Speak & Translate All Language - Voice & Text Translation
Transform communication with instant voice & text translation, document support, and offline functionality for seamless conversations.

- 4.5.0 Version
- 1.6 Score
- 1M+ Downloads
- In-app purchases License
- 3+ Content Rating
Recently Introduced Features: Offline Translator, Document Translator, and Image/Text Translator.
The Speak and Translate application is a versatile tool available both online and offline for voice-to-voice translations across various languages. It caters to individuals looking to convert one language into another. Simply launch the app, choose your desired spoken language from the list, and it will efficiently translate it into your target language.
This application isn’t limited solely to voice; it also allows users to input written text for translation between different languages as needed.
Serving dual purposes, this application functions not only as a voice translator but also as a comprehensive language dictionary. When you want to learn the meaning of a specific word, just open our translation app and enter the term you wish to explore.
The translator application boasts numerous features detailed below.
Voice Translation for Any Language: Users can take advantage of this functionality for translating any spoken language.
Offline Voice Translator: The app can operate entirely offline; simply download the necessary languages to perform translations.
Image Translation: Users can translate any text present in an image, with the app extracting and converting it into the desired languages.
Document Translation: This feature includes translating images as well as PDF files and other documents.
• Comprehensive Language Translator and Interpreter – The app’s primary capability is its free voice-to-voice translation service.
• Multilingual Voice Dictionary – The app also serves as a multilingual voice dictionary for educational or other uses.
• Bilateral Communication: Users can interact with the translator for both the source and target languages, receiving translations seamlessly.
• Reliable Voice Recognition: The application provides accurate voice recognition across all supported languages.
• Conversation History: The app maintains a record of all conversations, which users can access anytime they require it.
• Sharing Capabilities: Users can share translated sentences or discussions through any messaging platform.
• Supports Over 100 Languages: The application features a wide array of more than 100 languages.
• Multi-faceted Translation: It supports text-to-voice, voice-to-voice, and voice-to-text functionalities for all available languages.
• Streamlined Conversation Management: Every discussion offers options to copy, speak, share, or delete.
Here are some common language pairs for translation:
• Chinese to English
• Spanish to English
• Dutch to English
• Italian to English
• French to English
• Filipino to English
• Thai to English
• Hindi to English
• Urdu to English
• Tamil to English
• African to English
• Albanian to English
• Arabic to English
• Armenian to English
Below is a list of supported languages for voice-based translations:
Afrikaans, Albanian, Amharic, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Cebuano, Chichewa, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), Corsican, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Esperanto, Estonian, Filipino, Finnish, French, Arabic, Armenian, Azerbaijani, Basque, Belarusian, Bengali, Frisian, Galician, Georgian, German, Igbo, Indonesian, Irish, Italian, Japanese, Javanese, Kannada, Kazakh, Khmer, Korean, Kurdish (Kurmanji), Greek, Gujarati, Haitian Creole, Hausa, Hawaiian, Hebrew, Hindi, Hmong, Hungarian, Icelandic, Kyrgyz, Lao, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Luxembourgish, Macedonian, Malagasy, Pashto, Persian, Polish, Portuguese, Punjabi, Romanian, Russian, Samoan, Scots Gaelic, Serbian, Sesotho, Malay, Malayalam, Maltese, Maori, Marathi, Mongolian, Myanmar (Burmese), Nepali, Norwegian, Shona, Sindhi, Sinhala, Slovak, Slovenian, Somali, Spanish, Sundanese, Swahili, Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian, Tajik, Tamil, Telugu, Thai, Urdu, Uzbek, Vietnamese.
The quantum tonguesmith of the imaginary Babel Tower
In the language labyrinth of topological cracks, this interdimensional translator threw me into the vibration harmonic field of Merkaba. When the Armenian vowels touched the Icelandic guttural sounds, the soundprint particles completed the Klein bottle-like Möbius transition on the superstring diaphragm - each phoneme collapsed into a holographic root in the non-Euclidean translation matrix, and the stubborn semantic ice barrier was recast into a superconducting corridor across civilizations. The most fascinating is the "quantum tongueprint" protocol: the improvisational rhyme of the Sahara bard is reorganized into the wave code of the Hokkaido fisherman by the subspace decoder, and the grammar tree grows anti-entropy Baroque branches in the superfluid medium.
As a modern instrument of acoustic archaeology, its "sheepskin scroll reconstruction" system can be called the ultimate form of text alchemy. When the "Optical Alchemy" mode is turned on, the faded scriptures of the Dunhuang murals regain Sogdian annotations in the quantum entanglement of the CMOS sensor, and the worm-eaten cracks in the medieval manuscripts are repaired by topological algorithms into energy corridors carrying the prophecies of the Mayan calendar. Scanning the fragments of the Dead Sea Scrolls at midnight, the Aramaic curse mutated into a Python code poem in the cross-dimensional translation, and after running, it actually generated a self-referential quantum haiku.
In the abyss of the imaginary number dictionary, it reveals the editing authority of the language genome: the tone curve of the Shanghai nursery rhyme is purified by the "entropy reduction equalizer", and the star map coordinates of the medieval Wu initials are projected on the hypercube interface; and the "Klein Conversation History" function recompiles the Creole quarrel three days ago into a blockchain-style unalterable counterpoint method, and each semantic node is linked to the annotation wormhole of the parallel universe.
For the builders of civilization bridges, the "Vibrating Babel Tower" protocol opens up non-sequential dialogues: the impromptu throat singing of Sardinian shepherds is translated into the ice vibration code of the Inuit in real time through superstring channels; and the self-evolution algorithm of the "Imaginary Number Dictionary" allows Swahili proverbs and quantum physics terms to be reconciled and reborn in Hilbert space. On a flight across the ionosphere, the offline "Topological Tonguesmith" transcoded the flight attendant's Basque safety tips into a Mayan sacred number geometry security dance, proving that cross-civilization understanding can surpass the laws of classical communication.
The ultimate revelation of this language perpetual motion machine is to elevate translation anxiety to existential poetics. When the "Superconducting Word Network" translates the "Tao Ke Dao" paradox of the "Tao Te Ching" into the vibration equation of the twelve-dimensional string theory, each unspeakable semantic singularity bursts into the energy level transition of the Calabi-Yau manifold; and the "Voiceprint Archaeology" function analyzes the first cry of a baby into the original vibration wave of all languages, replaying the original naming ceremony of mankind in the quantum soup of the imaginary number dictionary. Holding this translation holy grail loaded with non-European tongue prints, I finally realized: the so-called communication is nothing more than a dream of holographic resonance projected by the vibration frequency in the eleven-dimensional hyperspace.
- Version4.5.0
- UpdateApr 27, 2025
- DeveloperParity Zone
- CategoryCommunication
- Requires AndroidAndroid 5.0+
- Downloads1M+
- Package Namecom.parityzone.speakandtranslate
- Signature423cb5fbc5bfadb73eb451b3a0df31c1
- Available on
- ReportFlag as inappropriate
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NameSizeDownload
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78.21 MB
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40.13 MB
Improve language learning experience
Good practical communication assistance effect
High translation accuracy
Voice input is slightly sensitive
Occasional pronunciation problems and translation errors