Translate Into the World's Most Fascinating Languages
From Viking runes to Sumerian cuneiform to Gen Alpha slang — 18 free translation tools, instant results, zero sign-up required.
Our Free Translation Tools
Old English Translator
Anglo-Saxon with thorn (þ), eth (ð) and wynn (ƿ).
Ancient Language Open Translator → 🛡️Old Norse Translator
Viking language with Elder Futhark rune output.
Ancient Language Open Translator → 🏛️Ancient Greek Translator
Attic Greek — language of Plato, Aristotle and the Iliad.
Ancient Language Open Translator → 📜Aramaic Translator
Biblical Aramaic with Syriac script.
Ancient Language Open Translator → 🏺Sumerian Translator
The world's oldest written language — 3100 BC.
Ancient Language Open Translator → 𒀭Cuneiform Translator
Mesopotamian wedge-script — Sumerian, Akkadian, Babylonian.
Writing System Open Translator → 🪓Proto-Germanic Translator
Reconstructed ancestor of English, German and Norse.
Ancient Language Open Translator → ᚱRunic Translator
Convert any text to runes, character by character.
Writing System Open Translator → 🎩Victorian English Translator
Transform modern text into formal 19th-century prose.
Regional Dialect Open Translator → 🎷Cajun French Translator
Louisiana bayou French — an endangered dialect.
Regional Dialect Open Translator → 🐫Egyptian Arabic Translator
Masri — the most widely understood Arabic dialect.
Regional Dialect Open Translator → 🪶Navajo Translator
Diné Bizaad — the WWII Code Talkers' language.
Regional Dialect Open Translator → 🇵🇷Puerto Rican Spanish Translator
Boricua dialect with Taíno and African influences.
Regional Dialect Open Translator → あHiragana Translator
Convert English words and names to Japanese kana.
Writing System Open Translator → 🤙Gen Alpha Slang Translator
Rizz, skibidi, gyatt — the fastest-evolving language.
Modern Style Open Translator → 😈Freak / Internet Text Translator
Leet speak, aesthetic Unicode and zalgo styles.
Modern Style Open Translator → 💼Corporate Jargon Translator
Turn plain speech into polished business-speak and back.
Modern Style Open Translator → ✒️Premium English Translator
Elevate casual writing into sophisticated literary prose.
Modern Style Open Translator →No tools match your search. Try a different word.
Why Choose MultiLangConvert?
Instant Results
Every translation runs in your browser and appears the moment you type. There is nothing to install and no waiting on a server.
Educational First
Each tool sits inside a full guide to the language — its history, writing system and vocabulary. You leave knowing more than you came with.
Privacy by Design
We never store the text you translate. The dictionaries live in your browser, so your words stay on your device.
Languages Others Ignore
Mainstream tools skip Old Norse, Sumerian and Cajun French entirely. We focus on exactly the languages they leave out.
Works Everywhere
The site is mobile-first and fully responsive, so the tools work just as well on a phone as on a desktop.
Genuinely Free
No paywalls, no sign-up and no trial. Every one of the 18 tools is free to use as often as you like.
Language of the Month: Old Norse
Old Norse was the language of the Viking Age, spoken across Scandinavia and the Norse colonies from roughly the 8th to the 15th centuries. It is the parent of modern Icelandic, Norwegian, Danish and Swedish, and it travelled with Viking ships to Iceland, the British Isles, Normandy and even briefly to North America around the year 1000.
Before the Latin alphabet arrived, Norse speakers wrote in runes. The Elder Futhark of 24 characters gave way in the Viking Age to the streamlined Younger Futhark of just 16. Most runestones that survive are not magical spells but practical records — memorials to the dead, declarations of ownership and accounts of brave deeds.
The language left a deep mark on English. During the Viking settlements, English absorbed everyday words we still use without a second thought: sky, knife, egg, husband, ugly, and even the day name Thursday, from Thor. When you speak, you are quietly speaking a little Old Norse.
| English | Old Norse | Survived in Modern English? |
|---|---|---|
| sky | himinn | Yes — "sky" itself comes from Old Norse. |
| knife | knífr | Yes — knife. |
| egg | egg | Yes — egg. |
| husband | húsbóndi | Yes — husband. |
| ugly | uggligr | Yes — from uggr, "fear". |
| saga | saga | Yes — unchanged. |
From the MultiLangConvert Blog
The 10 Most Fascinating Ancient Writing Systems Still Being Decoded
Linear A, the Voynich Manuscript and the Indus Valley script have baffled scholars for generations. Here's what we know — and don't know.
8 min read · Read Article → Language HistoryHow Viking Runes Were Actually Used (It's Not What You Think)
Most runes recorded trade deals and memorials, not magic spells. The true history is far more interesting than the myth.
6 min read · Read Article → LinguisticsIs Sumerian Really the World's Oldest Language? Linguists Explain
The question sounds simple. The full answer requires separating 'oldest written' from 'oldest spoken' — and the difference matters.
5 min read · Read Article →