Free AI Text-To-Speech and Text-to-MP3 for Danish

Transform your Danish text into high-quality, AI-generated speech effortlessly and at no cost. Ideal for enhancing e-learning experiences, enriching presentations, powering YouTube videos, and making your website more accessible. Our advanced AI voices deliver natural-sounding speech in various languages, complete with authentic accents. Furthermore, your spoken text can be effortlessly saved as an MP3 file. Select from a range of voices to ensure the tone and style perfectly match your needs.


Todays use: 0 / 1,000 characters

Information about working with AI voices

How do i select a language?

AI voices detect the language automatically. However, AI voices do not support ALL languages. Here is the list of languages that are supported:
Arabic, Armenian, Azerbaijani, Belarusian, Bosnian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, Galician, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kannada, Kazakh, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Malay, Maori, Marathi, Nepali, Norwegian, Persian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swahili, Swedish, Tagalog, Tamil, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Vietnamese, Welsh.

How do i change the tone or pitch of the output voice?

Unlike our regular voices, AI-generated voices currently lack the capability to adjust pitch or tone on demand. Instead, the AI analyzes the context of the text, including punctuation like exclamation points or dashes, to determine the appropriate inflection during speech.

Disclaimer about AI voices

The TTS voices you are hearing are AI-generated and not human voices. Although this may be self-explanatory, it is mandatory for us to clarify this here.

Example audio files for all voices in Danish

Example sentence: 'Den hurtige brune ræv hopper over den dovne hund.'

Alloy

Echo

Fable

Onyx

Nova

Shimmer


Facts about the Danish language:

Danish is a language from the Indo-European language family, particularly the North Germanic branch. Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian have their beginnings in Old Norse. Interestingly, due to this shared origin, Danes, Swedes, and Norwegians can converse in their native tongues and remain intelligible to one another.

Old Norse evolved and changed with the times. This caused a fissure, the effect of which was Old Norse becoming two languages: Old West Norse and Old East Norse. Denmark and Sweden shared Old East Norse as a spoken tongue. For writing, however, Latin was the language of choice. It was with written language that Swedish and Danish began their divide to separate entities.

Danish as a language was in its infancy during the 13th century; it was at this time laws and government documents started to use Danish in writing. It was the Protestant Reformation in Germany, however, which would bring to the Danish language the fuel for its fire. In the 16th century the first full translation of a Danish language Bible was published. Following this publication, the use of written Danish exploded.

All this aside, this old form of Danish did not yet look like modern Danish; in fact, different regions spoke and wrote Danish slightly different. Standardization of the language was not achieved until centuries later, using the Danish used in Copenhagen. Changes to the Danish language were slight after this, and a few more variations to the rules finally saw modern Danish come into being.


Current Limit: ~125 words or 1,000 characters / day | Powered by OpenAI Text-To-Speech

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