Pinyin IME is a phonetic input method.
As you type pinyin, e.g., âhaoâ, you'll see a list of candidate characters that map to your input.
You can choose a candidate from the list by taking any of the following actions:
Press ENTER to type in English (i.e., the letters you type).
Wubi IME for ChineseWubi is a radical based input method.
As you type pinyin, youâll see a list of word candidates that map to your input.
To choose a candidate:
Press ENTER to type in English.
Zhuyin IME for Traditional ChineseZhuyin IME is a phonetic input method.
After you type in Zhuyin of a character, e.g., âvul â, you will see a character that maps to your input:
Press ENTER to choose the character. To see more candidate words, which have the same pronunciation, press DOWN arrow or SPACE key.
To choose a word from the list:
Cangjie IME is a graphological based input method.
As you type, e.g., âoiarâ, youâll see the word(s) mapping to your input.
Press SPACE to select the word. To select a word from multiple candidates,you can take any of the following actions:
Cantonese does not have a widely used romanization standard. With this Cantonese IME, you simply type how you think the word sounds in English letters. The IME will attempt to find out words that match those sounds. For example, you type âfailokâ to get âå¿«æ¨â.
Quickly learn Cantonese IME in the video.
Cantonese IME supports fuzzy phonetic mapping. There is no fixed rule to spell pronunciation. For example, you can type âlayâ, ânayâ, or âleiâ to get âä½ â.
The intelligent guessing works best when you enter two or more Cantonese characters so donât stop after the first one. Try type âææ³é£åçå â with ângoshuengsikchasiubaoâ.
While typing, you will see a list of candidates matching the sounds of your input.
Choose a candidate by taking any of the following actions:
You can use ' to explicitly separates pronunciation of two characters. For example, "long" can be interpreted into "long" or "lo-ng", while "lo'ng" will only be interpreted into "lo-ng".
Press ENTER to type in English (i.e., the letters you type).
Related Google blog posts:
Latin IMEsLatin IMEs aim to help people type in Latin-script languages (e.g., French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian and Dutch) using the US keyboard. Features include automatic diacritics, spell correction, and prefix completion.
To use Latin IMEs, type unaccented letters, and the correct word with diacritics will be suggested. For example, in French, as you type âfrancaâ, you will see a prefix-completion candidate.
Press TAB to commit the candidate âfrançaisâ. At this time, press SPACE/ENTER to commit the source text âfrancaâ.
While continuously typing âfrancaisâ, the candidate on stage becomes an auto-diacritic candidate. Press SPACE/ENTER to commit the candidate âfrançaisâ.
To fetch more candidates, press BACKSPACE, and you will see all the candidates.
The first candidate is the high-confident auto-diacritic candidate, which will be automatically highlighted. The second candidate is the source text. The third and fourth candidates are prefix-completion candidates. The 5th and 6th candidates are spelling-correction candidates.
To select a word from multiple candidates,take any of the following actions:
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