AppRecs review analysis
AppRecs rating 3.7. Trustworthiness 65 out of 100. Review manipulation risk 23 out of 100. Based on a review sample analyzed.
★★★☆☆
3.7
AppRecs Rating
Ratings breakdown
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1 star
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What to know
✓
Low review manipulation risk
23% review manipulation risk
About Learn About Minerals
The app will help you learn the correct pronunciation of minerals using English language. Following are the main features of this app
1. Supports pronouncing Minerals in English Language
2. Uses Text to Speech Engine for Audio Functionality
3. Quizzes
4. Study Mode
5. Bookmarking Study Flashcards and Quiz Questions
6. Progress Indicators for Every Chapter
7. Visualization for Overall Progress
Currently following commonly used minerals are supported
Antimony
Asbestos
Barium
Bauxite
Beryllium
Chromite
Cobalt
Columbite-tantalite
Copper
Feldspar
Fluorite
Gold
Gypsum
Halite
Iron Ore
Lead
Lithium
Manganese
Mica
Molybdenum
Nickel
Perlite
Platinum
Phosphate
Potash
Pyrite
Quartz
Rare Earth Elements
Silica
Silver
Sodium Carbonate
Stibnite
Sulfur
Tantalum
Titanium
Tungsten
Uranium
Vanadium
Zeolite
Zinc
Learn About Minerals Screenshots
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Reviews for Learn About Minerals
Look At Me Mama
Pictures?
Useless exercise in memorizing photos, many of which aren’t common or even naturally occurring. Chemical formulas would have been more useful. I wasted my money. Can I get it back? Also, bauxite isn’t mineral but a combination of minerals. Beryllium, antimony, lithium, tungsten, vanadium, and barium only occur in combination with other elements in nature. Titanium can only be found in nature as an oxide. Mica isn’t a mineral but a group of minerals. Perlite isn’t a mineral but amorphous volcanic glass. Potash isn’t a mineral, neither is rare earth elements, or silica, or sodium carbonate. This isn’t a collection of minerals so much as a collection of elements. The lithium photo is of ingots. I can see many of the pictures come from Wikipedia.