Poll
Should dictionaries still exist as physical books, or are apps killing real learning?
As digital natives increasingly rely on smartphone dictionaries, the 2026 debate intensifies over whether physical books still offer unique cognitive benefits or if apps are merely convenient crutches. Cast your vote to weigh in on this generational shift in learning.
Options
Live results
Vote first to see results.
Emoji reactions
No reaction selected.
Comments
Please sign in to comment.
Share / embed
Quick info
- How do I vote in the "Should dictionaries still exist as physical books, or are apps killing real learning?" poll?
- Select one option on the page to cast your vote; results update with community votes in real time.
- Can I view results without voting?
- Yes. Use the "I don't know / Show results" option, or access the results summary after voting.
Similar polls
Up to 10 suggestions from the same category and shared tags, sorted by vote count; this poll is excluded.
From the same category
Books, Literature and Dictionary CultureThe same site category as this poll.
- Is swapping paperback dictionaries for apps killing our love for words or saving it?
- Is buying books for the shelf and never reading them a harmless hobby, or pure pretension?
- Are people who only read fantasy and romance less "serious" readers than literary fiction snobs?
- Would you switch from traditional dictionaries to a fully online thesaurus like OneLook?
- Does owning a massive book collection actually mean you read, or just that you decorate well?
- Are book snobs the main reason people stop reading for fun?
- Is the whole “physical book vs. ebook” debate just about being cheap vs. showing off?
- How do you decide if a literary prize winner is actually worth your time?
- Has AI changed how you decide which books to keep or declutter?
- Are cheap paperback classics killing literary culture, or just making it more accessible?
TrendVersus.com · live data