Free AI Tools in Hawaiian

ʻOlelo Hawaiʻi

ISO Code: haw

Hawaiian AI Capabilities

Free.ai supports Hawaiian across 30 tools, powered by state-of-the-art open-source models (Qwen3, Whisper, Madlad). Pick a tool above to start.

  • AI chat and text generation in Hawaiian (Qwen3 30B MoE)
  • Translation to and from Hawaiian (Madlad — 419 languages)
  • Hawaiian speech-to-text transcription (Whisper Large v3)
  • Hawaiian prompts work for image, video, and music generation

Try AI Tools in Hawaiian

No sign up, no cost. Start using AI in Hawaiian instantly.

Alustatakse tasuta

Keele üksikasjad

KeelHawaiian
OmanimiʻOlelo Hawaiʻi
ISO koodhaw
Tööriistad Saadaval30
HindVaba

Lehitsemise keeled

Vaata kõiki keeli

KKK

Hawaiian (ʻOlelo Hawaiʻi) has limited but real coverage on Free.ai. AI chat at /chat/, translation at /translate/, and transcription at /transcribe/haw/ all work — these run on multilingual models (GPT-class chat, NLLB / M2M-100 translation, Whisper transcription) that cover the long tail. Text-to-speech voices for Hawaiian may be limited or absent; check /voice/haw/ for what is available. Image prompts work better in English. Currently active: chat, search, assistant, write, summarize, paraphrase, grammar, humanizer, detect-ai, expand, simplify, rewrite, email, cover-letter, resume, essay, story, poem, code, coder, translate, image, image/anime, image/logo, image/poster, image/meme, image/wallpaper, video/generate, music/generate, transcribe.

Yes — /chat/ accepts Hawaiian prompts and replies in Hawaiian. Free signups get 10,000 tokens immediately plus a daily refill pool (resets every 24 hours) that covers normal conversational use. When the daily pool runs out, paid tokens start at $1 = 750,000 tokens; a $5 top-up adds 200,000 tokens at the entry tier. Per-message cost in Hawaiian is roughly the same as English on modern multilingual models — no language surcharge.

Partial. The Free.ai UI is auto-translated to Hawaiian on /?lang=haw — most strings are covered, but you may see a handful of English fallbacks on newer surfaces until the next translation pass. Hreflang in <head> still emits the haw variant for crawlers. AI tools themselves accept Hawaiian input and respond in Hawaiian regardless of the UI setting.

TTS coverage for Hawaiian is limited. /voice/haw/ falls back to multilingual engines (MeloTTS, premium providers) which may render Hawaiian with a generic accent rather than a native voice. If quality matters, translate to a fully-supported language at /translate/ first and synthesize from there, or open a request at contact@free.ai for native-voice priority.

Yes, but expect higher WER. /transcribe/haw/ runs Whisper across all 99 languages it was trained on. For lower-resource languages like Hawaiian, WER is meaningfully higher than English — sometimes 25%+ on conversational audio. Pin `/v1/transcribe/?language=haw` so the model does not autodetect wrong. Studio-quality audio helps most.

Yes — /translate/ does both directions. Free.ai uses a mix of NLLB-200 (Meta's 200-language model) and premium models depending on the pair. Popular pairs have dedicated landing pages — try /translate/en-haw/ for English→Hawaiian or /translate/haw-en/ for Hawaiian→English (where available). The API endpoint is `/v1/translate/?target=haw` — POST your source text in the request body. There is no per-character minimum; short strings and full documents both work.

Yes, with a caveat. /image/generate/ accepts prompts in Hawaiian, but every major open and commercial image model (Flux, SDXL, Seedream, Ideogram, etc.) was trained primarily on English-captioned images. Hawaiian prompts work, but the tightest prompt-following comes from English. If quality matters, run your prompt through /translate/ first (or use /v1/translate/?target=en in the API) and feed the English version to /image/generate/. Rendering Hawaiian text inside images requires Ideogram or a similar text-aware model — most other models will produce gibberish glyphs.

Yes. Hawaiian uses the Latin script with locale-specific diacritics, and Free.ai serves UTF-8 end-to-end — chat, transcription output, TTS input, /write/ exports, and PDF/DOCX downloads. Accented characters and locale-specific glyphs render without substitution.

Yes — /write/blog/, /write/essay/, and /write/email/ accept topics in Hawaiian and respond in Hawaiian. Quality follows the underlying chat model: frontier models (Claude, GPT-class) handle Hawaiian well; smaller open-source models may be thinner. Pick a frontier model from the dropdown on /write/blog/ for the best Hawaiian long-form output.

Same rates as every other language. $1 buys 750,000 tokens; a $5 top-up gets 200,000 tokens at the entry tier; free signups receive 10,000 tokens immediately plus a daily free pool that covers everyday chat and translation. Hawaiian input and output tokenizes at roughly the same rate as English on modern multilingual tokenizers (BPE / SentencePiece), so a Hawaiian chat costs about the same as the equivalent English chat. No language carries a surcharge.

Yes. The same endpoints used by the web UI accept Hawaiian input transparently — `/v1/chat/` takes a `messages` array in any language and replies in the same one. For translation, POST to `/v1/translate/?target=haw` with the source text. For transcription, pin the language with `/v1/transcribe/?language=haw` so Whisper does not autodetect wrong on short audio. For TTS, POST to `/v1/tts/` with `language=haw` to pick the right voice automatically. Auth: Bearer token from /api/. See /api/ for SDK snippets and rate-limit details.

Free.ai supports 100+ languages with dedicated landing pages at /languages/. The full list covers every language Whisper, NLLB, and the major chat models handle — including all official EU languages, every major Asian language, Arabic and Hebrew, and a growing roster of African and Indigenous languages. Each language page (like this one for Hawaiian) lists which surfaces currently support it.

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