Common N-Grams (mixed stream)
2-grams · 3-grams · 4-grams
Fast typing is really fast n-gram typing. The same handful of letter chunks — "th", "ing", "tion" — appear everywhere in English, so drilling them as one continuous stream builds the muscle memory that makes everyday text feel automatic.
Why n-grams
English isn’t random letters; it’s patterns. The bigrams TH and IN, the trigram ING, the 4-gram TION together account for a huge fraction of everything you type. Practicing them in isolation trains your fingers to flow through the common chunks without thinking word-by-word.
How this drill works
Each round picks a random mix from the top 50 bigrams, top 50 trigrams, and top 20 four-grams, stitches them together, and then sprinkles spaces back in at random so what you see reads as ~5-letter chunks — word-length, but not real words. Type them as you would any text; let your fingers settle into the chunks.
Tip: Don’t try to read it — type by feel, one chunk at a time.