Kannada Nkọwa na-ekwu
Kpụghaa Kannada ngwe n'okwu na-emegharị ya na ụda AI. 2 ụda. Free, enweghị ndebanye — budata dịka MP3 mọọbụ WAV.
Kannada is a classical Dravidian language whose rounded script grew from writing on palm leaves, and like its Dravidian relatives it is agglutinative and retains its inherent vowel, so a text-to-speech voice must actually pronounce the vowel that follows each consonant instead of applying Hindi-style schwa deletion. The Kannada abugida builds conjunct consonants by attaching a subscript form (ottu) below the base letter, and correctly resolving these stacked clusters is the central rendering task. Because Kannada has absorbed a large Sanskrit vocabulary, it uses the full aspirated/unaspirated series alongside the native dental/retroflex contrasts, so the voice has to keep four-way distinctions clean where a careless model would merge them. Gemination is contrastive, and the language chains case, tense and honorific suffixes onto roots, producing long word forms that must be segmented for natural rhythm. Standard Kannada also differs from strongly regional spoken varieties, so a natural voice targets the standard used in news and education. Demand comes from Karnataka's Sandalwood film industry, Bengaluru's media and technology sector, state government and education services, and Kannada news and devotional channels.
Mepee Kannada Onyenhọrọ okwuỤdị — ಕನ್ನಡ
“ನಮಸ್ಕಾರ, ಇಂದು ಬೆಳಿಗ್ಗೆ ಹವಾಮಾನ ಚೆನ್ನಾಗಿದೆ, ಬನ್ನಿ ನಾವೆಲ್ಲರೂ ಒಟ್ಟಿಗೆ ನಡೆದಾಡಲು ಹೋಗೋಣ.”
- Aha nkeonwe
- ಕನ್ನಡ
- Ndịna-ekwu okwu
- About 44 million native speakers, one of the classical languages of India
- Ụmụasụ
- Southern branch of the Dravidian languages
- Ihumkpụrụedemede
- Kannada (a rounded Brahmic abugida)
- Ekwenyere m na
- The Indian state of Karnataka, where it is official, plus border communities in Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and Kerala