
Sak-an-a. Sounds like “sock on a”, Now imagine a fish with a footy sock on its tail. Sock on a fish.
Nemasis. The mnemonics assistant.
A mnemonic flashcard app for language learners. Turn new words into strange images and silly stories that you couldn't forget if you tried.
Instead of staring at word pairs until they blur, you create a vivid cue: a sock on a fish, boots on a pig, or an apple wearing panties.

Sak-an-a. Sounds like “sock on a”, Now imagine a fish with a footy sock on its tail. Sock on a fish.
Nemasis combines the useful parts of flashcards with the oldest memory trick in the book: make it vivid, personal, and strange enough to remember later.
Mnemonics is a proven memory technique. Nemasis creates one for every word you learn.
People often remember pictures more readily than matching words because images can be more distinct and easier to re-find in memory.
Source: Stenberg, 2006Pairing a verbal cue with an image can create more than one route back to the same idea.
Source: Paivio, 1991Material you generate yourself is often remembered better than material you only read. Nemasis makes you the author; AI is the illustrator.
Source: Slamecka & Graf, 1978Plain word pairs on the left. Nemasis image cues on the right. No tapping required.

Can you picture a football sock on the tail of a fish?

Those bright yellow rain boots on a pink pig make Buta an easy one to remember.

Your cat has a comically long neck, maybe with a neck-tie on its neck-o?

Yep. It's an apple and it's wearing panties. Unforgettable.

After you've had a few, Wa' wan may sound like white wine. Now all you need is a bear.

Imagine a rabbit caught in the rain. You soggy little rabbit! Usagi!

Does it sound close enough to heavy to you? Here's a snake on a scale to remind you.
The app flow is intentionally simple: organise, write, create, practice. The weirdness lives in the card, not the interface.
Organize by language, topic, lesson, or your always-ready difficult words list.
Add the target and meaning, then think of a sound, rhyme, scene, or joke.
Describe the scene. The more specific and ridiculous, the better.
Practice image, target, and meaning so each side can lead you back.
Gigi
I found Gigi in a gutter in Penang - tiny, weak, and somehow still looking magnificently unimpressed. Rescuing her was an easy choice. Her name wasn't a choice at all.
I was learning Bahasa Malay at the time. Gigi means teeth in Malay, and one look at that glorious underbite made the word impossible to forget.
That was the spark: the right image can make a word feel like a story instead of a chore. Nemasis grew from that moment.
Start with 30 free images. No credit card. Upgrade when you need more image generation for bigger decks.
Nemasis is designed as a quiet study tool, not a social network. Your study material stays focused in your own deck space.
Join the beta to shape image prompts, deck flow, and the recall experience before store launch.
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