

Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Vassilina Nikoulina from the Naver Labs Europe Natural Language Processing Group explains that they have used these corpora in a multilingual and multi-domain neural machine translation model specialized for biomedical data and that enables translation into English from five languages (French, German, Italian, Spanish, and Korean). “It is indeed a new feature with added translate tools directly within search,” confirmed a Google spokesperson, “You can say ‘translate where is the closest museum into French’ and you can now edit the text, change the input and output languages, and hear the translation spoken back to you more than once.” Once a full translation search query has been entered, Google offers both the text translation or the option to hear the audio version of the translated word or phrase. Going off a tip from when searching the word “translate,” Google now delivers a quick search option for entering text or choosing the translation language via a dynamic knowledge graph box as shown in this screen shot: Now speak into your phone’s mic and the Google. If the app asks to access your phone’s mic, let it do so. After selecting both languages, at the bottom of the app, tap the microphone icon. Tap the language on the right and choose the target language. Google has added new translation features, making it easy to edit translation search terms, change languages or hear the translations directly within search. From the Translate From menu, select the language in which your original audio is.
