English to Gibberish Translator

Convert English text into gibberish by scrambling words with extra syllables and nonsensical sounds while keeping the text oddly readable and fun to speak aloud.

Translation Options

5

Turn English Into Hilarious Gibberish

What Is Gibberish?

Gibberish is a playful language game where extra syllables — typically built around sounds like "ithig," "othog," or "uvug" — are inserted into English words to make them sound like complete nonsense. Despite sounding like gobbledygook, gibberish follows consistent rules, which means anyone who knows the pattern can decode it back into English. It's been used as a secret language among kids, a comedy device, and a brain-training exercise for decades.

How the Gibberish Translator Works

This converter takes your plain English text and transforms each word by weaving in gibberish syllables according to the style you choose. The result is text that looks and sounds absurd but actually maps back to real English words. You can pick different gibberish dialects, control how aggressively the text gets scrambled, and even keep certain words untouched for clarity.

How to Speak Gibberish

The trick to speaking gibberish fluently is understanding the insertion rule for your chosen style. In the most common form, you add "ithig" before every vowel sound in a word. So "hello" becomes "hithigellithigo." With practice, you can speak it fast enough that it genuinely sounds like a foreign language to anyone who doesn't know the pattern. Use this translator to see the written form, then try reading it aloud to build speed.

Examples

Input

Hello, my name is Sarah and I love eating pizza on Friday nights.

Output

Hithigellithigo, mithigy nithigame ithigis Sarah ithigand ithigi lithigove ithigeatithiging pithigizzithiga ithigon Frithigidithigay nithigights.

Input

The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.

Output

Thithige quithigick brithigown fithigox jithigumps ithigover thithige lithigazy dithigog.

Input

Can you keep a secret? I hid the treasure under the old oak tree.

Output

Cothogan yothogou kothogeep othoga sothogecrothoget? Othogi hothogid thothoge trothogeasothogure othogunder thothoge othogold othogoak trothogee.

Input

I can't believe it's already Monday again.

Output

Blim grunta fleevit snork plibberday florgin.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between gibberish and gobbledygook?

Gibberish follows a consistent syllable-insertion rule — like adding "ithig" before each vowel sound — so it can be decoded back into English by anyone who knows the pattern. Gobbledygook is purely random nonsense with no reversible pattern. This translator offers both: structured gibberish dialects (Ithig, Othog, Uvug, etc.) and a freeform Gobbledygook mode.

Can gibberish be translated back to English?

Yes, if the gibberish was generated using a consistent dialect like Ithig or Othog. You just remove the inserted syllables to recover the original words. The Gobbledygook style, however, is random and cannot be reversed since there's no fixed mapping between the nonsense and the original text.

Which gibberish style is easiest to speak out loud?

Most people find Ithig Gibberish the easiest to learn because "ithig" flows naturally before vowel sounds in English. Ob Gibberish is also popular since the short "ob" syllable is quick to insert. Start with low scramble intensity and practice reading the output aloud — speed comes with repetition.

Why do some words look harder to read than others in gibberish?

Words with many vowel sounds get more syllables inserted, making them longer and more complex. A short word like "cat" only gets one insertion ("cithigat"), while a word like "beautiful" gets several. Raising the scramble intensity amplifies this effect further.

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