
Use voice typing to talk instead of type on your PC
Use dictation to convert spoken words into text anywhere on your PC with Windows 10. Dictation uses speech recognition, which is built into Windows 10, so there's nothing you need to download and …
Dictate text using Speech Recognition - Microsoft Support
When you speak into the microphone, Windows Speech Recognition converts your spoken words into text that appears on your screen. Open the program you want to use or select the text box you want …
Use voice recognition in Windows - Microsoft Support
First, set up your microphone, then use Windows Speech Recognition to train your PC.
Use the Speak text-to-speech feature to read text aloud
Listen to text in your documents, messages, presentations, or notes using the Speak command.
Dictate text using Speech Recognition - Microsoft Support
Speech-to-text can be used with other input modalities to type using your voice. Additionally, your operating system may have built-in solutions for additional voice input and control with speech …
Windows Speech Recognition commands - Microsoft Support
Learn how to control your PC by voice using Windows Speech Recognition commands for dictation, keyboard shortcuts, punctuation, apps, and more.
Dictate your documents in Word - Microsoft Support
Dictation lets you use speech-to-text to author content in Microsoft 365 with a microphone and reliable internet connection. It's a quick and easy way to get your thoughts out, create drafts or outlines, and …
Dictate your notes in OneNote - Microsoft Support
Dictation lets you use speech-to-text to author content in Office with a microphone and a reliable internet connection. It's a quick and easy way to create drafts, capture notes, and make comments.
Dictate text with voice - Microsoft Support
Use voice access to dictate text, insert symbols and special characters, automatically punctuate your text, filter out profanities, and more.
Transcribe your recordings - Microsoft Support
The transcribe feature converts speech to a text transcript with each speaker individually separated. After your conversation, interview, or meeting, you can revisit parts of the recording by playing back …