Transform your Polish 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
Same as on our regular voices you can now add pauses with the tag <break time="1s"/>
Example: Mary had a little lamb <break time="2s"/> Whose fleece was white as snow.
Pauses can be between 1-60 seconds long.
AI voices detect the language automatically. However, AI voices do not support ALL languages. Here is the list of languages that are supported:
Afrikaans, 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.
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.
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.
The polish language boasts of having a high presence globally with more than 40 million people speaking it fluently mostly in Poland. It is a Western Slavonic language with more significant polish communities in Belarus, Lithuania, Ukraine and others countries around Eastern Europe. The polish language is closely related to Slovak and Czech languages, and in the Indo-European Family group of languages, Polish Language is categorized as Slavic Language. The polish language was introduced to other parts when the Slav people migrated from the old Poland and predominantly settled all over Eastern Europe.
The Polish Language Alphabets
The polish language has a unique alphabet from the other Slavic languages since it is based on the Latin alphabet than the usual Cyrillic alphabet. The Roman Catholic predominance played a vital role in the use of Latin alphabets. The language uses diagraphs which uses a pair of character to write single sound; the diacritics are when the glyph is uniquely added to any existing letter and used to communicate sounds not represented on the Latin-based alphabet. An example of polish language used digraph is 'sz' that sounds like the English language sound 'sh.'
Development of the Polish Language
The oldest evidence of the polish language was in the 12th century, and the first adjustment made in the 14th century, and the modern literary polish adopted in the 16the century. The spoken polish has over the years preserved its nasal vowels, and it uses 35 constant sounds and seven vowels making it a rich phonetically language.
Current Limit: ~125 words or 1,000 characters / day | Powered by OpenAI Text-To-Speech
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