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Press Releases from TRANSLIT.CC (4 total)

Multilingual Transliteration Service Now Supports Seven Languages

TRANSLIT.CC, the worldwide provider of online web services, announces this week release of the new free transliteration web service to support speakers and learners of Russian, Ukrainian, Bulgarian, Greek, Belarusian, Georgian and Armenian languages. The Russian transliteration service available at http://www.translit.cc is now complemented with six additional language converters. These are Ukrainian transliteration converter at http://ua.translit.cc , Bulgarian at http://bg.translit.cc , Belarusian at http://by.translit.cc , Greek at http://gr.translit.cc , Georgian at

Multilingual Transliteration Service Now Supports Three Languages

TRANSLIT.CC, the worldwide provider of online web services, announces today release of the new free transliteration web service to support speakers and learners of Russian, Ukrainian and Armenian languages. The service started to operate back in 2007 with only support of one language - Russian. With the time is was growing and now it supports three different languages. For all three languages it is possible to perform spell checking and use

Frymer and Co. launches new online Ukrainian translit service

Frymer & Co., the worldwide provider of online web services, announces the release of the new free transliteration web service to support Ukrainian speakers and learners that is accessible for everyone online. This service uses latest WEB 2.0 technologies to allow users to transliterate (convert) Latin-lettered text to Cyrillic alphabet which is a common scenario for email conversations between people using PCs without any support for Slavic languages. Thousands of users

New Online Transliteration Service for Russian Language Launched

Frymer & Co., the worldwide provider of online web services, announces the release of a brand-new free transliteration web service to support Russian speakers and learners that is accessible for everyone online. This service uses latest WEB 2.0 technologies to allow users to transliterate (convert) Latin-lettered text to Cyrillic alphabet which is a common scenario for email conversations between people using PCs without any support for Slavic languages. Thousands of users

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