Thai ki te Polish Whakamāoritanga

TH PL Ko nga hua tere Kei te wātea te API

Ka whakamāoritia... Ka puta tēnei te whakamāoritanga...

Ka whakaingoatia te whakamāoritanga.

Ka waihanga i tētahi kāwanatanga wātea hei whakamāori i ngā tuhinga, ngā tuhipānui, me ētahi atu.

Ka tāuru i te wātea Ka tāurutia te tāurunga

He pēhea te whakawhiti i te Thai ki te Polish

1
Ka tāuru i ōna kupu

Ka tuhituhi, ka tāpoi rānei i tōna kupu Thai ki roto i te pātengi tāuru i runga ake nei. Ka taea e koe te tāuru tae atu ki te 10,000 ngā tohu, te tāurunga rānei i tētahi tuhinga.

2
Ka tirohia te whakawhitinga

Ka kōwhiria te pihi Whakamāori, e tūmanako ana rānei - ka tīmata te whakamāori aunoa i muri i ta koe i te whakamutu i te tuhituhi. Ka tātaritia e te AI tōna kupu i roto i ngā milliseconds.

3
Ka tārua ōna whakamāoritanga

Ka puta haere tonu tōna whakamāoritanga Polish. Ka pā ki te ctrl tārua hei tārua ki tōna papatuhi, hei whakauru rānei mā tātau API.

Ko ngā kīanga pūnoa Thai

Tirohia tētahi rerenga kia whakamāoritia ai i te wā kotahi.

Ka whakamāoritia te whakawhitinga

Ki te whiwhi Thai ki ngā whakamāoritanga Polish i roto i ngā millisekona.

Tūtohu tautoko

Whakataki i te Wā, PDF, SRT subtitle me ētahi atu mō te whakamāoritanga rōpū.

Ka āhei ki te API

Ka whakaurua tēnei takirua whakamāoritanga ki ōna taupānga me tātau REST API.

Thai ki te API Polish

E tāpiri ana tēnei takirua whakamāoritanga ki tōna taupānga me tētahi whakarongo API māmā.

Tirohia ngā tuhinga API Kitenga te kī API
curl -X POST https://api.translateapi.ai/api/v1/translate/ \
  -H "Authorization: Bearer YOUR_API_KEY" \
  -H "Content-Type: application/json" \
  -d '{"text": "Hello", "source_language": "th", "target_language": "pl"}'

Mo te whakamāoritanga o Thai ki Polish

E whakarato ana te TranslateAPI i te whakamāoritanga tere me te tika o Thai ki te Polish e whakahaua ana e te AI arā atu anō. E tautoko ana tātau ratonga:

  • Ka whakamāoritia te kupu - Ka whakamāoritia ētahi kupu tae noa ki te 10,000 ngā pūāhua
  • Ka whakamāoritia te tuhinga - Whakapupuri i te Wā, PDF, me ngā faila kupu mō te whakamāoritanga
  • Ko te whakaurunga API - Tāpiri i te whakamāoritanga Thai ki te Polish ki ōna taupānga
  • Ka whakamāoritia - Ka whakamāori i ngā kupu maha i roto i tētahi tono kotahi
Ka whakamahia ngā take:
  • Ka whakamāoritia ngā tuhinga Thai ki te Polish mō te umanga
  • Ka whakawātea i ngā pūnaewele me ngā taupānga mai i te Thai ki te Polish
  • Ka tahuri ngā tuhipoka Thai ki te Polish
  • E whakawhitiwhiti ana ki ngā kaikōrero Polish
He takirua whakamāoritanga
Mātāmua
Thai (th)
Tūtohu
Polish (pl)

E pā ana ngā pātai

These Southeast Asian abugida scripts write without spaces between words. Sentence boundaries use specific marks (Thai ฯ, Khmer ។, Burmese ။). Thai to Polish handles word-segmentation internally — you don't need to add spaces to the source.

Thai and Lao both have explicit tone marks above or below the base consonant. These are preserved on the output side and applied correctly: tone-marked syllables in the target reflect the target language's phonotactics, not a transliterated copy of the source.

Khmer subscript (coeng) consonants and Burmese subscript stacks are emitted with the correct Unicode combining sequences. Font rendering takes care of the visual stacking — your editor or browser needs a complete Khmer / Burmese font.

Thai has five-level register splits (royal, religious, formal, polite, vulgar) marked by entirely different verb stems and pronouns. The model defaults to polite formal register, which is right for business and consumer content. Royal language for monarchic context needs manual editing.

Default output uses Latin (Western) digits for compatibility with databases and modern UI. Native-script numerals (Thai ๐-๙, Lao ໐-໙, Khmer ០-៩, Burmese ၀-၉) are available as a post-process option.

Theravada-Buddhist vocabulary in Thai, Lao, Khmer, and Burmese (largely Pali-derived) preserves its conventional spelling in the target script. Quoted Pali verses stay verbatim when bracketed.

Each SE-Asia language has a classical register used for poetry and historical text. The model translates source classical text into modern paraphrase first then re-renders in the Polish classical conventions if the output context calls for it.

The model uses a learned segmentation pass that recognizes inherent vowel patterns, tone marks, and known word forms to split tokens before translation. No manual chunking is required; just send the whole paragraph as one string.

Thai, Lao, Khmer, and Burmese personal names use given-name first followed by family-name (the reverse of CJK convention). The model preserves this order and uses the conventional transliteration when emitting to Latin-script targets.

Yes — output is UTF-8 with explicit zero-width-non-joiner (ZWNJ) only where the script requires it. For SMS or character-limited contexts, note that one SE-Asia character typically uses 2-3 UTF-8 bytes.

Output for Thai is central / Bangkok Thai; Burmese defaults to standard literary Burmese; Khmer to standard central; Lao to Vientiane. Regional dialects (northern Thai, Mon Burmese mixes, etc.) are not directly supported — translate to the standard first and localize.

These scripts pack 1.5-2x more meaning per character than Latin, so 5,000 source characters of Thai/Khmer/Burmese typically expand to 8,000-10,000 characters of English. Send paragraph-sized chunks (500-2,000 characters) for best discourse coherence.

Ko ētahi atu kōwhiringa whakamāori

He nui ake mai i te Thai

Ka whakamāoritia te Thai ki ētahi atu reo

Tirohia ngā ūnga katoa
Whakamāoritanga whakarerekē

Ka whakawhitinga mai i te Polish ki te Thai

Polish → Thai
E whakawātea ana i tēnei pou
Mahalo mo ōna arotakenga!
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