Resources / No-Install Language Keyboards
Type in any language without installing a keyboard
Adding a language keyboard the usual way means changing system settings or installing a language pack — which you often can't do on a school Chromebook, a library computer, or a managed work laptop. A browser-based keyboard sidesteps all of that: it runs inside the web page, needs no admin rights, and disappears when you close the tab.
When a browser keyboard is the right tool
- School and university computers where settings are locked down.
- Public library and hotel-lobby machines you don't own.
- Borrowed or work computers where you can't install software.
- A one-off task — writing a single message or filling one form field.
How to use one
- Open your language's on-screen keyboard — or its phonetic typing page if you prefer typing by sound.
- Click or tap the keys to build your text in the native script.
- Copy the result and paste it wherever you need it.
Prefer typing by sound instead of hunting for keys? Phonetic tools like English-to-Hindi typing let you type in English letters and get the correct script instantly.
Frequently asked questions
Why can't I just add the language keyboard in system settings?
On shared, school, or work computers you often don't have permission to change system settings or install language packs. A browser-based keyboard needs no permissions — it runs on the web page itself.
Will the characters paste correctly into Word, Google Docs, or email?
Yes. The tools produce standard Unicode text, so it copies and pastes into any modern app — Word, Google Docs, Gmail, WhatsApp Web, and more — with the correct characters.
Does this work on a phone or tablet?
Yes. The on-screen keyboards are tap-friendly, so they work on phones and tablets as well as desktops.