Archive
Immerse yourself into your language of study by switching the user interface language on LRC PCs
- Ever imagine yourself studying or working in an e.g. Spanish– Japanese- or Chinese- speaking country? Then you will likely find yourself in front of a computer display that is in that language – what if you could get a sneak preview before you go?
- You can now switch the interface language of the LRC Windows 7 computers (including Internet Explorer and MS-Office (note that you have to change the editing language separately) to your language of study (How?).
- All non-classical languages studied here are supported:
Language Native name Arabic العربية Chinese (Simplified) 中文(简体) Chinese (Traditional) 中文 (繁體) English English French français German Deutsch Greek Ελληνικά Hebrew עברית Italian italiano Japanese 日本語 Korean 한국어 Polish polski Portuguese (Brazil) Português Portuguese (Portugal) português Russian Русский Spanish español - Some languages, however, come only with the limited support of a MS Language Interface Pack :
-
Hindi हिंदी KiSwahili Kiswahili Persian (Farsi) فارسی Yoruba ede Yorùbá - Below are examples (for German) what you get when you switch the operating system language:






Foreign language support in LRC MS-Office 2010
- A full set of proofing tools is available, thanks to MS-Office Language Packs installed on the Windows 7 computers, for all non-classical languages studied here:
-
Language Native name Arabic العربية Chinese (Simplified) 中文(简体) Chinese (Traditional) 中文 (繁體) English English French français German Deutsch Greek Ελληνικά Hebrew עברית Hindi हिंदी Italian italiano Japanese 日本語 Korean 한국어 Polish polski Portuguese (Brazil) Português Portuguese (Portugal) português Russian Русский Spanish español - Some languages have only limited features provided by the MS-Language Interface Pack:
-
KiSwahili Kiswahili Persian (Farsi) فارسی Yoruba ede Yorùbá
Foreign Language Character Input on Windows 7 in the LRC
- The LRC, now on Windows 7, is testing Carly J. Born’s U.S. International Extended 2.0 Keyboard, an improvement on the previously used US International Keyboard (still recommended for personal use, as it comes standard with all but ancient versions of Windows) for typing accented characters in Western languages, Pinyin-tone-marks for Mandarin (replacing the also useful, but more evolved Pinyinput), and other SLA tone- and length-marks e.g. for Latin.
- Not limited to specific application, you can use anywhere in Windows the following shortcut’s – taken from the original developer documentation (with some minor modifications).
- We hope you find the benefit for SLA far outweighs the need to getting used to typing a space between the 2 red characters and a vowel, in order to produce their regular form, without creating a foreign language character.
|
acute accent, pinyin 2nd tone |
apostrophe (= ‘), vowel |
(e.g. á é í ó ú) |
|
grave accent, pinyin 4th tone |
grave (= `), vowel |
(e.g. à è ì ò ù) |
|
c cedilla |
comma apostrophe, c |
(e.g. ç) |
|
macron accent, pinyin 1st tone |
hyphen, vowel |
(e.g. ā ē ī ō ū ) |
|
vowel with umlaut |
double-quote (= “), vowel |
(e.g. ä ë ï ö ü ÿ) |
|
vowel with circumflex |
shift+6 (= ^), vowel |
(e.g. â ê î ô û) |
|
pinyin 3rd tone |
Shift+5, vowel |
(e.g. ǎ ě ǐǒǔ) |
|
ü with pinyin tones |
Accent, double-quote |
(e.g. ǖǘǚǜ) |
|
letter with tilde |
tilde (= ~), letter |
(e.g. õ ñ ã) |
|
letter with dot below |
shift+period, letter |
(e.g. ạ ẹ Ẹ ị ọ ụ) |
|
letter with double acute |
shift+; , o or u |
(e.g. ő, ű, Ő, Ű) |
|
« |
ctrl + alt + [ |
|
|
» |
ctrl + alt + ] |
|
|
€ |
ctrl + alt + 5 |
|
|
ß |
ctrl + alt + s/right-ALT + s |
|
|
ø |
ctrl + alt + l |
[won’t work in word, onenote, but works in excel] |
|
¿ |
ctrl + alt + / |
|
|
¡ |
ctrl + alt + 1 |
[To type ¡, disable the command called ApplyHeading1 in the Format category, in word or onenote, but not needed in excel] |
|
œ |
Right alt + k |
A search interface to the EuroParl corpus
(Note the on my IE9, the text in the right column appears “blacked-out” – Select it to view, or use a different webbrowser).
How to change the display language and speech recognition language on LRC Windows 7 computers (and which languages are available)
- UPDATE: Since this page seems to be getting a lot of hits, I want to clarify: The step-by-step guide below only applies after you installed (free) language (or language interface) packs (see list here) on Windows 7 Enterprise or Ultimate SKU (others SKUs cannot add multiple language interfaces). UPDATE2: Things got much easier with Windows 8.
- In order to
- view the GUI of Windows and Internet Explorer in a foreign language,
- use the speech recognition in (a subset of the below) foreign languages,
- and also switch the default language of MS-Office
- Double-click the desktop shortcut “Region and language – Keyboards and languages”.
- Select the desired language from the dropdown box, click “OK”.

- Click: “Log off now”:

- “Log back in” (without restarting).
- And if you want the available display languages in English,
- here are the fully supported (MS Language packs):
Language Native name Arabic العربية Chinese (Simplified) 中文(简体) Chinese (Traditional) 中文 (繁體) English English French français German Deutsch Greek Ελληνικά Hebrew עברית Italian italiano Japanese 日本語 Korean 한국어 Polish polski Portuguese (Brazil) Português Portuguese (Portugal) português Russian Русский Spanish español - and here the partially supported (MS-Language Interface packs):
Hindi हिंदी KiSwahili Kiswahili Persian (Farsi) فارسی Yoruba ede Yorùbá - And here are the languages that support speech recognition:

How you can reuse your speech profile even on deepfrozen Language resource center computers
- “A [Windows Speech] profile is basically the collection of all settings and information about how to recognize your voice when using Windows Speech Recognition. Before changing the language used or letting other persons use Windows Speech Recognition it is best to create a new profile so that your current one will remain unaltered”.
- To be able reuse your effort training the computer to recognize your voice speaking in your study language – even though the LRC Windows 7 computers get reset when restarted -, you can backup, and later reload, your Speech Profile, preferably to your H:-drive.
- The Microsoft tool that allows you to do that has been put on WSRProfile.exe desktop of the LRC Windows 7 PCs. I can copy these instructions directly from the Microsoft blog page:
- Double-click WSRProfile.exe to start the WSR Profile tool wizard.
- To back up a speech profile using the WSR Profile tool, select Backup my speech profile.
- In the Select your Speech Profile dialog box, choose the speech profile you wish to back up and then click Next.
- The wizard will prompt you for a filename and location to save the file. When you have entered this information, click Next. The WSR Profile tool wizard will start the backup process of the selected speech profile.
- After the backup operation successfully finishes, click Close .
- In the Select your Speech Profile dialog box, choose the speech profile you wish to back up and then click Next.
- To restore a speech profile using the WSR Profile tool, select Restore my Speech Profile.
- On the File to Restore wizard page, click Browse and locate the backed up speech profile, and then click Next.
- Choose the speech profile you want to restore to.
- Select Use the current speech profile if you want to overwrite the current default speech profile.
- Select Create a new speech profile if you want to restore to a new speech profile. If you choose to restore to a new speech profile you will be prompted to provide a name for the new profile.
- After the restore operation successfully finishes, click Close.
Example 7: Exercise dictating in German to an LRC Windows 7 computer
How can we get language students more speaking practice with qualified, but affordable feedback ? Native speaker contact remains difficult to organize even in the days of online conferencing. The LRC hosts language tutoring, but numbers are limited. Enter speech recognition, the holy grail of iCALL, much easier for learners to relate to than the voice graph that digital audio can be broken down to, and thus for a long time a standout feature of costly second-language-acquisition packages like Auralog Tell-me-More (speech recognition in English tested here) – but now the LRC has Windows 7 Enterprise (and its free add-on language packs), and another crucial prerequisite: headphones with excellent microphones.
We are setting up the new Windows 7 computers in the LRC to allow for speech recognition in Chinese, English, French, German, Japanese and Spanish. Here is an example of me using this facility for a practicing my German during a dictation exercise:
Granted, German is my native tongue; but the example text is from the online component for the final chapter of the “Treffpunkt Deutsch” 1st-year textbook in use here, which sends the readers to the website of the Swiss (-German) employment agency.
Apart from infrequent words ("Archiven") and Lehnwörtern ("Bachelor" etc.), Windows 7 speech recognition accuracy seems quite impressive. The above example was actually my first dictation, except that immediately beforehand, I invested a few minutes into the standard Windows 7 speech recognition training (aimed at training the user, although may behind the scenes teach the computer a few things about the speaker already also) and a few more minutes of voice training (this one is meant exclusively for the computer, but the user can also see it fail and why). The – rather simple trick to boost speech recognition results – certainly accessible to our students – seems to be to speak not only clearly, but also slowly, with short pauses between most words.
Speech recognition in these languages is a feature of the Windows 7 (Enterprise/Ultimate version) “language packs” that we installed and switched to – that is why the entire computer interface appears in German. Practicing the L2 with (computer—operating) “voice commands” (instead of with a mouse) is also possible, simpler than replacing the keyboard (mostly) by voice, but not as easy to devise homework exercises for.
Tips for designing exercises using speech recognition: As the example shows ("Archiven") , doing all corrections by voice can quickly become tedious. But there is no pedagogical need to have your students’ bang their heads against this wall. Instead, just ask your students to correct their automatically recognized words manually at the end of their video, after their dictation. This way both you and your students get a clear summary of what they achieved – even clearer if they dictate in MS-Word with the spell and grammar check for the language (automatic with the switch to the language pack for the language) and (using key combination CTRL+SHIFT+E) track changes. We will show you later TBA:how we now enable students to easily record their screen and TBA:upload their screencast into Moodle Kaltura.
Blog Stats
- 526,969 hits

Questions? Read the About. Or just ask me a quick
FAQs for LRC student staff or for students or for teachers. To search our FAQs, in the browser addressbar, add after "https://plagwitz.wordpress.com/feed/?tag=faqs+/" "+TAG1" (from tag cloud below) OR "https://plagwitz.wordpress.com/feed/tag=faqs
&category_name=" "CAT1" (from category hierarchy below). OR search both categories and tags, and multiple TAGs/CATs (connect with "," for OR-search, with "+" for AND-search), like so: https://plagwitz.wordpress.com/feed/?tag=TAG1+TAG2+...TAGn&category_name=CAT1
+CAT2+...CATn"
Other ways to find help
If you cannot find it here, look there: 5,500 Language-Learning Links and Programs for learning or teaching 150 languages
Shortcuts:Our Lists, Our Maps, LRC Staff Moodle Site,LRC Project Moodle Site, 49erexpress, UNCC Moodle, Student Recordings: s:claslcslrcsanakostudent
Learning usage samples: Sanako oral exam, Kaltura webcam presentation, Dictation with speech recognition, Sanako written exam, Chinese and Japanese interactive stroke-order practice
Test the Sanako Installer, Webbrowser Popup Konfigurator for XP, or Windows7, faster LRC TeacherPC Log-in Let MS facilitate diacritics writing by installing for you US-International keyboard layout
This is my personal blog (Google+). The views expressed on these pages are mine alone and not those of my employer. The information in this weblog is provided “AS IS” with no warranties, and confers no rights.
Top Posts & Pages
Categories
- Area-is-any (194)
- Back office (10)
- Coed432 (2)
- LRCRoomCoed435a (1)
- LRCRoomCoed436 (4)
- COED037 (14)
- presenter-computer (9)
- student-computers (6)
- faculty-offices (3)
- LRCRoomCoed433 (68)
- iMacs (14)
- Listening-Stations (23)
- printer (1)
- Reception-desk (33)
- small-group-work-spaces (12)
- TV-viewing-area (3)
- LRCRoomCoed434 (117)
- Presenter-Computer (78)
- Student-Computers (69)
- MGB-36 (4)
- Back office (10)
- audience-is-any (683)
- Computer and Internet (3)
- Utilities (1)
- Genre-is-any (643)
- announcements (21)
- bad-ideas-and-other-mistakes-samples (1)
- cheat-sheets (2)
- checklists (31)
- documentation (151)
- feedback (2)
- flowcharts (3)
- Internal (1)
- learning-materials (86)
- learning-usage-samples (21)
- marketing (18)
- Notes (228)
- Glitches&Errors (190)
- Learning-logs (24)
- mental-notes (20)
- policies (5)
- Practice&Demos (26)
- conferences (17)
- tradeshows (3)
- projects (9)
- proposals (13)
- reports (11)
- research (2)
- reviews (3)
- step-by-step-guides (38)
- table-of-contents (8)
- training (80)
- clinics (6)
- faculty-showcases (2)
- workshops (29)
- Institution-is-any (193)
- Institution-is-Aston-University (13)
- Institution-is-Drake-University (2)
- Institution-is-London-Metropolitan-University (33)
- Institution-is-Loyola-University-Maryland (27)
- Institution-is-Queen's-University (1)
- Institution-is-University-of-Michigan-Dearborn (3)
- Institution-is-University-of-North-Carolina-Charlotte (120)
- Institution-is-University-of-Tampa (4)
- K12 (1)
- Learning-activity-is-any (82)
- assessments (44)
- assignments (35)
- classroom-activities (8)
- grading (11)
- presentations (4)
- Learning-Tool-is-any (683)
- Classroom-technology (162)
- erepository (19)
- hardware (86)
- audiovisual (28)
- faculty-equipment (10)
- film-studies-equipment (14)
- furniture (1)
- headphones (18)
- mobile-computing (8)
- mobile-phones (4)
- tablets (4)
- phones (6)
- audiovisual (28)
- Media (32)
- multimedia-recording (79)
- software (215)
- Authoring-tools (3)
- Polls (2)
- GIS (4)
- office-software (87)
- Operating-system (20)
- os (16)
- recording-software (15)
- translation-software (9)
- web-browsers (12)
- Authoring-tools (3)
- software-old (7)
- textbooks (22)
- websites (208)
- blog (12)
- eportfolio (7)
- lab-portal (4)
- lms (95)
- Metrics (22)
- Analytics (7)
- Visualizations (8)
- Multimedia-is-any (269)
- animated-GIFs (43)
- Audiofiles (1)
- Charts (8)
- compiledcode (17)
- Documents (15)
- forms (4)
- Interactive-documents (1)
- Photos (11)
- Pictures (1)
- polls (1)
- Scans (2)
- Screencasts (87)
- screenshot-albums (5)
- Screenshots (16)
- Slideshows (24)
- sourcecode (21)
- Spreadsheets (35)
- Videos (13)
- Personal (22)
- second-language-acquisition (249)
- 4-skills (216)
- Grammars (4)
- Proficiency-Levels (36)
- Absolute-Beginner (19)
- Advanced (28)
- Beginner (26)
- Intermediate (29)
- Near-Native (9)
- Syntax (2)
- Vocabulary (52)
- Corpus-linguistics (16)
- corpora (9)
- Dictionaries (18)
- Corpus-linguistics (16)
- service-is-any (454)
- service-is-applying-learning-tools (23)
- service-is-assessing (21)
- service-is-configuring-learning-tools (34)
- service-is-documenting (70)
- service-is-evaluating-learning-tools (38)
- service-is-hr-managing (15)
- service-is-it-managing (20)
- service-is-learning-materials-creation (90)
- service-is-library (99)
- service-is-outreach (2)
- service-is-programming (66)
- service-is-project-managing (16)
- service-is-testing (2)
- service-is-testing-troubleshooting-debugging (71)
- service-is-training (14)
- service-is-tutoring (19)
- Study-program-is-any (314)
- all-languages (228)
- Film-studies (38)
- Interpreting (36)
- Translation (27)
- Teaching-delivery-format-is-any (27)
- technology-domains-is-any (853)
- digital-humanities (7)
- e-commerce (2)
- e-infrastructure (471)
- e-languages (297)
- e-learning (103)
- e-research (2)
- Uncategorized (38)
- unit-is-any (4)
Archives
- September 2017
- April 2017
- January 2017
- November 2016
- July 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
- February 2016
- January 2016
- December 2015
- November 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- August 2015
- July 2015
- June 2015
- May 2015
- April 2015
- March 2015
- February 2015
- January 2015
- December 2014
- November 2014
- October 2014
- September 2014
- August 2014
- July 2014
- June 2014
- May 2014
- April 2014
- March 2014
- February 2014
- January 2014
- December 2013
- November 2013
- October 2013
- September 2013
- August 2013
- July 2013
- June 2013
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- September 2008
- August 2008
- July 2008
- June 2008
- March 2008
- January 2008
- November 2007
- August 2007
- July 2007
- June 2007
- December 2006
- June 2006
- May 2006
- April 2006
- March 2006
- February 2003
