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Google Translate
translate.google.com
Google Translate
Google's service, offered free of charge, instantly translates words, phrases, and web pages between English and over 100 other languages.

multilingual neural machine translation service from Google

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screenshot of google translate
Google Translate is a multilingual neural machine translation service developed by Google to translate text, documents and websites from one language into another. It offers a website interface, a mobile app for … Wikipedia
Factsheet
Available in 249 languages; see below
Owner Google
Factsheet
Available in 249 languages; see below
Owner Google
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Google Support
support.google.com › translate › thread › 117846843 › google-translate-pronunciation
Google translate pronunciation - Google Translate Community
Skip to main content · Google Translate Help · Sign in · Google Help · Help Center · Community · Google Translate · Terms of Service · Submit feedback · Send feedback on
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Genealogy Gems
lisalouisecooke.com › 2016 › 04 › 17 › how-to-pronounce-names
How To Pronounce Names: Google Translate and Name Pronunciation Tools - Genealogy Gems
November 30, 2021 - They’re each a little different. I’m giving you all three so you can run the name through more than one site to be even more confident you’re getting the right pronunciation. Google Translate is a powerful, free tool I use for quick translation look-ups.
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Forvo
forvo.com › word › google_translate
Google Translate pronunciation: How to pronounce Google Translate in English
Google Translate pronunciation in English [en] Accent: British · Google Translate pronunciation · Pronunciation by mooncow (Male from United Kingdom) Male from United Kingdom · Pronunciation by mooncow · User information · Follow · 2 votes Good Bad · Add to favorites ·
Top answer
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9

Since this question was asked, it's gotten much harder to "scrape" MP3s from Google Translate, but Google has (finally) set up a TTS API. Interestingly it is billed in input characters, with the first 1 or 4 million input characters per month being free (depending on whether you use WaveNet or old school voices)

Nowadays to do this using gcloud on the command line (versus building this into an app) you would do roughly as follows (I'm paraphrasing the TTS quick start). You need base64, curl, gcloud, and jq for this walkthrough.

  1. Create a project on the GCP console, or run something like gcloud projects create example-throwaway-tts
  2. Enable billing for the project. Do this even if you don't intend to exceed the freebie quota.
  3. Use the GCP console to enable the TTS API for the project you just set up.
  4. Use the console again, this time to make a new service account.
    • Use any old name
    • Don't give it a role. You'll get a warning. This is okay.
    • Select key type JSON if it isn't already selected
    • Click Create
    • Hold onto the JSON file that your browser downloads
  5. Set an environment variable to point at that file, e.g. export GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS="~/Downloads/service-account-file.json"
  6. Get the appropriate access token:
    1. Tell gcloud to use that new project: gcloud config set project example-throwaway-tts
    2. Set a variable TTS_ACCESS_TOKEN=gcloud auth application-default print-access-token
  7. Put together a JSON request. I'll give an example below. For this example we'll call it request.json
  8. Lastly, run the following

     curl \
    -H "Authorization: Bearer "$TTS_ACCESS_TOKEN \
    -H "Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8" \
    --data-raw @request.json \
    "https://texttospeech.googleapis.com/v1/text:synthesize" \
    | jq '.audioContent' \
    | base64 --decode > very_simple_example.mp3
    

What this does is to

  • authenticate using the default access token for the project you set up
  • set the content type to JSON (so that jq can extract the payload)
  • use request.json as the data to send using curl's --data-raw flag
  • extract the value of audioContent from the response
  • base64 decode that content
  • save the whole mess as an MP3

Contents of request.json follow. You can see where to insert your desired text, adjust the voice or change output formats via audioConfig:

{
  'input':{
    'text':'very simple example'
  },
  'voice':{
    'languageCode':'en-gb',
    'name':'en-GB-Standard-A',
    'ssmlGender':'FEMALE'
  },
  'audioConfig':{
      'audioEncoding':'MP3'
  }
}

Original Answer

As Hugolpz alludes, if you know the word or phrase you want (via a previous Translate API call), you can get MP3s from a URL like http://translate.google.com/translate_tts?ie=UTF-8&q=Bonjour&tl=fr

Note that &tl=fr ensures that you get French instead of the default English.

You will need to rate-limit yourself, but if you're looking for a small number of words or phrases you should be fine.

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Similar functionality is provided by the Speech Synthesis API (under development). Third-party libraries are already there, such as ResponsiveVoice.JS.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/languagelearning › discovered an easy way to check pronunciation: google translate
r/languagelearning on Reddit: Discovered an easy way to check pronunciation: Google Translate
August 23, 2020 -

I never see anyone talking about this but it's so easy. Google Translate allows you to record your voice and it guesses what you are saying. Perhaps if you change services like Siri or Alexa to your target language it would also work.

I was having trouble pronouncing the Russian word for hello, Здравствуйте. The Latin transliteration of this is zdravstvuyte. Note that this word looks like pure nonsense, to me anyway. But by using Google Translate I was forced to pronounce it accurately for the program to recognize the word. Then I could play back their recording of a native speaker saying the word and practice it. All you have to do is Google "translate Russian to English" and this pops up.

Of course it's not as good as having a native speaker listen to your speaking but it's very convenient.

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YouGlish
youglish.com › pronounce › google_translate › english
Google Translate | 644 pronunciations of Google Translate in English
Sound it Out: Break down the word 'google translate' into its individual sounds "goo" + "guhl tranz" + "layt". Say these sounds out loud, exaggerating them at first.
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Points Brotherhood
pointsbrotherhood.com › home › google translate: easy pronunciation guide
Google Translate: Easy Pronunciation Guide | Points Brotherhood
May 17, 2020 - Finding out how to pronounce the name of the museum was as easy as typing in the words and clicking on the speaker icon: Find out how to pronounce Het Scheepvaartmuseum. Google Translate is super useful as a pronunciation guide, in addition to its primary purpose as a translator.
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WordReference
forum.wordreference.com › english only › english only
The pronunciation of Google "Translate" | WordReference Forums
October 30, 2019 - "Google Translate" is a compound noun formed from Google (noun) and translate (verb). ... I think this came up in some earlier threads like: Word stress pronunciation: translator In the latter thread, I said that any verb beginning with trans- gets the stress on the next syllable for me - hence, transLATE, as Loob says it.
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Right click the page and select "Inspect Element", then go to the network tab. Now, refresh the page with the network panel still open. Wait until nothing is showing up there anymore. While waiting, make sure not to get your mouse near the Listen button. Once nothing is showing up in the network panel, hover and click the listen button. As soon as you hover the listen button, an entry will appear that says "batchexecute". Find this entry. It should be above entries that say log?format=json&hasfast=….

Click on that and then on the right select the "Response" tab. There should be a bunch of random characters that go off the screen very far to the right

Select just that text and copy it. The easiest way to do this is to scroll all the way to the right first and then click and hold to the right of the ending quotation mark, then move your mouse up to the line above, then move your mouse down to reach the starting quotation mark, holding the mouse the whole time.

Go to the console tab and type v= then paste then press enter. Then, paste this into the console and press enter

{
const a = document.createElement("a");
a.href = "data:audio/mp3;base64,"+JSON.parse(v)[0];
a.download = "file.mp3";
a.click();
}

The mp3 file will download.

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  1. Google search the word of which you want to download pronunciation by entering the query :"*How to pronounce *word**"
  2. Right-click the page and click View page source.
  3. Search for Mp3. screenshot
  4. click the mp3 link.
  5. Click the 3 dots and click Download.
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Cambridge Dictionary
dictionary.cambridge.org › pronunciation › english › google
Google | Pronunciation in English
Google pronunciation. How to say Google. Listen to the audio pronunciation in English. Learn more.
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PronounceNames
pronouncenames.com
Pronounce Names - Your Dictionary of Name Pronunciation, Learn How to Pronounce Names of People & Places
PronounceNames.com is a crowdsourced website offering a pronunciation guide for names of people and places, allowing users to find, share, and request pronunciations.
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Google Groups
groups.google.com › g › google-translate-api › c › bJ3008DSP-U
Needed Standard Pronunciation key in Google Translate
You want to use Google Translate to help into learning new languages, including how to pronounce the words the proper way? Yes, but using IPA inspired standard English pronunciation key in traditional Roman alphabet using as needed proper diacritics.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/nostupidquestions › how do machine translators (ie. google translate) recognize names?
r/NoStupidQuestions on Reddit: How do machine translators (ie. Google Translate) recognize names?
February 26, 2024 -

How do translating services know when a word is a name? I sorta get it between Latin languages where some names might not have direct translations, but for languages like Mandarin Chinese where the name's characters have literal meanings, how does the translator know not to translate it directly? I feel like it would be super hard to code the translator to recognize all possible names, since like in Chinese there are so many different characters that can be in a name.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnthai › practicing pronunciation with google translate ?
r/learnthai on Reddit: Practicing pronunciation with Google Translate ?
January 6, 2023 -

Do you guys check up with the Google Translate (voice input) to see if your pronunciation is allright ? I nail it often but sometime it seems that my phone doesn't catch what I say at all.

ex: I was trying เกลียด earlier and it gave me:

เรียบ

เบียร์

เรียก

Even if my "ก" is good in other words, so I'm wondering if it's just maybe the application that is somewhat a bit capricious with thai ? Do you guys nail it 100% of the time with every words ?

Top answer
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If you're doing this, you should try out Google Live Transcribe. It doesn't auto translate like Google Translate does, but it's more optimized for picking up speech. Google looks at a ton of stuff, besides just pronunciation, since they've used AI a lot with their speech to figure out "natural speech." Your're probably pronouncing ก totally fine. You were just probably pronouncing the word with the wrong tone. เกลียด is low tone, and เรียบ, เบียร์, and เรียก are all falling tone. So it's probably looking at your tone first, and then afterwards matching what words it could be. From what I can tell, that's what Thai people do too. And there are a bunch of other components of Thai speech that people don't usually talk about. Digitized speech is way way more complicated than just stringing sounds together. Also, from what I can tell, Google Translate/Live Transcribe pretty much always gets everything right when Thai people talk. So I don't think it's quirky or weird or capricious with Thai.
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I don't think that's much of a metric tbh. For one thing it will keep coming up with a specific word when a native speaker would just be confused. The fact that you were going for a low tone and it guessed falling mid and falling might be telling you something, possibly - but really I just don't think good enough for google translate is the same thing as good enough for a human being. Maybe try saying nonsense English words and see what it gives you. For example, if you say "dap", what does google give you? "Tap", maybe? If so that tells you that the fact it comes back with tap doesn't show that you pronounced the t correctly.
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How to Pronounce
howtopronounce.com › names › index.php
Learn how to pronounce names | HowtoPronounce.com
March 17, 2021 - Yes! HowToPronounce also has a name pronunciation dictionary to help you learn the correct pronunciation of anyone’s names instantly. Our goal is to put an end to mispronunciation of anyone’s name and help people remember.
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Quora
quora.com › Does-Google-translate-pronounce-English-words-correctly
Does Google translate pronounce English words correctly? - Quora
Answer (1 of 5): Sorry, but I have no idea, since I have never used Google to translate English audibly. I just read it. I would guess, however, that the program is computer generated speech, which means it is probably correct sometimes, and probably incorrect for other words or phrases. It woul...