Export your vocabulary to Quizlet
If you study with Quizlet, you can take any wordbook (or your full vocabulary) out of SnapVerbo as a Quizlet-ready text file. SnapVerbo writes the standard tab-separated format Quizlet expects when you paste into Create → Import.
Open the export sheet
- Tap the Flashcards tab in the bottom navigation.
- In the AppBar, tap the download icon (tooltip “Export”).
The Export flashcards bottom sheet slides up.
Pick Quizlet, profile, and scope
If multiple formats are enabled, a PDF / Anki / Quizlet segmented switch appears at the top — pick Quizlet (cards-stack icon). The helper text reads:
Export as Quizlet-importable TSV. Paste into Quizlet → Create → Import.
Below the format switch, pick a profile:
- Simple — one short translation per term. Best when your wordbook is bilingual (e.g. laufen → to run) and you just want a quick deck.
- Detailed — full multi-sense definitions grouped by part of speech (e.g. compromise → n: an agreement reached by mutual concession v: to settle a dispute by mutual concession). Best when you want the back of each card to teach you the word, not just translate it.
When Detailed is selected, an extra Include word roots toggle appears. Turn it on to append a short · root: … line for entries where SnapVerbo has etymology data (premium dictionary lookups only).
Below the profile, pick a scope:
- All words — every entry across every wordbook.
- A specific wordbook — scoped to just that wordbook.
Each row shows the entry count. Tap one to start.
What happens after you tap
- SnapVerbo formats your vocabulary as TSV (
term<TAB>definition, one entry per line) and writes it as a.txtfile named likeSnapVerbo_<wordbook>_YYYYMMDD.txt. - The OS share sheet opens with the TSV content (and the file attached). The next step depends on your platform — see below.
Get it into Quizlet — Android
Quizlet appears in the Android share sheet, but tapping it lands you on Quizlet’s Transform screen (the AI flashcard maker), not the structured Import screen. Two paths from there:
- Recommended — clipboard path: in the share sheet, tap Copy (don’t tap Quizlet). Open the Quizlet app → Create (➕) → Import → paste. You’ll get a clean structured import where each TSV row becomes one card.
- Quick path: tap Quizlet in the share sheet. The TSV content lands in Transform’s text area. Long-press → Select all → Copy → tap back → Create → Import → paste.
Either way the final keystroke is paste into Quizlet’s Import field.
Get it into Quizlet — iOS
Quizlet for iOS doesn’t currently register as a share-sheet target for plain-text files, so it usually won’t appear in the iOS share sheet. The reliable workflow is the clipboard path:
- In the share sheet, tap Copy (top right of the row).
- Open Quizlet → Create (➕) → Import.
- Paste. Each TSV row becomes one card.
The same .txt file is also attached to the share sheet, so you can save it to Files, AirDrop it to a Mac, or email it to yourself if you’d rather work with the file directly.
What you get on each card
Simple profile:
- Term — your saved word or phrase.
- Definition — your translation. For monolingual entries (e.g. an English word looked up in English) where there’s no real translation, SnapVerbo automatically falls back to the dictionary definition.
Detailed profile:
- Term — your saved word or phrase.
- Definition — multi-sense definitions, grouped by part of speech, separated by a double space. If you turned on Include word roots, a short · root: … line is appended when the entry has etymology data and fits within Quizlet’s cell budget.
What carries over, and what doesn’t
Carried over:
- Source word/phrase as the term
- Best available translation/definition (per profile)
- Word roots (Detailed + toggle on, when present)
Not carried over:
- Source images — Quizlet’s Import feature is text-only. Use PDF export if you want images.
- Tags & wordbook membership — pasted decks live as flat Quizlet sets. The set name will be the wordbook you exported.
- SRS review history — Quizlet has its own scheduler.
- Personal notes — they aren’t included in the term/definition format.
When Quizlet export costs credits
This export is currently free on all tiers — there’s no credits dialog before the share sheet opens.
Tips
- Re-export anytime. Add new words to a wordbook and re-export — Quizlet’s Import will create a new set; you can also paste into an existing set’s edit screen if you’d rather add to it.
- Detailed → simple-feeling cards. If Detailed feels too dense for the front-back rhythm, switch to Simple — the term/translation format is closer to traditional Quizlet decks.
- Keep an offline backup. The same
.txtfile works as a portable backup of your wordbook in plain text — open it in any editor.