World Languages in L10N

Dive into our detailed language reports offering valuable insights from a localization perspective. Listen to our human voice talents available and see if we can help you with high quality Text to Speech neural voices, transcription or voice cloning capabilities. Our reports also cover a Language Overview, Market Insights, Cultural Context, Writing System, Phonetics, Grammatical Structure, Media Layout, Localization Challenges, and other Technical Considerations like subtitle best practices, etc.

World Languages in L10N

Dive into our detailed language reports offering valuable insights from a localization perspective, and listen to our human voice talents available.

Jola-Fonyi, a language spoken by around 410,000 in Senegal and Gambia. Part of the Bak language family.

Djimini Senoufo, a Senoufo language spoken by around 130,000 in Côte d’Ivoire.

Dawro, an Omotic language spoken by approximately 500,000 in the Dawro Zone, Ethiopia.

Chiduruma, a Bantu language spoken by around 90,000 people primarily in Tanzania.

Toro So Dogon, spoken by around 50,000 in Mali, part of the Dogon language family.

Central Dusun, a Dusunic language spoken by approximately 150,000 in Sabah, Malaysia.

Desiya, a Dravidian language spoken by around 200,000 in Odisha, India.

Daasanach, a Cushitic language spoken by around 50,000 in Ethiopia and Kenya.

Dogosé, a Gur language spoken by approximately 20,000 in Burkina Faso.

Lukpa, a Gur language spoken by approximately 200,000 in Togo and Benin.

Western Dani, spoken by approximately 200,000 in Papua, Indonesia. Part of the Trans-New Guinea family.

Mid Grand Valley Dani, spoken by around 60,000 in Papua, Indonesia.

Dan, spoken by around 1 million people in Côte d’Ivoire and Liberia. Part of the Mande family.

Eastern Maroon Creole, spoken by around 50,000 in Suriname, a Creole of English and African languages.

Official Name: Dhivehi. Alternate Names: Maldivian. Language Family: Indo-European, Indo-Aryan. Historical Background: D…

Dinka Rek, a major dialect of Dinka spoken by around 1 million in South Sudan.

Dinka, spoken by approximately 2 million in South Sudan, part of the Nilotic family.

Digo, a Bantu language spoken by around 400,000 in Kenya and Tanzania.

Didinga, a Surmic language spoken by approximately 100,000 in South Sudan.

Dhimal, a Sino-Tibetan language spoken by around 20,000 in Nepal and India.