaline, further boosting heart and breathing rates while triggering glucose release from the liver for energy.
Meanwhile, your excretory system helps with temperature regulation through sweating, though this means losing water and salts that kidneys must later rebalance through osmoregulation. This shows that homeostasis involves constant communication between systems.
Negative feedback mechanisms ensure everything stays balanced - when carbon dioxide builds up, breathing increases to remove it; when body temperature rises, sweating increases to cool you down.

Master these crucial distinctions that trip up students: Digestion breaks down food, egestion removes undigested waste (faeces), and excretion removes metabolic waste like urea and carbon dioxide. Don't mix them up - it's a classic examiner trick!
Remember that homeostasis links everything together, especially through negative feedback mechanisms. When blood glucose rises, insulin is released to lower it; when it falls, insulin release stops. Same principle applies to temperature regulation and water balance.
For exam success, memorise key diagrams: the heart's four chambers, a nephron's structure, and a complete reflex arc. These appear frequently and are easy marks if you know them properly. Also remember: Arteries carry blood Away from the heart, Veins have Valves.
The bottom line? All systems are interdependent - they work together to maintain homeostasis and keep you alive. This interconnection concept is what separates top students from average ones in exams.
Final Tip: Practice explaining how systems work together in different scenarios (exercise, eating, stress). This deeper understanding will help you tackle any question the examiners throw at you.
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
Your body is like a well-coordinated team where different systems work together to keep you alive and healthy. Understanding how these systems connect and communicate is crucial for your Leaving Cert Biology - and it's actually pretty fascinating once you... Show more

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Think of your body as the ultimate teamwork example - every system depends on others to function properly. The organisation goes from cells (the basic units) → tissues (groups of similar cells) → organs (different tissues working together) → organ systems (organs with a common goal).
Homeostasis is the star concept here - it's how your body maintains a stable internal environment despite what's happening outside. Whether you're sweating in PE class or shivering in winter, your body is constantly adjusting to keep everything balanced.
The key insight? No system works alone. Your digestive system needs your circulatory system to transport nutrients, which needs your respiratory system for oxygen. It's all interconnected, and that's exactly what examiners love to test you on.
Exam Tip: Always think about how systems work together, not just what each one does individually. This interconnection is a favourite topic for longer exam questions.

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Your digestive system is basically a sophisticated food processor that turns your lunch into molecules small enough to enter your bloodstream. The four main stages are ingestion (eating), digestion (breaking down), absorption (taking in nutrients), and egestion (removing waste).
Mechanical digestion happens when you chew or when your stomach churns food around. Chemical digestion uses enzymes like amylase in your saliva to break down starch, or pepsin in your stomach to tackle proteins. Your stomach also produces hydrochloric acid - strong enough to kill bacteria and create the perfect pH for pepsin to work.
The small intestine is where the magic happens - most digestion and ALL absorption occurs here. Those tiny finger-like projections called villi massively increase surface area for absorption. Meanwhile, your liver produces bile to break up fats , and your pancreas churns out enzymes for all the major food groups.
Don't confuse egestion (removing undigested food as faeces) with excretion (removing metabolic waste like urea). This mix-up costs students marks every year!

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
The diagram shows how food travels through your body in a logical sequence. From your mouth where mechanical digestion begins with chewing and chemical digestion starts with salivary amylase, food moves down the oesophagus via wave-like muscle contractions called peristalsis.
Your stomach acts like a muscular bag that churns food while secreting hydrochloric acid and pepsin. The real action happens in the small intestine, where bile from the liver and enzymes from the pancreas complete the breakdown process.
The large intestine has one main job - absorbing water from whatever's left over. This is why you get dehydrated when you have diarrhea - your large intestine isn't doing its water-absorption job properly.
Memory Trick: Remember that the liver produces bile (which emulsifies fats) while the pancreas produces the three main enzymes: amylase, protease, and lipase.

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Your circulatory system is the body's transport network, moving oxygen, nutrients, hormones, and waste products around via blood. The heart is a muscular pump with four chambers - two atria (top chambers) and two ventricles (bottom chambers). The right side handles deoxygenated blood to the lungs, while the left side pumps oxygenated blood to the rest of your body.
Arteries carry blood away from the heart and have thick, muscular walls to handle high pressure. Veins bring blood back to the heart, have thinner walls, and contain valves to prevent backflow. Capillaries are where the actual exchange happens - they're only one cell thick to allow easy diffusion.
Your blood contains plasma (the liquid bit that transports everything), red blood cells (packed with haemoglobin to carry oxygen), white blood cells (your immune system's soldiers), and platelets (for blood clotting when you get cut).
This double circulatory system is incredibly efficient - blood goes through the heart twice in each complete circuit, ensuring high pressure delivery of oxygenated blood to your tissues.

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Join milions of students
Gas exchange is the respiratory system's main job - getting oxygen in and carbon dioxide out. Air travels through your trachea (windpipe), which splits into two bronchi (one for each lung), then branches into smaller bronchioles, finally reaching tiny air sacs called alveoli.
Alveoli are perfectly designed for gas exchange - they have enormous surface area, walls just one cell thick, and rich blood supply. This allows oxygen and carbon dioxide to diffuse efficiently between air and blood.
Breathing involves your diaphragm and intercostal muscles working together. When you breathe in, your diaphragm contracts and moves down while your rib cage moves up and out, increasing chest volume and drawing air in. Breathing out is basically the reverse process.
Common Mistake: Don't confuse breathing (moving air in and out) with respiration (the chemical process that releases energy in cells). They're related but different processes.

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The excretory system filters waste from your blood and regulates water content. Your kidneys contain millions of nephrons (filtering units) that use ultrafiltration to force small molecules out of blood, then selective reabsorption to reclaim useful substances like glucose and most water back into your bloodstream.
The nervous system and endocrine system are your body's control networks, but they work very differently. Nervous signals are electrical impulses that travel along neurons - super fast but short-lived, perfect for precise responses like reflexes. Hormones from the endocrine system travel through blood - slower but longer-lasting, ideal for widespread effects.
A reflex arc demonstrates nervous system efficiency: stimulus → receptor → sensory neuron → relay neuron → motor neuron → effector → response. No conscious thought needed! Meanwhile, hormones like insulin from the pancreas control blood glucose, and adrenaline from adrenal glands prepares you for "fight or flight" situations.
Negative feedback maintains homeostasis - when something increases, the body responds to decrease it, and vice versa. Think blood sugar regulation or temperature control.

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
The table clearly shows why your body needs both control systems. Nervous system signals are electrical impulses along neurons - lightning fast (milliseconds) but brief, perfect for precise targeting like moving a specific muscle. Endocrine system uses chemical messengers (hormones) in blood - slower (seconds to minutes) but longer-lasting with widespread effects.
Key endocrine glands include the pancreas (insulin and glucagon for blood glucose), adrenal glands (adrenaline for stress response), and pituitary gland (the "master gland" controlling other glands). These work alongside your brain and spinal cord (central nervous system) and the nerves connecting everywhere else (peripheral nervous system).
Understanding the reflex arc is crucial - it shows how your nervous system can respond without conscious thought. When you touch something hot, sensory neurons detect the stimulus, relay neurons in your spinal cord process it, and motor neurons trigger muscle contraction to pull your hand away.
Exam Gold: Be able to compare nervous and endocrine systems using the table format - it's a classic exam question that students often mess up.

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Join milions of students
Exercise perfectly demonstrates how all systems coordinate. When you decide to run, your nervous system sends signals to muscles while telling your brainstem to increase heart and breathing rates. Your respiratory system responds by increasing breathing rate and depth to supply more oxygen and remove carbon dioxide faster.
Your circulatory system kicks into high gear - heart rate increases, blood vessels to muscles dilate (widen) for increased blood flow. The endocrine system joins in as adrenal glands release adrenaline, further boosting heart and breathing rates while triggering glucose release from the liver for energy.
Meanwhile, your excretory system helps with temperature regulation through sweating, though this means losing water and salts that kidneys must later rebalance through osmoregulation. This shows that homeostasis involves constant communication between systems.
Negative feedback mechanisms ensure everything stays balanced - when carbon dioxide builds up, breathing increases to remove it; when body temperature rises, sweating increases to cool you down.

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Improve your grades
Join milions of students
Master these crucial distinctions that trip up students: Digestion breaks down food, egestion removes undigested waste (faeces), and excretion removes metabolic waste like urea and carbon dioxide. Don't mix them up - it's a classic examiner trick!
Remember that homeostasis links everything together, especially through negative feedback mechanisms. When blood glucose rises, insulin is released to lower it; when it falls, insulin release stops. Same principle applies to temperature regulation and water balance.
For exam success, memorise key diagrams: the heart's four chambers, a nephron's structure, and a complete reflex arc. These appear frequently and are easy marks if you know them properly. Also remember: Arteries carry blood Away from the heart, Veins have Valves.
The bottom line? All systems are interdependent - they work together to maintain homeostasis and keep you alive. This interconnection concept is what separates top students from average ones in exams.
Final Tip: Practice explaining how systems work together in different scenarios (exercise, eating, stress). This deeper understanding will help you tackle any question the examiners throw at you.
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