Talk about a name that speaks for itself. The one and only thing it does not tell you is how many languages are supported.
The answer is 40, a very respectable number on anybody’s books.
The system is implemented along the following lines: you specify the source and the target languages, obviously, and choose to post the tweet immediately or “save it for a rainy day” as Stephen Bishop would say. You also have to furnish your Twitter credentials, as it is only fit – you prove you are a Twitterer and you prove that you are who you claim to be.
Once you have finished typing and the resulting translation has been generated (in real time), all you have to do is bang the button that reads “Tweet This Translation!” and you can tweet like Longfellow would have tweeted if he were born today. In most languages known to man, that is.
I didn’t mention that this service is not only browser-based but also wholly free, so that if you want to amaze everybody with your mastery of foreign languages and be the talk of the party this site will quite likely do the honors.
TweetTranslate.com In Their Own Words
“Welcome to TweetTranslate! We provide a quick easy and automatic tool to post foreign language tweets So next time you want to speak to someone in another country don’t grab for the translation book, just visit TweetTranslate!”
Why TweetTranslate.com It Might Be A Killer
Everybody loves tweeting. Consequently, everybody will love a service that will let him or her tweet in a foreign language.








