![]() New! Live-translation – aim the pointer at a word which is not clear and tap anywhere on the screen for translation (not supported for Chinese and Kazakh).You can be confident in your translations. It provides a reliable translation and exhaustive interpretation at any time, simply by using a mobile device.Īccess to 11 basic dictionaries for 7 languages included! Download them after installation right from within the app! Over 200 additional premium dictionaries are available for In-App Purchase.Įlectronic versions of dictionaries from the world’s leading publishers, including Macmillan, Compact Verlag and dictionaries compiled by ABBYY lexicographers. The dictionary will be an indispensable tool when traveling, at work or school. You can create your own custom dictionary sets selecting from a wide range of general translation dictionaries, explanatory, idiomatic, and also various subject dictionaries.ĪBBYY Lingvo do not require Internet connection. There is a whole thread about dics and conversion here atĪlberto Pettarin, the creator of Penelope (an universal converter), has his thread here:Īnd the thread here from the very helpful SIRSteiner:įor whose who understand German a good source of information is this from yen:Īnd the the attached file from the last mentioned thread has all the infos in German in it including the tools needed (source yen from the German forum).ĮDIT: And for Jacek who is looking for Polish sources, that could be interesting:Ĭonversion should work with penelope but I didn't check it.ABBYY Lingvo Dictionaries offers a fast and easy way to access dictionary content for a variety of languages. ![]() There is one english-german downloadable at the aforementioned site too. Since they are very generous with their vocabulary database and are asking not to give the dics away, every user should create his dictionary himself. Sure, but jacek was asking for Polish dics:Ī good source is. It costs about US$10.50 for the Collins dictionary. You can buy a En->Pl dictionary at the Obreey store if copying fails. I would read off everything available via USB first, though, in case the device gets broken even worse after that. You could try taking the device apart and seeing if there is a removable SD card used for internal storage, and reading it from your desktop. If your screen is broken badly and you can't read or interact with that menu, then you probably can't copy the files yourself from the running device. Any method I can think of needs for you to be able to start an application from the Applications menu. There is a third problem, and that is that you probably need a working screen to be able to copy the files off the old device. ![]() If so, the dictionary wouldn't work, even if you figured out a way to copy it to the directory. Second, there is a license file for each commercial dictionary there, and it's likely that the license file is tied to the device it was installed on. First, that directory is read-only, and you would first have to root the new device to be able to write to it (and so far no one has figured out how to root the new devices). ![]() I think there are two problems with just copying them from one device to another. They are in the /mnt/secure/dictionaries/ directory in the root filesystem. The commercial dictionaries aren't accessible via the USB interface. ![]()
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