If you want a translation app with some heft, iTranslate is a good option. It covers more than 100 languages and has a lot of features, including text and voice translation, camera translation and keyboard extensions for messaging apps. Offline support is available for dozens of languages, too, so it's a good option for travelers, students and businesspeople.
Another good option is Reverso, a full-featured online translation service that translates text from one of 15 languages using AI technology. It's got a lot of bells and whistles, including document translation, grammar and spell checking, verb conjugation and pronunciation help. That makes it a good option for people and companies that need translations that sound natural and are accurate.
If you want something that works in your browser, Immersivetranslate is a good option. This free browser extension translates web pages, documents and video subtitles in two languages. It can use multiple translation engines, and it works on Chrome, Edge, Firefox and Safari, so it's good for researchers, students and businesspeople who need to translate lots of documents and other content.
Last, Lingvanex is a full-featured translation platform with more than 100 languages. It uses AI technology like machine translation and speech recognition, and it can be installed on your own servers or used through cloud APIs. That means it's good for companies that want to build their own translation tools for customer support and language learning, and that can pay for it through a variety of pricing models.