Accurately convert
Norwegian FLAC files to text
Sonix automatically transcribes your Norwegian FLAC files to text in minutes. Access industry-leading artificial intelligence and the days of manually transcribing your Norwegian FLAC files are long gone. Norwegian speech to text: Sonix has been independently reviewed the most accurate Norwegian automated transcription, translation, and subtitling platform.
Free to start — no credit card required.
Thousands of Sonix customers convert their Norwegian FLAC files to text











Use Sonix to quickly convert
Norwegian FLAC 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 Norwegian FLAC file~1 min
Click “Upload” and locate the Norwegian FLAC file on your computer.
- 3Choose language: Norwegian~10 sec
Select Norwegian as the language spoken, then click “Transcribe”.
- 4Sonix transcribes your FLAC file~5 min
Sonix transcribes your Norwegian FLAC file and converts it to Norwegian text.
- 5Polish your Norwegian transcript~2 min
Edit your Norwegian transcript directly in the browser to correct any misheard words.
- 6Export Norwegian text~10 sec
Export the Norwegian text to MS Word, PDF, subtitles, or plain text.
Understanding Norwegian FLAC files
Norwegian has two official written standards, Bokmål and Nynorsk, but no single standard spoken form — regional dialects from Oslo, Bergen, Trøndelag, and northern Norway differ noticeably in pronunciation, intonation, and vocabulary, and are used freely in broadcasting and formal settings. Automated transcription typically renders speech in Bokmål-style written Norwegian regardless of the speaker's dialect.
FLAC technical specifications
- Codec
- FLAC (Free Lossless Audio Codec)
- Container
- Native FLAC stream (can also be muxed into Ogg or Matroska)
- Typical bitrate
- Roughly 400–1,000 kbps for CD-quality stereo (varies with content; typically 50–70% of uncompressed size)
- Sample rate
- 44.1–192 kHz common (format supports 1 Hz up to 655 kHz)
- Compression
- Lossless
Norwegian at a glance
- Speakers
- ~5 million speakers worldwide
- Writing system
- Latin alphabet (with the additional letters æ, ø, and å)
- Say hello
- Hallo!
Frequently asked questions
How to improve the accuracy of your Norwegian transcripts?
Start by improving the quality of the Norwegian FLAC 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 Norwegian FLAC file that I upload?
Yes, please do not over-compress or over-filter the audio track of your Norwegian FLAC file. By uploading a high quality version of your audio, we can give you the best level of accuracy.
Aside from FLAC, do you support other types of audio/video files?
Yes, we do! You can convert the following file types in Norwegian with Sonix:
Do I need to convert FLAC to MP3 before transcribing?
No. FLAC files can be uploaded and transcribed directly, and skipping the MP3 conversion avoids an unnecessary lossy re-encode of your audio.
Why won't my FLAC file play in iTunes or Apple Music?
Apple's media apps do not natively support FLAC; Apple uses its own lossless codec, ALAC. You can play FLAC on Apple devices through the Files app or a third-party player, or convert the file to ALAC or AAC for library use.
Does Sonix transcribe Norwegian in Bokmål or Nynorsk?
Automated Norwegian transcripts generally follow Bokmål written conventions, since Bokmål is the more widely used written standard. You can edit the transcript into Nynorsk in the Sonix editor before exporting.
Can Sonix handle Norwegian dialects like Bergen Norwegian or Trøndersk?
Yes — you upload your audio, Sonix transcribes it, and you can correct any dialect-specific passages in the editor. Speech closer to standard Eastern Norwegian typically needs fewer corrections than heavier regional dialects.
Should I choose Norwegian or Danish for my Scandinavian audio?
Choose the language actually being spoken. Written Norwegian and Danish look similar, but their pronunciation differs substantially, so selecting the correct language gives the speech model the right acoustic match.
Trusted by professionals worldwide
Easy to use and it saved me SO much time transcribing.
In one word? FAN-TAS-TIC!! The possibility to split the transcript to subtitles AND split them! THAT IS FANTASTIC!!
More ways to convert & transcribe
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