Accurately convert
Esperanto XSPF files to text
Sonix automatically transcribes your Esperanto XSPF files to text in minutes. Access industry-leading artificial intelligence and the days of manually transcribing your Esperanto XSPF files are long gone. Esperanto speech to text: Sonix has been independently reviewed the most accurate Esperanto automated transcription, translation, and subtitling platform.
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Thousands of Sonix customers convert their Esperanto XSPF files to text











Use Sonix to quickly convert
Esperanto XSPF files to text
- 1Log into your Sonix account~30 sec
If you don't have one, you can sign up for Sonix's free account — Your free trial includes 30 minutes of transcription and translation.
- 2Upload your Esperanto XSPF file~1 min
Click “Upload” and locate the Esperanto XSPF file on your computer.
- 3Choose language: Esperanto~10 sec
Select Esperanto as the language spoken, then click “Transcribe”.
- 4Sonix transcribes your XSPF file~5 min
Sonix transcribes your Esperanto XSPF file and converts it to Esperanto text.
- 5Polish your Esperanto transcript~2 min
Edit your Esperanto transcript directly in the browser to correct any misheard words.
- 6Export Esperanto text~10 sec
Export the Esperanto text to MS Word, PDF, subtitles, or plain text.
Understanding Esperanto XSPF files
Esperanto is a constructed language with a single standardized form and no regional dialects. In practice, pronunciation varies with each speaker's native language, so recordings from international gatherings can mix many different accents in one conversation.
XSPF technical specifications
- Container
- XML (text-based playlist, not a media container)
- Compression
- Uncompressed
Esperanto at a glance
- Speakers
- ~100,000–2 million speakers worldwide (estimates vary widely; roughly 1,000 grow up speaking it natively)
- Writing system
- Latin alphabet with six diacritic letters (ĉ, ĝ, ĥ, ĵ, ŝ, ŭ)
- Say hello
- Saluton
Frequently asked questions
How to improve the accuracy of your Esperanto transcripts?
Start by improving the quality of the Esperanto XSPF file that you upload to Sonix. Please use high quality recording equipment, recording in a quiet environment, and ensure that your speakers are speaking clearly to ensure that your transcript is as accurate as possible.
Any advice for the Esperanto XSPF file that I upload?
Yes, please do not over-compress or over-filter the audio track of your Esperanto XSPF file. By uploading a high quality version of your audio, we can give you the best level of accuracy.
Aside from XSPF, do you support other types of audio/video files?
Yes, we do! You can convert the following file types in Esperanto with Sonix:
Can I convert an XSPF file to text?
Not directly, because an XSPF file is a playlist that contains no audio data, only references to audio files. Locate the MP3, WAV, or OGG files it points to, upload those to Sonix to transcribe them, then edit and export the transcript.
How do I find the audio files referenced in an XSPF playlist?
Open the XSPF file in a text editor or a player like VLC; each track's location tag lists the file path or URL of the actual audio file. Those referenced files are what you upload for transcription.
What is the difference between XSPF and M3U playlists?
Both are playlist formats that reference external audio files rather than storing audio themselves. XSPF organizes its entries with structured XML tags, while M3U is a simpler plain-text list of file paths.
Can Sonix transcribe Esperanto audio and video?
Yes. Upload your recording, select Esperanto as the spoken language, and Sonix generates a transcript you can edit alongside the original audio and export as documents or subtitles.
Does Esperanto transcription handle different accents?
Esperanto speakers carry accents from their native languages, so pronunciation varies from speaker to speaker. Sonix's browser editor syncs the transcript to the audio, making it easy to review and correct accent-related mistakes.
Will Esperanto's special characters like ĉ and ŭ appear in my transcript?
Yes. Transcripts and exports use standard Unicode text, so the six diacritic letters (ĉ, ĝ, ĥ, ĵ, ŝ, ŭ) are preserved in documents and subtitle files.
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