S In Different Languages



This is a simple online tool that converts regular text into text symbols which resemble the normal alphabet letters. It converts text into several symbol sets which are listed in the second text area, and the conversion is done in real-time and in your browser using JavaScript. If you'd like your text to be randomly translated into different symbol (character by character), check out my other translator called 'fancy text'.

  1. S In Every Language
  2. S Alphabet In Different Languages
  3. S In Different Languages
  4. How To Write S In Different Languages
  5. Letter D In Different Languages

In Different Languages, or IDL, is an online tool that shows you how to say words and phrases in more than 100 different languages. Here you will find tens of thousands of words and expressions along with their translations into dozens of foreign languages. Information about COVID-19 and the COVIDSafe app is available in 63 languages on the Department of Home Affairs website. The COVIDSafe app privacy policy is also available in 63 languages. You can also visit our YouTube channel to view SBS's COVID-19 video in various languages.

You'd be forgiven for thinking that this translator converts text into a number of different fonts - that's not what's happening here. So how does it work? Unicode.

S in different language but look same

Unicode Symbols

This translator is essentially generating unicode symbols which resemble letters from the latin alphabet (a, b, c, ...). Unicode is an international standard for symbols in computer-related industries. It supersedes 'ASCII' and actually contains all the ASCII symbols within it's specification. There are literally tens of thousands of different symbols defined by Unicode compared to 256 characters defined by the extended ASCII set. On top of this, unicode allows us to add diacritic marks which agument our characters and allow us to produce weird stuff like this:

h̸̨̧̨̡̘̰̗̝̮̮͔̜̖͂̽͛̉̓́͛̑͂͘͘ͅẽ̸̢̺̝͓̱̙̮̲͍̑̉ͅl̷̙̯̬̯͇̰̩̬̺͊̋̊̽l̵̢̛͇̤̺̩̞͈̥̱̩̳̖̎̃̂̓͆̍̐͌̒͋̿͝͝͝ͅö̵̡̻̟̺̪̤̙̟͚̬́̎̉̚͜͝

By the way, the above text is called 'Zalgo text', and I also made a zalgo translator which you can use to generate that type of text.

So yeah, the unicode standard is awesome, and it allows us to have all sorts of fun with text.

Copy and Paste

I said earlier that this translator isn't simple generating the same text with a different font, it's actually generating different text symbols from the unicode spec. This has the awesome benefit that we can copy and paste symbols wherever we want (you couldn't do this if it were just a font). You might have found this generator after looking for a text to symbol converter which would allow you to have weird symbols in your profile like all the other l33t hackers.

L33t hacking aside though, weird text symbols of letters are great for making your message on social media stand out. Just look at the difference between:

> Look at my post!

and:

> 𝓛𝓸𝓸𝓴 𝓪𝓽 𝓶𝔂 𝓹𝓸𝓼𝓽!

Since social media sites don't generally allow fonts, it gives the user a huge surprise when they see something new like that. So whether you want to put symbols in your Tumblr blogs, Facebook statuses, Twitter profiles or tweets, Instagram bios or wherever, this translator should hopefully be handy for that. Having different fonts Instagram bios has become fairly popular recently, so it might be worth jumping on that trend.

Different Letters

Are you looking for letters that aren't included in this generator? There are all sorts of different letters in Unicode, and I've done my best to include as many different symbol fonts as I can, but there is always room for improvement! If you find any different letters that I don't have, please let me know! I want to include as many different fonts as possible. Meanwhile, feel free to post a comment below with some crazy unicode symbols :)

S In Every Language


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© StepanPopov/Shutterstock It's easy to change your keyboard language on Windows 10. StepanPopov/ShutterstockDifferent
  • You can change the keyboard language on a Windows computer by going through the 'Time & Language' menu.
  • After you change the keyboard language once, you'll be able to switch between languages quickly using a button in your taskbar.
  • You can also change the language that Windows uses for everything, not just the keyboard.
  • Visit Business Insider's Tech Reference library for more stories.

Windows gives you a lot of control over the language it uses — so much control, in fact, that it can be confusing to set it up the way you want.

For example, you can change the language that Windows uses for every menu, or just the language used for the keyboard.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

HP Wireless Elite Keyboard V2 (From $51.70 at Amazon)

Windows 10 (From $139.99 at Best Buy)

Acer Chromebook 15 (From $179.99 at Walmart)

How to change the keyboard language on Windows 10

You can change your keyboard's language without changing the language that Windows is using on the screen — this is handy for gaining access to accent marks and other specialized characters, or for typing on a keyboard with a different language layout.

Different

1. Click Start and then click the Settings icon (which is shaped like a gear).

S Alphabet In Different Languages

2. Click 'Time & Language.'

© Dave Johnson/Business Insider Use Settings to add a new keyboard language. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

S In Different Languages

3. In the navigation pane on the left, click 'Language.'

4. In the 'Preferred languages section,' click your language (i.e., 'English') and then click 'Options.'

© Dave Johnson/Business Insider Click 'English' (or your current default language) and choose 'Options.' Dave Johnson/Business Insider

5. Scroll down to 'Keyboards' and then click 'Add a keyboard.' In the pop-up menu, click the keyboard language you want to add.

© Dave Johnson/Business Insider Add a keyboard from the list of options. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

6. Close Settings. Once you add a second keyboard language to Windows, a language control button will appear in the taskbar, in the lower-right corner of the screen. Click it, and in the pop-up menu that appears, choose the language you want to use with your keyboard.

How To Write S In Different Languages

© Dave Johnson/Business Insider You can switch among keyboards using the language options in the task bar. Dave Johnson/Business Insider

Letter D In Different Languages

You can always return to the taskbar to switch back to your original keyboard language.

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