Microsoft Translator is a free, personal translation app for 60+ languages, to translate text, voice, conversations, camera photos and screenshots. You can even download languages for offline translation for free to use when you travel! I am from iran but i am living in Turkey and I don’t know Turkey so i have no other choices to speaking English with people of Turkey which is so hard because there is few people here who can speak English and i need to buy too many things from stores which is 99 percent in Turkey language so i start to search for something better than google translate and i test this one now. It’s not good in Persian language which is my native language but it’s working like a charm for Turkey to English and I didn’t expect that because i have too many problems with google translate these days. Thanks for this amazing app and please if you can upgrade the Persian language too. Besides of that we need live translation too and we will pay for the good quality of it too because it’s super useful in outside of our home and we can not forcing the people to installing this app for having the live transition.
Sep 27, 2014 - Bing's iOS app update for iOS 8 adds a cool new translate extension that lets. The translation takes some time, and you'll see a progress bar.
Thanks again and keep up and good work. I moved to Switzerland and I used to use google translator for everything since it had image translation feature that came very handy when in restaurants, or in streets. However, after using Microsoft translator, I never went back to Google app. First off, MS translator does much better job of pronouncing the words or a phrase by slowing it down for each retry. Secondly, when translating through image capture, it puts the words in the original image. Google and other translators bunch them all up in an unformatted paragraph which make it unclear where a sentence ends or starts. Very nice work by MS.
The only improvement I would recommend is to have the landscape feature work. Currently, everything must be in portrait. Just downloaded this app. I have been playing with it all afternoon. We are planing a trip to Japan in the fall.
I have been thinking of purchasing one of those hand held voice translators. I have been reading reviews and looking at all manor of voice translators for months. Hand held and earbud translators range anywhere from $100 to as much as $400+. Well.this app seems to have everything I have been looking for in a voice translator. All in an app on my iPhone 8. An additional plus is I wont have to carry my phone AND a separate voice translators. And the basic is FREE!
I gave 4 stars because I haven’t had a chance you use this application while traveling. I have a feeling it will rate the five stars plus!
In February, the Office Global Service & Experiences (GSX) team released the Translator for Outlook add-in, showcasing the launch of. While this was developed, and released outside the normal feature process, given the enthusiastic response from early users, the team wanted to share the announcement more broadly to the Outlook for Windows, Mac, and web audiences, and let you know that it’s also coming soon for Android! What is Translator for Outlook?
Translator for Outlook is an add-in that enables you to translate email messages on the fly. It’s great for anyone who works in a second language every day and wants to read messages in their native language.
Examples include international teams and companies, exchange students, pen pals, and language learners. The add-in works across all Outlook platforms: Outlook 2013/2016 (Windows) Outlook 2016 for Mac, as of Version 15.32 (Build 170304) Outlook on the web (O365 and Exchange) Outlook.com Outlook for iOS Coming soon to Android!, and it’ll be available automatically wherever you use Outlook. The GSX team partnered closely with Microsoft Translator to bring this to life, and the add-in now supports 60+ languages for translation. Why use Translator? Language auto-detection. Email content is a bit different than website content, in terms of both formatting and language composition, and Translator for Outlook strives to accommodate that. For example, you could be on an email thread with global colleagues—such as a modern Outlook Group, or perhaps an interest-based distribution list—where different languages are mixed together.
![Translator Translator](/uploads/1/2/5/3/125391520/476931921.png)
When you want to read that whole thread in your native language, shouldn’t it just work? Translator add-in for Outlook achieves that while keeping the interface super simple. Cross-device experience. If you use Translator across devices (with the different Outlook apps), you’ll notice that there’s a different interface for the “desktop” and “mobile” flavors (plus some behind-the-scenes performance optimizations)—but wherever you use it, the capabilities are equal. Get started.
The command for Translator will appear alongside other add-in commands, which depends on the platform where you use Outlook. For example, in Outlook 2016 on Windows, this can be reached from the Home tab → select Translate Message:. In the Translator window, select the language to which you’ll translate your message. Availability Anyone with an Outlook.com, Office 365, or Exchange account (not just subscribers!), plus any of the Outlook apps mentioned above. Troubleshooting If you’re having trouble installing the add-in, please check out the Troubleshooting section in the “How to” links below.
Useful links Feedback/questions? All feedback is greatly welcomed and appreciated! We’re excited to hear what you think. Please let us know if you have any.
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