Tamil テキストから音声へ

ターン Tamil テキストから自然な音声に変換することができます 2 声. 無料で登録なし — MP3 または WAV でダウンロード。

Tamil poses a synthesis challenge unlike any other Indian language because of its diglossia: the formal literary variety (செந்தமிழ்) used in writing and news differs markedly from everyday spoken Tamil, and a voice has to choose a register and stay consistent rather than drifting between them. The Tamil script is also unusually economical with consonants — it has no separate letters for voiced or aspirated stops, so a single glyph covers k, g and h and the voicing is decided entirely by position within the word. That makes context-based allophony, not a lookup table, the core of correct Tamil pronunciation: the same letter is read as hard 'k' at the start of a word and soft 'g' between vowels. Tamil adds the special aytham character ஃ, a full set of retroflex consonants, and a contrast between alveolar and retroflex sounds that a naive voice tends to flatten. Being agglutinative, Tamil piles case, tense and honorific suffixes onto roots, so long word forms must be segmented for natural phrasing. Real demand comes from the Kollywood film industry, Tamil Nadu's aggressive push for Tamil-first digital public services, and Tamil news and devotional media consumed across Sri Lanka, Singapore and the diaspora.

開ける Tamil 声の編集

サンプル — தமிழ்

“வணக்கம், இன்று காலை நல்ல வெயில் இருக்கிறது; அனைவரும் நலமாக இருக்க வேண்டும் என்று வாழ்த்துகிறேன்.”

実名
தமிழ்
スピーカー
Around 79 million native speakers, one of the world’s oldest living literary languages
言語族
Southern branch of the Dravidian languages
スクリプト
Tamil (a Brahmic abugida)
話した言葉
The Indian state of Tamil Nadu and Puducherry, plus official status in Sri Lanka and Singapore and a large diaspora in Malaysia and the Gulf

2 Tamil 声

Jaya (Tamil)

Indic Parler TTS
標準 Female
使用

Kavya (Tamil)

Indic Parler TTS
標準 Female
使用

人々が使うもの Tamil テキストから音声を生成する

Kollywood and Tamil short-video dubbing and voiceover
Tamil-first e-governance and public-service audio for Tamil Nadu
Narration for Tamil news, education and devotional content
IVR and app prompts for Sri Lanka, Singapore and Malaysia Tamil markets
Accessibility and screen-reader narration for Tamil speakers

Tamil テキストから音声へ

Tamil has no separate letters for voiced or aspirated stops, so one glyph covers k, g and h. The engine uses position within the word to voice it correctly — hard at the start, softer between vowels — which is exactly how Tamil speakers read it.

The voice reads the register you write. Formal literary Tamil (used in news and writing) and colloquial spoken Tamil differ significantly, so the output follows your text rather than converting between the two varieties on its own.

Yes. Tamil contrasts retroflex and alveolar sounds and includes the special aytham (ஃ). The voice keeps these distinctions rather than flattening them, which is essential for words to be understood correctly.

No. Although all three are Dravidian, Tamil has its own script, its distinctive lack of separate voiced letters, and its own phonology. A Telugu or Malayalam voice would mispronounce Tamil, so use the Tamil voice for Tamil text.

関連言語