Listen to the word online

The best text-to-speech online tools are fun to play with, but you wouldn’t want to use them for a commercial project. Just look at the benighted voice NFT provider, Voiceverse. The company combined TTS voices with NFT ownership: Buy the NFT and you get exclusive rights to a voice file. But before you go selling rights, you should probably make sure they’re yours to sell.

In January 2022, Voiceverse was on top of the NFT world, having netted a powerful new partner in gaming voice superstar Troy Baker (that’s Joel from The Last of Us, among about a million other roles). By the end of that month, Baker had pulled out of the deal and Voiceverse was making public apologies.

The issue? Voiceverse used a non-commercial TTS voice without permission, offering it for sale as an NFT. The creator of the voice, 15.ai, found out and brought the complaint to Twitter, the nation’s highest court of public shaming. Voiceverse lost its celebrity backer as a result.

The lesson? Never use free text-to-speech online tools in a commercial project. If you’re adding TTS to something you plan to monetize, stick with professional services that include commercial licenses.

If that’s something you need, check out ReadSpeaker. We work with organizations of all sizes on every conceivable TTS scenario, and our neural TTS voices are second to none. We’ll even work with you to create a custom TTS voice that’s never been heard before.

The story of Voiceverse is a cautionary tale for content creators of all stripes, whether you’re hopping on the NFT train or just adding a voiceover to your monetized YouTube videos. Be careful how you use text to speech—free services especially.

With that warning out of the way, here’s a list of some of the best text-to-speech online tools of 2022, that are totally free.

Looking for lifelike TTS voices with legal rights to distribution? Contact ReadSpeaker to get the conversation started.

10 of the Best Text-to-Speech Online Tools for 2022

1. ReadLoud.net

It may not be the best sounding text-to-speech provider out there, but ReadLoud.net beats most (not all!) of its peers on character count. You can convert up to 30,000 characters of text to voice files at a time, playing them back or downloading them as MP3s. Choose from 16 English voices or any of 13 other languages.

ReadLoud.net - best text to speech online

2. Intelligent Speaker

Unlike others on this list, Intelligent Speaker isn’t a production tool. It’s a browser plug-in that acts as a text-to-speech reader for any online content, so you can listen instead of read. Paid subscriptions are available, but this service is free for up to one hour of listening per month.

3. Listen

This quick and easy TTS site uses the Google Text to Speech API to convert short snippets of text into natural-sounding synthetic speech. Listen online or download an MP3. You’re limited to just 100 characters at a time, but the voice quality is great, and more than 100 languages are available (including Esperanto!).

Listen - best text to speech online

4. FromTextToSpeech.com

Looking for an easy way to create long TTS MP3s, maybe for a utilitarian voice over or study guide? FromTextToSpeech.com offers up to 50,000 characters per TTS conversion, the most generous count on our list. It’s only good for MP3 conversions, and the processing time was pretty long during testing—it took about a minute to handle just 80 characters. The service is also only available in English, with just a few voices. But if your main concern is character count, this could be the TTS tool for you.

FromTextToSpeech.com - best text to speech online

5. NaturalReader

NaturalReader adds accessibility features to a browser-based TTS reader. Adjust text size or turn on OpenDyslexic font. Get unlimited use of the service’s free voices, which are strong enough, with four U.S. English speakers and seven other languages available. NaturalReader offers commercial licenses for a fee.

NaturalReader - best text to speech online

6. ttsMP3.com

No one will mistake the voices for a human speaker, but ttsMP3.com processes text quickly and offers both onsite playback and MP3 downloads. It offers more than 20 languages, plus four English accents: U.S., British, Indian, and Australian. Text is limited to 3,000 characters at a time. There are no playback controls other than Read, but a helpful list of SSML (it’s like HTML, but for TTS) commands allows you to control the performance.

ttsMP3.com - best text to speech online

7. Free TTS

Free TTS brings Google’s high-quality TTS voices to an easy-to-use browser tool. Enter up to 5,000 characters of text, with more than 10 U.S. English voices and about 30 total languages and dialects available. Listen online or download an MP3. Free TTS also supports SSML, giving users more control over speaking styles—but free accounts can only convert 6,000 characters per week.

Free TTS - best text to speech online

8. Text-to-Speech Tool

This TTS provider sources voices from established services: Amazon’s Polly and Microsoft TTS. This allows it to offer better quality output in a stripped-down, browser-based service. Within this tool, Microsoft TTS voices cover more than 30 languages, many overlapping the 16 offered by Amazon. English-speakers can choose from 13 high-quality voices from each provider, for a total of 26 options. Controls include volume, rate, and pitch. Downloadable MP3s are available.

Text-to-Speech Tool - best text to speech online

9. Text To MP3

The voices on this free TTS converter are more machine-like than others on this list, but the site occupies a unique niche. There’s no pre-conversion playback; you have to generate an MP3 to hear a block of text, and there’s a 300-word limit per use. But an integrated menu of background music adds a little fun. Text To MP3 speaks English, German, French, Italian, Spanish, and Turkish, with a few voice options for each.

Text To MP3 - best text to speech online

10. TTS Reader

This free text-to-speech reader features simple controls and reads plaintext, PDF, and epub uploads, in addition to a standard text field. Whereas the other TTS reader on our list—Intelligent Speaker—is a browser plug-in, this one is simply a website; drag-and-drop or copy-paste content to start your TTS conversion. The outstanding feature of TTS Reader is that it saves its progress through a text block. Users can close the browser, come back later, and pick up where they left off.

TTS Reader - best text to speech online

Text-To-Speech Online Tools From ReadSpeaker

If you’re looking for the best text-to-speech online tool available, you probably won’t find it on a list of free websites. Many of these sites prohibit commercial use—and that includes NFTs, if you’re thinking of following in Voiceverse’s footsteps. When you need lifelike TTS voices with full commercial licensing, find the right partner.

ReadSpeaker’s speech production solutions operate on the cloud or on your server. They generate natural, human-like voices—including custom branded voices—by harnessing neural networks to mirror human expression. ReadSpeaker provides synthetic speech for websites, apps, voice user interfaces, public announcement systems, IVR, and more. Browse our case studies to find out how companies are already benefiting from these best-in-class text-to-speech services.

ReadSpeaker’s speechMaker TTS production packages support more than 50 languages, with 200 voices and growing—each of which can be customized by speed, pitch, and even word-by-word pronunciation. To experience ReadSpeaker yourself, try our demo tool here.

Request TTS Voice Samples

Listen to ReadSpeaker’s neural TTS voices in dozens of languages and personas—or inquire about your very own custom branded voice. Start the conversation today!

Speechify is available to all Star Tribune users through Star Tribune’s Listen feature.

Speechify is available to all Moneywise users through Moneywise’s Listen feature.

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Text to Speech

4.5/5117,800+4M+ users

Speechify is the leading text to speech app in all app stores. With about about 20M+ downloads and 150K+ reviews, it is one of the fastest growing apps in its category.

Our text to online text to speech converter produces the most natural sounding voices. You can 5x your reading speed.

You can try it free today!

Text to Speech Chrome Extension

I used to hate school because I’d spend hours just trying to read the assignments. Listening has been totally life changing. This app saved my education.

Ana, student with dyslex

Ana, student with dyslex

Speechify has made my editing so much faster and easier when I’m writing. I can hear an error and fix it right away. Now I can’t write without it.

Daniel, writer

Daniel, writer

Speechify makes reading so much easier. English is my second language and listening while I follow along in a book has seriously improved my skills.

Lou, avid reader

Lou, avid reader

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What is text to speech

Text to speech is also known as TTS, read aloud, or even speech synthesis. It simply means using artificial intelligence to read words aloud be; it from a PDF, email, docs, or any website.  There isn’t a voice artist recording phrases or words, or even the entire article. Speech generation is done on-the-fly, in real time, with natural sounding AI voices.

And that’s the beauty of it all. You don’t have to wait. You simply press play and artificial intelligence makes the words come alive instantly, in a very natural sounding voice. You can change voices and accents across multiple languages.

Listen to any article. Easily scan any printed material and convert the image to audio.

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Text to speech features

🚀 Official celeb voices Snoop Dogg & Gwyneth Paltrow official and exclusive voices with more celebrity voices to come.
✅ Listen at any speed Our high-quality AI voices can read up to 9x faster than the average reading speed, so you can learn even more in less time. While it isn’t easy to listen to 900 words per minute, but who are we to limit what you are capable of? Most other text to speech readers do go that fast. Try us out today. Ease into 380 words per minute and train your ears to listen faster and slowly increase the speed to as fast as you need it to be.
🚀 Listen on desktop or mobile devices Anything you’ve saved to your Speechify library instantly syncs across devices so you can listen to anything, anywhere, anytime.
✅ Natural-sounding human voices Our reading voices sound more fluid and human-like than any other AI reader so you can understand and remember more.
🚀 Multi lingual and high quality natural sounding voices Enjoy high-fidelity speech in 30+ languages with multiple voices. Some of the languages available are Arabic, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian Bokmål, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, & Ukrainian.
✅ Free audio file download With our free text to speech online converter you can type, paste, or even upload a file and convert it to speech. You can then download it as an audio file to use as a voice over or for any other applications. The premium subscritption to Speechify offers HD voices and even official celebrity voices such as Snoop Dog & Gwyneth Paltrow.
🚀 Document upload Have a large document you need converted to speech? No problem. Just upload it to our online text to speech app and get it converted to text within seconds. Try it in the demo, now!

Text to speech use cases

Speechify was first built to serve a single purpose; to help with dyslexia. But the use case for text to speech app with the best sounding voice exploded. If you love to read, need to read, or struggle with reading, Speechify is for you.

👩‍🎓 Students Students of any grade can benefit from TTS. Read faster and retain much more with Speechify. You can listen to your notes or text book and follow along while stimulating audio and visual inputs.
♿️ Those with disabilities Speechify was created by Cliff Weitzman who struggled with dyslexia. It helped him excel at his studies. Speechify is perfect for those who also struggle with dyslexia. Other disabilities such as dry eyes, migraines, TBIs or any illness thats a barrier to reading. Our mission has been constant – remove barriers to reading.
👨‍⚖️ Professionals like lawyers & doctors Professions that require an extensive amount of reading such as lawyers, doctors, editors and such can read important case files quickly and become more familiar with their work in shorter amounts of time
👧 Story time Parents can use text to speech to read their children’s favorite books either at home or those long car rides. You don’t have to turn on an iPad or a movie to entertain your kids. They can listen to their favorite stories over and over again. Reading has proven to have significant results in early childhood development. Let them read, plenty.
🎙️ Those that love podcasts Reading your favorite blog, news article, or a lengthy PDF but it’s time to work out? No problem. Simply press play and Speechify will convert your article into speech, instantly. You don’t have to be stuck to a screen to read.

The use cases are plenty. Try Speechify free and see how it can help you in your use case. Tell us, we’d love to know how.

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Speechify text to speech online reviews

Kate Marfori

Kate MarforiProduct Manager at The Star Tribune

Read More

With Speechify’s API, we can offer our users a new and accessible way to consume our content. We’ve seen that readers who choose to listen to articles with Speechify are on average 20% more engaged than users who choose not to listen.

Susy Botello

Susy Botello

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Thanks for sharing this.I love this feature. I just tweeted at
you on how much I like it. The voice is great and not at all
like the text-to-speech I am used to listening to. I am a
podcaster and I think this will help a lot of people multitask
a bit, especially if they are interrupted with incoming
emails or whatever. You can read-along but continue
reading if your eyes need to go elsewhere. Hope you keep
this. It’s already in other web publications. I also see it in
some news sites. So I think it could become a standard that
readers expect when they read online. Can I vote twice?

Renato Vargas

Renato Vargas

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I just started using Medium more and I absolutely love this
feature. I’ve listened to my own stories and the Al does the
inflections just as I would. Many complain that they can’t
read their own stories, but let’s be honest. How many
stories would go without an audio version if you had to do
all of them yourself? I certainly appreciate it. Thanks for
this!!

Dawn :)

Dawn 🙂

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Oh! How cool — I love it 🙂 The voice is surprisingly natural
sounding! My eyes took a much appreciated rest for a bit.

I’ve been a long time subscriber to Audible on Amazon. I
think this is Great 😀 Thank you!

Paola Rios Schaaf

Paola Rios Schaaf

Read More

Super excited about this! We are all spending too much
time staring at our screens. Using another sense to take in
the great content at Medium is awesome.

Ananya

Ananya

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Hi Warren, I am one of those small, randomly selected
people, and I ABSOLUTELY love this feature. I have
consumed more ideas than I ever have on Medium. And
also as a non-native English speaker, this is really helping
me to improve my pronunciation. Keep this forevermore!
Love, Ananya:)

Tigonal

Tigonal

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This is the single most important feature you can role out
for me. I simply don’t have the time to read all the articles I
would like to on Medium. If I could listen to the articles I
could consume at least 3X the amount of Medium content I
do now.

Andrew Picken

Andrew Picken

Read More

Love this feature Warren. I use it when I’m reading, helps
me churn through reading and also stay focused on the
article (at a good speed) when my willpower is low! Keeping
me more engaged..

Nic E.

Nic E.

Read More

I was THRILLED the other day when I saw the audio option.
I didn’t know how it got there, but I pressed play, and then I
was blown away hearing the words that I wrote being
narrated

Neeramitra Reddy

Neeramitra Reddy

Read More

LOVE THISSS. As someone who loves audio almost as
much as reading, this is absolute gold

Get Text to Speech Today

And begin removing barriers to reading online

Text-to-speech software goes by a few names. Some refer to it as TTS, read aloud, or even speech synthesis; for the more engineered name. Today, it simply means using artificial intelligence to read words aloud be; it from a PDF, email, docs, or any website.  There isn’t a voice artist recording phrases or words, or even the entire article. Speech generation is done on-the-fly.

About 1 million users trust Speechify Chrome extension. It’s highly rated and is one of the fastest growing apps. Once you install the extension you can then get the App for your iPhone, Android, and even Safari. This is great for productivity or people with disabilities such as dyslexia, or others that cause reading to be a barrier.

Speechify has a handy text highlighter that reads out selected text so you can read along. Try it on your Chromebook, desktop, or mobile device.

Turning text to audio in Chrome is really easy. Install Speechify Chrome extension for free and press “Play”. It’s as simple as that. Try it, install text to speech for Chrome.

Yes there is! Speechify is the leading TTS app and offers various languages and accents. English, Spanish, Italian, and various others. Install it for free today!

Google test to speech is built more for developers. They can employ Google to convert text to audio via API in their apps. Speechify also offers the same option. In addition, Speechify also offers text to speech as an app or a Chrome extension that anyone can just install and hit play.

Listening, speaking, reading, and writing – these are your four basic language skills. Two of them – speaking and writing – are referred to as productive language skills. This is because you have to produce something, either in spoken or written form. It’s challenging to find online tools, especially free online tools, to help you with those skills. You need feedback once you have spoken or written something, and most technology right now still needs to be improved to do that well and for free.

In contrast, there are lots of free resources online to help you with reading and listening, which are your receptive skills. This post is all about some websites you can freely access to help you work on your listening skills. They can be used for either intensive or extensive listening practice, depending on your level. I have 20 websites to start you with – hopefully more than enough.

But first, are you self-directed?

Now, to really make good use of the resources I’m going to share with you, it’s helpful if you are a self-directed learner. Self-directed learners are people who take control of their own learning. They don’t depend on teachers to assign appropriate homework or answer questions. Self-directed learners can create or already have in place a system to help them plan, monitor, and evaluate their own learning – as noted by researchers Vandergrift and Goh. Self-directed learners are also capable of selecting their own materials for practice and for working with the materials by themselves.

Not all language learners have those skills yet – even more advanced learners. If you’re not a self-directed learner yet, don’t worry. If you think you need help developing a study plan for any resources you find online, find someone to help you. An English teacher is an obvious choice, but you can also ask someone who has had a lot of success in studying on their own.

Many of the websites I’m sharing with you today are from an article published by my friend and colleague, Dr. Louise Ohashi (see below). She has divided her selection of listening resources into four categories (or groups), and these are stories, songs, talks and conversations, and news and current affairs. The resources in each of these categories of listening materials have different features and offer benefits to your learning.

1. Stories

Stories are great for learning another language because they are usually enjoyable and motivating, and you typically get a lot of descriptive language.

The Fable Cottage

The first free site in this category is The Fable Cottage. This site is designed for learners of four other European languages in addition to English. Voice actors read well-known stories, such as Snow White, supported with music, video images, and illustrations. In the English version of each story, you can hide the transcript or make it visible. Each story is five to sixteen minutes long. It’s a good site to help you work on understanding both main ideas and details, learn new vocabulary, identify grammar patterns, and improve pronunciation through shadowing.

Storyline Online

On Storyline Online is a website where you can watch videos of people reading children’s books aloud in English, with the option of viewing subtitles. Although this site was designed to develop literacy skills in children, it’s also great for mature English language learners, especially if your level is similar to American kindergarten to grade four. There are some famous narrators you’ll recognize, such as Elijah Wood from the Harry Potter movie series.

If you think you’d enjoy watching celebrities doing this, you may find this genre of listening very motivating. The videos here are also between five and sixteen minutes. Listening to stories on this website will expose you to a good range of vocabulary and grammatical structures that are supported with with pictures and video, read at a moderate speed, and read by people with a variety of accents.

ESL Fast

ESL Fast offers short stories with audio and text for intermediate students. It’s not the most beautiful website, but a good thing about it is the large number of stories available – and there are hundreds. At the bottom of the page, you’ll see a vocabulary list for each audio recording, plus a variety of exercises, including dictations. The site also offers easy conversations if you have a more beginner level of English. You can listen to short conversations on a variety of topics and speak to Mike, a “robot” that replies to questions and statements that you type in a dialogue box.

Movies Club

Movies are an audio-visual form of stories, and the ultimate short form is the movie trailer. Movies Club is a simple website where you can listen to trailers and try to complete cloze (or fill-in-the blank) activities while you enjoy watching a movie trailer. The website divides the trailers into categories, but not levels.

2. Songs

It’s not only language learners who love songs. The Internet offers many websites where you can find the lyrics to all types of songs in many different languages. I’ll talk about a couple of options for English language learners here.

Lyrics Training

Lyrics Training is one of the many tools online where you can listen to songs with or without viewing the lyrics. It can be used for both intensive listening and extensive listening.

This is a “freemium” site, which means you get some free access, but then have to start paying for more. This study aid is popular as an app for smartphones, but can also be accessed through a website. You can sing along to songs in Karaoke (or カラオケ) mode, or challenge yourself in game mode, where you complete fill-in-the-gap activities at different levels of difficulty. The system keeps track of your progress and you can compete with other users to try to get the best score.

Lyrics Gaps

A very similar type of website which is completely free, at least while it is still in BETA, is Lyrics Gaps. On this site there is an added google translate site where you can hover over a word in the lyrics, and it will translate the English word into multiple different languages. You can search for songs by artist or by difficult level – easy, medium or hard. Fill-in-the-gap tasks where you type the missing words are at three levels, and there is a quiz function where you have to quickly choose between three possible words. Registered members can compete with other members to get the best score on this site as well.

If you enjoy music, tools like these make for great listening practice because there tends to be a lot of repetition in the chorus, and music lovers generally enjoy hearing songs over and over again – a pleasant way to study on your own. Through lyrics websites like this, you can learn new vocabulary, improve your pronunciation, get used to grammar patterns, improve your spelling, and even increase you typing speed.

3. Talks and Dialogues

Listening to people talk about a range of topics is great listening practice because it exposed you to natural usage patterns that you’re likely to hear in real life.

TED Talks (and the TEDICT app)

The first two tools in this category are TED Talks, which is a large collection of recorded live speeches, and TEDICT, which is an app (for iphone or for android) that provides you with a range of language learning tasks based on TED Talks.

The TED Talks website and app were created by TED (Technology, Education and Design). This is a non-profit organization that aims to share “ideas worth spreading.” The organization hosts live events and shares recordings through its digital resources. There are now over 3,100 talks from speakers from all around the globe. The audio content is in English, but you can access subtitles and transcripts translated into over 100 languages. As a viewer, you can search by topic, subtitle/transcript language and video length to find the talk that you want to listen to.

While watching a video, subtitles can be switched on or off and viewers can refer to an interactive transcript. The transcript is interactive because if you click on any part of it, you will be taken to the corresponding (or the matching) section within the video. This is very useful when you want to listen to the pronunciation of a particular word or phrase, or if you want to check how something is translated. Just like with YouTube videos, you can also change the video speed. Slowing down a video can help you with comprehension.

If you want extra value when practicing intensive and extensive listening, the TEDICT app will give it to you. You can listen to segments (or parts) of TED Talks to practice dictation tasks. If you select the TEDICT function you can type what you hear or use speech recognition to complete the task. If you find that too difficult, you can the TEDICTisy function, which will allow you to select the words required to complete the dictation tasks from a list of options. With the Repeat Player function, you can also do shadowing activities. This function cuts videos into shorter parts. You then listen to one part at a time, and then try to accurately repeat when the voice recorder is activated. You can listen to yourself before moving to the next part to check your pronunciation and accuracy. Now sadly, the TEDICT app is not completely free. The lite version is free, however, but this means you only have this functionality for some videos, or for some parts of videos.

ELLLO

English Language Listening Library Online (or ELLLO with three Ls) has been around for a long time. It’s a large collection of audio and video files that give listeners access to clips made by speakers worldwide who speak English at various degrees of proficiency. There are over 1500 audio recordings and 800 videos. Each audio file comes with a script, vocabulary support and a comprehension quiz.

The recordings are short – some less than a minute long – and usually include one or two speakers. The Mixer section of the website allows you to listen to a particular topic from different perspectives. In the One Minute English video files, one or two speakers answer a pre-set question in one minute or less. You can listen while hiding the transcript or making it visible, and there are vocabulary lists, additional exercises or quizzes, as well as downloadable links. You can search for audio and video recordings by English level (there are 6). You can search by topic, media type, or speaker nationality. The nationality of speakers is useful for you if you want to hear different English accents from around the world.

ESL Lounge

ESL Lounge is a website with a listening section that supplies listening comprehension exercises divided into four levels of difficulty, as well as a business English section. There is a transcript that you can download with the audio file, and there are different kinds of comprehension exercises (multiple choice, cloze, true/false…etc.) There are no pre-listening activities or follow-up activities, however.

The British Council’s Learning English has a great listening practice section that is helpfully organized by CERF level. You can find short listening activities at the A1 or A2 beginner levels, the B1 and B2 intermediate level, and the more advanced C1 level. You can take a test online to get an idea of your level, too. There are plenty of accompanying activities on screen and for download. The British Council also have a special site for teenagers, which is great if you are a high school or even a university student, as the topics are more related to your needs.

ESL teacher Randall Davis put together a very impressive site some years ago called the Cyber Listening Lab. His site is filled with listening quizzes. One of the things you’ll notice right away about the site is that the quizzes are divided into Easy, Medium and Difficult. Each quiz comes with a pre-listening activity, a multiple-choice quiz based on the listening, and post-listening activities that include vocabulary exercises. These are wonderful, ready-to-use listening activities.

Talk English

Talk English has listening lessons for basic, intermediate, and advanced levels. You can listen to a conversation, complete a multiple-choice quiz, and read a script of the audio. You can use the website for free, but if you pay a one-time fee, you get unlimited downloads, which included hundreds of dialogues at different levels. I think the advanced section is not really that advanced, so if you are an intermediate learner, try it!

Listen A Minute

Sean Banville is an experienced EFL teacher who runs many websites for language learners. I’ll talk about him again later, but in this section, I’ll mention his site, Listen A Minute. On this site, which is for elementary to pre-intermediate students, you can select a listening lesson from almost 500 options according to topic, arranged alphabetically on the main page. With each one-minute audio recording on the topic you chose, you can try the online quiz, read the script, do a fill-in-the-blanks listening activity, and do other activities on grammar, spelling, and/or vocabulary for the lesson. There are even discussion questions, writing prompts, and other follow-ups that are useful if you have a study partner or want to journal. There is an answer key provided as well.

4. News and Current Affairs

ABCニュース英語

Particularly useful for Japanese native speakers is ABCニュース英語 (ABC News English). This website is produced by Japan’s national broadcaster, NHK. The materials are aimed at Japanese speakers who are learning English, with the interface in Japanese and all English listening tasks offering Japanese support. So, if you’re not a native speaker of Japanese, probably, you don’t need this one.

There is a new video clip is uploaded to the site four to six times a week. Each five-minute clip has an overview of a current news item in Japanese and a key word or phrase, then a short, authentic news clip played three times, first with English audio and subtitles, and then with English audio and Japanese subtitles, and finally with English audio and no subtitles. There is a lot of support in Japanese, so if you’re a Japanese speaker, this site might be good for you.

VOA Learning English

Probably one of the most widely known news sources in accessible English is the multimedia platform, Voice of America (VOA). Like most news sites, it offers content on local and international news. There are many different parts to it. There is level specific content specifically for learning English at learningenglish.voanews.com. Video programs and audio programs here are separated into sections for beginner, intermediate and advanced levels. You can find not only news items, but also resources that are designed to help you learn news-related vocabulary and develop news literacy skills (which means the ability to read). Each of the recordings is no more than three minutes long, and there are subtitles. You can also make use of an app for iPhone or Android smartphones that teaches you how to say and use a word in a sentence.

VOA Student Union

Now, you can also try Student Union from Voice of America, which is described as “news for students and youth worldwide.” This section is mostly written articles, but there are some are accompanied by related videos. These give you the opportunity to learn about topics in different ways. This part of VOA or Voice of America is not specifically designed for learners of English as a second or foreign language, so I would recommend this site for more for extensive listening for advanced learners. There are not subtitles in the videos.

BBC Learning English

The BBC or British Broadcasting Corporation, has a website called Learning English that is dedicated to helping learners of English. There are a lot of resources here for you, and not all of them are related to news, but since the BBC is a news corporation, I’ll focus on that section. You can search by level, but sadly you cannot search by media type. However, many of the resources are multimedia-rich, including video. I like this one series of lessons with short videos about fake news, which is a very timely and important topic these days.

Breaking News English

The main website of Sean Banville, who I mentioned earlier, is called Breaking News English. This website is packed full of news articles with accompanying audio that is read by Mr. Banville himself. His news lessons are available in up to seven levels, and he has a large variety of activities to go with each article. You can listen at different speeds, with or without the transcript. As a teacher, I have been making use of this site for many years. The website is not very attractive, but it’s useful. Sean Banville also runs other sites, and I mentioned one of them earlier. Check them out!

Newsy

My last source for you today is Newsy, another source of short video news segments about a variety of topics from business to entertainment, international to US news. Each video is posted with a transcript, giving you the choice to just listen, or listen and read. The site offers an app for iPhone, iPad, Android and Blackberry, and is probably best for more advanced English learners.

So, now you have a list of tools you can explore for your own listening practice. I didn’t mention that of course YouTube is also a great source for listening materials. I have already created part 1 and part 2 posts on that topic, so do read them.

I challenge you to try out some of the website I mentioned today. See if they suit your style of learning. If you are studying English formally at school, you can always go to a teacher to get help to plan, monitor, and evaluate your own listening study. Thanks for watching and I hope you learned at least one new website you can make use of to help you practice your listening skills.

Remember, however, that you won’t see progress unless you practice often and regularly, repeating some activities for review. Sometimes you’ll have to practice even when you don’t feel like it. That’s the way we make progress!

References:

Knowles, M.S. (1975). Self-Directed Learning A Guide for Learners and Teachers. N.Y. :Cambridge Books.

Ohashi, L. (2019). Listen up! Useful materials for intensive and extensive listening. In Robert Chartrand, F. & Forsythe, E. (Eds.) AI and Machine Learning in Language Education. Selected papers from the JALTCALL2019 Conference, Tokyo, Japan. https://jaltcall.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/AI-and-Machine-Learning-in-Language-Education.pdf

Vandergrift, L., & Goh, C. M. (2012). Teaching and learning second language listening. Routledge.

Pronouncing English words fluently and confidently can be difficult, especially for new words.

But the proper English pronunciation is important so that your coworkers, managers, customers, and business partners understand what you mean.

If you are not sure how to pronounce a difficult word, how can you be confident? 

For example, how do you say the word ubiquitous? Not sure? Let’s look it up in the dictionary: it says you should pronounce it as /juːˈbɪkwɪtəs/. If you don’t know the phonetic alphabet, you are probably still unsure.

Believe me, I know how confusing English pronunciation can be. Pronunciation in English is very difficult, because there are no hard rules, as in some other languages, where one letter equals one sound. Moreover, there are a lot of sounds in the English language that might not exist in your native language.

But don’t give up just yet!

*Note: This article may contain affiliate links, which means we may receive a small commission, at no cost to you, if you make a purchase through a link.

You are on the right track and with the right tools, I will show you how you can achieve more confidence when it comes to your English pronunciation. You will see, these tools are fun to use.

Knowing the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) can be very useful. But don’t worry if you don’t know the Phonetic Alphabet yet. You can use these free pronunciation websites and apps to practice and improve your pronunciation.

Practicing the correct pronunciation is key in becoming a confident and understandable English speaker.

Luckily, there are some great, free tools you can use online to train your English pronunciation. Read on for my selection of free pronunciation apps and websites and how you can use them.

  1. Online dictionary

Why should you use it?  One of my favorite online English dictionaries is the Cambridge Learner’s Dictionary because it is easy to use, it gives you an easy definition in English and you can click on the button to hear a very clear pronunciation audio sample. You can choose between American English and British English pronunciation, which is useful.

How do you use it? Simply search for a word on the website and click on the “Listen” button next to the word. Repeat the pronunciation and do this a couple of times. Because it pronounces short words and phrases, you can listen and repeat it yourself many, many times until you feel confident.

  1. Speechling

Why should you use it? I recently discovered this new pronunciation tool. Speechling helps you improve your pronunciation by recording yourself and getting feedback on your pronunciation. With the “coaching” concept you get personal feedback from real English speakers. It can be hard to listen to yourself while you are speaking, so recording yourself is a great way to notice sounds. Getting human feedback on your pronunciation is even better. I like the focus on feedback and progress, which will motivate you to improve your English pronunciation.

How do you use it? Unlike Forvo, Speechling has high-quality examples of pronunciations, so you can listen to them and compare your pronunciation to how native speakers pronounce phrases. Listen to the native pronunciation. Record yourself and compare your pronunciation to the native pronunciation. What are the differences? Then, try again. Submit your recording and a coach will give you feedback on your pronunciation. After some time, you can go back to your old recordings and see how much progress you have made.

  1. Rhinospike

Why should you use it?  This website is easy to use, free and gives you real input by native speakers. It lets you request audio recordings of a text by native speakers. This way, you learn the real pronunciation of a native speaker. I especially like this platform, because it is based on sharing. You are also welcome to help other learners by pronouncing something in your native language in return.

How do you use it?  Submit a text you would like to know how to pronounce. Then, a native speaker will read the text and send you a recording of the pronunciation. You can then download the audio file, listen to it, repeat, and try to imitate the pronunciation yourself! Another way to use this website is to listen to existing audio files that have been submitted by other users in the past.

  1. HelloTalk App

Why should you use it?  This app is a great tool for language exchange with native speakers. With HelloTalk you can train your speaking skills in English by talking to real people and get immediate feedback. The app gives you the opportunity to meet people from all over the world and help them with their language skills, as well. Interacting with real people is very rewarding and motivating, so I highly recommend using this app for learning English.

How do you use it?  You can download the app on the iTunes App Store and Google Play You can find a partner for online language exchange. Once you have chatted with someone, you can call them for free and speak to them via the app. Then, they will immediately tell you when you are making a mistake and show you how to improve your pronunciation. But your partner will also tell you when your pronunciation is good and understandable. Speaking more often will make you more confident and fluent with practice.

  1. Pronunciation Power App

Why should you use it? Believe it or not, pronunciation is actually a physical activity. The Pronunciation Power App shows you how to pronounce sounds in English. Especially, as an adult learner, these lessons and exercises will be very helpful because there are many sounds you might be unfamiliar with in English.

How do you use it? The app is available for download on the iTunes App Store and Google Play Watch the video instructions to see how to move your tongue, mouth, and lips. You can switch between the front view and side view of the mouth movements. Then, practice the sounds by repeating the movements yourself. There are lessons and also many exercises and sample words for you to practice the English pronunciation.

  1. Aksent App

Why should you use it? This app is great and I find it almost addicting. I use it for any language and it is so much fun to use because it is like a game. The Aksent App uses Artificial Intelligence (AI) to give you a score for your pronunciation of a word, so you can improve your pronunciation. Also, the app teaches you the English pronunciation in many different English accents. For example, you can choose Australian English, Irish English, and much more.

How do you use it?  Listen, repeat and get feedback. You can download the app on the iTunes App Store. Select the English accent, type the (difficult) English word and the app will let you listen to the pronunciation. Then, you have to record your pronunciation and the app tells you how well you pronounced the word by giving you a score out of 100. Repeat this with the same word until you get a score of 100.

7. Forvo

Why should you use it? This website is a great resource based on a community which uploads pronunciations by native speakers. The website has a large collection of pronunciations of difficult English words in its dictionary. Its mission is to pronounce all the words in the world.

How should you use it? On the website, choose the English language. Then, you can either see the most recent pronunciations or search for a specific word to hear how it is pronounced. What is special is that the website offers pronunciations of both words and phrases. Give it a try!

Contribute in your own language to help other learners, as well!

Which is your favorite tool?

Remember that becoming fluent in English requires you to do the right things regularly. If you use these tools regularly they will help you become a more confident English speaker and you will be better understood. I really hope these websites and apps are useful for your language learning!

Now we would like to hear from you:

Have you used any of these tools?

Do you have any apps or websites to add? What are your experiences?

Let us know how it goes by leaving a comment!

Happy learning!

word of the day resolute resolute — word of the day

Use the adjective resolute to describe a purposeful and determined person, someone who wants to do something very much, and won’t let anything get in the way.

  • Normal — Default (1);
  • Slow — Slow playback speed (0.75);
  • Slowest — Slowest playback speed (0.5).

All words

How do you really learn new English words?

Get the lowdown on every word.

Look up a word in our dictionary — you’ll read a friendly explanation that you’ll actually remember. It’s as if your favorite teacher were explaining the word to you.
Clever usage tips and real-world examples show you how words live in the wild so you’ll be more confident using them yourself.

Use YouTube to improve your English pronunciation

YOLOlang is a very easy way to learn the correct pronunciation of words by hearing them spoken on YouTube videos. It gives you fast, unbiased answers about how languages are spoken by real people and in context instead of what’s prescriptively correct. Search for videos in YouTube subtitles with ease.

Free Online Audio Dictionary of English Pronunciation

YOLOlang is the place where you’ll find millions of words and phrases pronounced in their original languages.

Get the lowdown on every word.

Look up a word in our dictionary — you’ll read a friendly explanation that you’ll actually remember. It’s as if your favorite teacher were explaining the word to you.
Clever usage tips and real-world examples show you how words live in the wild so you’ll be more confident using them yourself.

YOLOlang is a very easy way to learn the correct pronunciation of words by hearing them spoken on YouTube videos. It gives you fast, unbiased answers about how languages are spoken by real people and in context instead of what’s prescriptively correct. Search for videos in YouTube subtitles with ease.

Free Online Audio Dictionary of English Pronunciation

YOLOlang is the place where you’ll find millions of words and phrases pronounced in their original languages.

also

Vocabulary level is important because it can save learning time to reach a goal.

Word associations is very effective to vocabulary learning because it helps people to understand words quickly and memorize them effectively.

Sometimes, we don’t know exactly how we sound until we carefully listen to our own voices. So when you’re practicing pronunciation, record yourself and then compare that with the learning material. Get instant feedback from proprietary artificial intelligence technology.

YOLOlang helps you to memorize words in associations (in typical word combinations and phrases), not as isolated words. The ties between words in phrases will help you to remember the word you need.

A list of the irregular verbs in English with their past simple and past participle, and lots of examples

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The list gives you the 1000 most frequently used English words in alphabetical order. Good luck improving your English vocabulary!

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With 2,500 to 3,000 words, you can understand 90% of everyday English conversations, English newspaper and magazine articles, and English used in the workplace.

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Dictation in EnglishBETA

To practice writing from dictation is a perfect way to improve learning English. By listening to the spoken version of the text, you will hear both the natural pronunciation and word-order. By hearing, reading, and pronouncing what you see, you will also improve your grasp of English. We have hundreds of online dictations for beginners through advanced students.

How does it work?

  • Listen carefully to the audio file. The speaker will read each sentence twice. Once at normal speed, then a slower speed for easier writing. You can replay these files as needed.
  • Write the text into the text field.
  • Once you are done, you can click the button to have your dictation evaluated.
  • We instantly check and correct your text, allowing you to see mistakes and receive a final grade.

Like this post? Please share to your friends:
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