World Languages in L10N

Dive into our detailed language reports offering valuable insights from a localization perspective. Listen to our human voice talents available and see if we can help you with high quality Text to Speech neural voices, transcription or voice cloning capabilities. Our reports also cover a Language Overview, Market Insights, Cultural Context, Writing System, Phonetics, Grammatical Structure, Media Layout, Localization Challenges, and other Technical Considerations like subtitle best practices, etc.

World Languages in L10N

Dive into our detailed language reports offering valuable insights from a localization perspective, and listen to our human voice talents available.

Asmat, Casuarina Coast, a Papuan language spoken by around 7,000 people in Papua New Guinea.

Assiniboine, a Siouan language spoken by around 150 people in the United States and Canada.

Asu, also known as Pare, a Bantu language spoken by around 500,000 people in Tanzania.

Aruá, a Tupian language spoken by around 150 people in Brazil.

Arawak, an Arawakan language spoken by around 2,500 people in Guyana, Suriname, French Guiana, and Venezuela.

Arbore, a Cushitic language spoken by around 7,000 people in Ethiopia.

Karo, a Cariban language spoken by around 200 people in Brazil.

Arapaho, an Algonquian language spoken by around 1,000 people in the United States.

Araona, a Tacanan language spoken by around 110 people in Bolivia.

Mapudungun, a language of the Mapuche people, spoken by around 200,000 people in Chile and Argentina.

Arabic (Levantine) – a variety of Arabic spoken in the Levant region. Part of the Semitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic lan…

Arhuaco, also known as Ika, a Chibchan language spoken by around 20,000 people in Colombia.

Aragonese, a Romance language spoken by around 10,000 people in the Aragon region of Spain.

Arrarnta, Western, an Australian Aboriginal language spoken by around 2,000 people in the Northern Territory of Australi…

Yemeni Arabic is a branch of the Semitic language family, Yemeni Arabic, like its Emirati counterpart, has ancient roots…