dict.cc is a free, multilingual online dictionary. For offline use the dictionaries can be downloaded as text files and used in various programs on Windows, iOS, Android[2][3] and Palm OS. Dict.cc GmbH have their main office in the Austrian capital city of Vienna.

dict.cc
Type of site
English-German dictionary and other languages
Available inMultilingual, see Languages
OwnerPaul Hemetsberger IT-Services
URLwww.dict.cc
Registrationfree
Users254,694 (November 2018)[1]
Launched2002
Current statusactive

History edit

The website was put on the internet in the year 2002 by Austrian Paul Hemetsberger.[4] His vision is to provide hundreds of languages within a few years.

At the beginning of February 2005 Paul Hemetsberger allowed vocabulary lists to be downloaded under the conditions of the free GNU General Public License (GPL). Later in the year he changed to a propriety license, which provides less freedom to the users. Despite this he released all user-generated posts, which were created under the former GPL-Licensed project, into the lists.[5][6]

Vocabulary structure edit

Like some other online dictionaries, dict.cc allows users to suggest new entries. These new entries are not moderated (unlike in LEO, another online multilingual dictionary), but rather reviewed by the users through a multi-stage validation system.

Languages edit

The biggest vocabulary sets currently consist of the German-English dictionary, from which the website developed. Since November 2009 additional language structures can be found, with translations into German and English respectively. Nowadays, there are 50 further dictionaries; in the order of verified vocabulary extent (descending): Swedish, Icelandic, Russian, Italian, French, Romanian, Portuguese, Hungarian, Latin, Dutch, Slovakian, Spanish, Croatian, Bulgarian, Finnish, Norwegian, Czech, Danish, Turkish, Polish, Serbian, Greek, Esperanto, Bosnian and Albanian.[7]

The level of user interest in adding additional language is used to develop a wish list, where interested users can register with their E-mail address as future translators or employees.[8]

Data edit

The German-English dictionary, with over 1,180,600 translations (November 2018), is larger than the competing site LEO, and as of late 2018 was growing daily by about 300 entries. The other 50 dictionaries contain a total of more than 1.5 million (November 2018) verified translations. In addition, there are over 1 million inflected forms.[9]

Furthermore, there is a forum with over 33,000 contributing users and over 770,000 posts within the website. As of March 2015 it ran on 11 servers in parallel, in order to process the 150 million monthly pageviews.[10]

Speech output edit

For every entry in the German and English language dictionaries, an automatic speech output can be generated through Speech synthesis. Nevertheless, users have the possibility to add their own speech recording for every entry. As of November 2017 there were over 1 million verified spoken recordings from native speakers.

Vocabulary trainer edit

In order to improve language knowledge, a vocabulary trainer is also provided, which is complemented with entries from the dictionary. Moreover, it is possible for every user to make their vocabulary lists publicly accessible, whereby a large choice of vocabulary questions is available.

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ Users
  2. ^ "dict.cc Wörterbuch für Android". Data-Bla.de. 7 February 2012. Archived from the original on 16 May 2013. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
  3. ^ "Test: kostenlose Wörterbuch App von Dict.cc für Android". allessparen.de/magazin. 7 July 2012. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
  4. ^ Thomas Gabriel (12 January 2010). "Interview mit Paul Hemetsberger von dict.cc". internetszene.at. Archived from the original on 30 November 2012. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
  5. ^ "dict.cc: Liste der Übersetzungen zum Download". www.dict.cc. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  6. ^ "dict.cc | Wörterbuch Englisch-Deutsch". www.dict.cc. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  7. ^ "Gesamtwortschatz". dict.cc. Retrieved 2 January 2018.
  8. ^ "Language Wish List". dict.cc. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
  9. ^ "alle Sprachen". dict.cc. Retrieved 2 January 2018.
  10. ^ "Zugriffsstatistik". dict.cc. Retrieved 15 March 2015.