Language Translator Reviews

3/5 rating based on 53 reviews. Read all reviews for Language Translator for iPhone.
Language Translator is free iOS app published by Piet Jonas

Wifi only-limited of travel areas

Wemnarr

Please make this this app offline compatable.


What the fish!!!!

Sky from above

My goodness! This is the worst app ever! It deleted all of my apps!!!!!!


helps with Spanish HW

M@/(0/m

But make the lay out bigger........... Kinda like my translatoralso make it non wifi compatable it waould also e nice with no ads


Love it!

KSimmons5

^Says it all... LOL helped me communicate with by BF hi just moved to Italy :D


Translation? Idk

Shnitzco

I wish they would translate into the source language example: I tried to put "how are you" in Japanese, with English as the source language, and it gave japanese letters, I wish it would put "hello" as "konichiwa" (excuse my spelling please) instead of "hello" as japanese letters which you can only read if you can read japanese.


Greeeeeeeeat app it has Spanish,French,Chinese,ect

It's not what I expected like wowed

I luv it but wish u didn't need wifi connection


It's ok

Rat151

It's ok but when I translate it into Thai it does the words in Thai.


Miss

Dixie Krista

I love it


Very useful!

Hockeygirl113

It is a fantastic app! I don't know what I would do without it. Now I can astound my friends by talking in a different language using this translator. I give it 5 stars!


Buy a WEBSTERS SPANISH DICT.

stephen.haltiner

There are a lot of words, even really simple ones, that it doesn't translate correctly. So it doesn't help a person who is serious about getting a correct translation. For example, in Spanish, "unos" should translate to "some." but it doesn't. It translates to "most," which is almost the opposite. If you want a reliable source, buy a WEBSTER'S SPANISH NEW WORLD DICTIONARY. It's the only truly reliable source, as web translators generally don't work. I got one for around $15 at Target. Also, there needs to be different settings for American Spanish and "Spanish" Spanish (from spain) because the dialects are noticably different- which everyone that actually speaks Spanish knows.