01
What this text-to-speech tool does
This tool takes text you already have and turns it into spoken audio. The editor, language selector, voice selector, speed control, audio player, and download action stay in one place. It is useful when you need narration rather than a writing assistant: the service does not create a wedding speech, graduation speech, or presentation draft. It only reads the text you provide and returns an audio file after the server-side provider completes the request.
02
How to convert text into speech
Paste a finished passage into the editor and check the visible character count. Select the language, choose a built-in voice or add an authorized reference recording, and set the speaking speed. A short preview can help before generating the full passage. Select MP3 for a compact file or WAV for an uncompressed editing workflow, then listen in the browser and download after the request succeeds.
03
Multilingual text and voice selection
The studio supports English and Chinese voice generation, with built-in voices organized by language. You can also upload or record an authorized MP3 or WAV reference voice for a one-time cloned generation. Punctuation, abbreviations, numbers, names, and mixed-language passages can affect pronunciation, so preview a representative sentence first.
04
Practical text-to-speech use cases
Text-to-speech works well for product demos, accessibility drafts, training narration, course lessons, podcast inserts, video voiceovers, pronunciation checks, and listening to written notes. Short passages help you evaluate pacing, while longer scripts benefit from clear punctuation and paragraph breaks. Always make sure you have the right to use the source text and that the chosen voice license fits your intended publication. Do not use generated speech for impersonation, fraud, harassment, or bypassing voice verification.
05
Server-side generation and private credentials
Every generation request goes through the application server, but the browser never receives the provider API key. Guests receive a private, no-store response. For signed-in users, generated audio can be retained for the configured history window and streamed only through an authenticated task endpoint. Task logs omit the original text and uploaded reference audio.