Showing posts with label Google Translate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google Translate. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 November 2011

Translate more Indic languages with the updated Google Translate for iPhone app

[Cross Posted from the Google Translate Blog]

Back in June, we launched five new experimental Indic languages for Google Translate on the desktop and mobile web app. Today, we’ve updated the Google Translate for iPhone app to add these new alpha languages: Bengali, Gujarati, Kannada, Tamil and Telugu. This brings the total number of languages supported by the app to 63 languages.


The updated app supports the ability to view dictionary results for single words and to display romanizations for these new Indic languages. So even if you can't read the script the words are written in, you can still take a shot at reading the translation.

Since these are still experimental alpha languages, you can expect translations be less fluent and include many more untranslated words than some of our more mature languages—like Spanish or Chinese—which have much more parallel data to power our statistical machine translation approach. Despite these challenges, we believe users will find these new languages helpful and we're excited to be making them available through the Translate app.

Google Translate for iPhone now supports text translation among 63 languages, voice input in 17 of those languages, and text-to-speech in 24 of them. Get the latest version of the Google Translate for iPhone app from the App Store now and start breaking down language barriers wherever you are!

Monday, 24 May 2010

Google Translate now speaks Hindi

India is one of the most linguistically diverse countries in the world, having more than hundred languages with Hindi as the most widely spoken language. To make it easier to read, learn and communicate in Hindi, we are excited to announce recent addition of automated text-to-speech capability for Hindi translations on Google Translate.

Now while visiting a Hindi speaking area, you'll be able to communicate easily in local language. You can learn Hindi by listening to the translation by clicking speaker icon next to the translated text. For example, if you want to say ‘Hello, how are you?’ in Hindi, just translate it and listen to Hindi equivalent to speak.



As we continue to improve the precision of our automatic translation and text-to-speech system, let us know if you have any feedback in our discussion group.

Posted by Vishnu Sharma, Arun Nair