Oompf app preview for articulation practice

Articulation and vocabulary

Become More Articulate Without Sounding Fake

Practice turning half-formed thoughts into clear sentences, sharper word choices, and answers that sound like you on your best day.

Who this is for

For people who know what they mean, then hear it come out as “stuff,” “thing,” and a sentence that needs a rescue team.

Oompf gives you private reps for finding the word, shaping the point, and saying it cleanly under a little pressure.

Your thoughts are clear in your head, but messy out loud.

You reach for filler words while your vocabulary catches up.

You want to sound precise, polished, and still natural.

How Oompf trains it

Short private reps, specific feedback, and no audience required.

Word Access Reps

Answer prompts that force you to swap vague words for specific ones before the moment passes.

Seven-Word Headline

Compress your thought into one clean sentence, then earn the detail after the point lands.

Explain It Twice

Say the same idea casually, then again with sharper vocabulary and cleaner structure.

Feedback signals

Oompf shows what actually happened when you spoke.

Structure

Can people follow the route?

Conciseness

Did the point arrive before the detour?

Vocabulary

Are your words specific enough to carry the thought?

Practice scenarios

Use it before the conversation is live.

explaining an opinion without rambling

answering “what do you do?” without sounding generic

making a complex idea feel simple

speaking up in meetings with cleaner phrasing

Common questions

Can Oompf help me improve vocabulary?

Yes. Oompf helps you practice retrieving better words while speaking, which is different from memorizing vocabulary lists. The goal is usable spoken precision.

Will this make me sound overly polished?

No. The app is built around your real voice. The aim is clearer and more specific, not stiff or rehearsed.

Start with one rep

You do not need a new personality. You need cleaner reps.

Practice privately, get the read on your speaking patterns, and build the version of your voice that shows up when it counts.