Punjabi Umbhalo ukuya kuSpeech

Ujikelezo Punjabi amagama aqhelekileyo ngeelizwi ze-AI. 2 iilizwi. Isimahla, akukho ubhaliso — khuphela njenge MP3 okanye WAV.

Punjabi is the rare Indo-Aryan language that is genuinely tonal, and that single feature dominates its text-to-speech: historical voiced-aspirate consonants collapsed and left behind low, high and level tones on neighbouring syllables, so the same sequence of letters can mean different things depending on pitch, and a voice that ignores tone will be misunderstood. The Indian standard is written in Gurmukhi, an abugida with its own letterforms, the gemination marker addhak that doubles a consonant, and nasalization signs the engine must read. Correctly reconstructing tone from spelling — since the tone is a relic of consonants that are no longer pronounced as written — is the hardest and most Punjabi-specific synthesis problem. The language also has the usual Indo-Aryan inherent-vowel and conjunct-consonant handling. A large share of demand is cultural and religious: Gurmukhi is the script of Sikh scripture, so kirtan and gurbani-adjacent content, alongside Punjabi music, film and a huge Canadian, British and American diaspora media market, all rely on natural Punjabi audio.

Vula i- Punjabi Umhleli wesandi

Iinketho ze projekti — ਪੰਜਾਬੀ

“ਸਤ ਸ੍ਰੀ ਅਕਾਲ, ਅੱਜ ਸਵੇਰ ਤੋਂ ਮੌਸਮ ਬਹੁਤ ਵਧੀਆ ਹੈ, ਆਓ ਆਪਾਂ ਸਾਰੇ ਰਲ਼ ਕੇ ਸੈਰ ਕਰਨ ਚੱਲੀਏ।”

Igama eliqhelekileyo
ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
Abathethi
Over 110 million speakers across India and Pakistan, one of the most spoken languages worldwide
Usapho lwesiNgesi
Northwestern branch of the Indo-Aryan languages
Igama lefayile le CVS:
Gurmukhi (the script used for Punjabi in India)
Ithetha
The Indian state of Punjab and, in Shahmukhi script, Pakistani Punjab, plus very large diaspora communities in Canada, the UK and the US

2 Punjabi iilizwi

Divjot (Punjabi)

Indic Parler TTS
Emiselweyo Male
Igama lefayile

Gurpreet (Punjabi)

Indic Parler TTS
Emiselweyo Female
Igama lefayile

Izinto abantu abasebenzisayo Punjabi I-text-to-speech ye-

Narration for Punjabi music, film and entertainment media
Voice content for the large Canadian, UK and US Punjabi diaspora
E-learning and audiobook narration in Gurmukhi
IVR and app voice prompts for the Punjab market
Accessibility and screen-reader narration for Punjabi speakers

Punjabi Umbhalo ukuya kuSpeech - FAQ

Yes, and it matters. Punjabi is tonal — low, high and level tones, a legacy of lost voiced-aspirate consonants, can change a word’s meaning. The voice reconstructs tone from the spelling so output is understood correctly rather than sounding flat or ambiguous.

This voice reads Gurmukhi, the script used for Punjabi in India, including the addhak gemination marker and nasalization signs. Shahmukhi (the Perso-Arabic script used in Pakistan) is a different writing system for the same language.

The addhak marks gemination, lengthening the following consonant. The voice reads it as a doubled sound, which is phonemic in Punjabi and distinguishes many word pairs, rather than ignoring the mark.

No. Punjabi is a separate, tonal Indo-Aryan language written in Gurmukhi, whereas Hindi is non-tonal and written in Devanagari. A Hindi voice cannot reproduce Punjabi tone or read Gurmukhi, so use the Punjabi voice for Punjabi text.

Iilwimi ezihambelanayo