Star Wars Language Translator
Use the Star Wars Language Translator to turn English into Aurebesh signs, Mando'a phrases, Huttese dialogue, Sith lines, Yoda-style text, names, props, and fan projects.
Note: Star Wars has several languages and scripts. Use the tool above for a quick themed draft, then choose Aurebesh, Mando'a, Huttese, Sith, or Yoda Speak below when you need a more exact style.
About Star Wars Languages
Star Wars language can mean a few different things. Aurebesh is the written alphabet seen on signs and screens, Mando'a is the Mandalorian language, and Huttese is tied to Jabba, smugglers, and Outer Rim scenes.
The Star Wars Language Translator is useful when you want a themed draft but do not know which Star Wars style fits best. Use it for names, fan captions, prop labels, roleplay lines, alien dialogue, droid-style text, Jawa-style lines, and quick meaning checks.
Readable Star Wars script belongs with the Aurebesh Translator. A Mandalorian-style line belongs with the Mando'a Translator instead.
How to Use the Star Wars Language Translator
A short line is enough to choose the Star Wars feel you want:
- Type an English name, quote, label, or short phrase.
- Click Translate to create a Star Wars-style version.
- Use Swap when you want Star Wars text checked back in English.
- Pick a specific Star Wars tool below if you need Aurebesh, Mando'a, Huttese, Sith, or Yoda wording.
Short phrases work better than long paragraphs because each Star Wars language or style has its own limits.
Star Wars Language Examples
One English idea can point toward different Star Wars language styles:
| English Input | Star Wars Language Output |
|---|---|
| May the Force be with you | Aurebesh script or classic Jedi-style wording |
| This is the way | Mando'a-style creed line |
| Hello, traveler | Huttese-style alien greeting |
| Power belongs to the strong | Sith-style dark-side phrase |
| You must be patient | Patient, you must be |
| Rebel base | Aurebesh-style sign or datapad label |
For exact script output, use Aurebesh. For spoken fan phrases, Mando'a and Huttese usually fit better than a general Star Wars-style line.
Common Star Wars Words and Styles
Use this quick guide when you are not sure which Star Wars translator matches the phrase:
| English | Star Wars Language |
|---|---|
| Written Star Wars alphabet | Aurebesh |
| Common galaxy language | Galactic Basic |
| Mandalorian language | Mando'a |
| Jabba-style language | Huttese |
| Dark-side wording | Sith-style phrases |
| Reversed wisdom line | Yoda-style speech |
| Armor motto | Mando'a or Aurebesh |
| Cantina dialogue | Huttese or alien-style wording |
| Prop sign | Aurebesh |
| Sith inscription | Sith-style text |
Most users searching for Star Wars language want either Aurebesh script or a specific fan language, so choosing the style first gives cleaner results.
Choose the Right Star Wars Translator
Each Star Wars language has a different job, so the best choice depends on what you are making.
- Aurebesh: Best for signs, ship labels, datapads, tattoos, costumes, and copy-and-paste Star Wars lettering. Use the Aurebesh Translator when the result needs to look written in the galaxy.
- Mando'a: Best for Mandalorian names, clan sayings, armor text, vows, and roleplay. Use the Mando'a Translator when the phrase needs a creed-like Mandalorian voice.
- Huttese: Best for Jabba-style lines, smugglers, cantina scenes, Outer Rim dialogue, and alien greetings. The Huttese Translator fits those scenes better than a clean hero phrase.
- Sith: Best for dark-side names, ritual lines, villain dialogue, and ancient-feeling inscriptions. The Sith Translator keeps that darker lore tone focused.
- Yoda Speak: Best for reversed sentence order and character-style jokes. The Yoda Speak Translator is the better match when you want the sentence to sound like Yoda.
A broad Star Wars language draft is useful for quick ideas, but specific tools are better when the final text needs one clear style.
Star Wars Language Checks
Star Wars languages are not all built the same way. Aurebesh is mostly a letter-for-letter writing system, while Mando'a and Huttese use known words and fan-recognized phrases.
If the result is for a tattoo, prop, costume, fan film, or public post, check the exact language choice before using it. A Sith-style line, a Huttese greeting, and an Aurebesh sign can all feel Star Wars-like, but they are not the same thing.
For a different sci-fi language outside Star Wars, the Klingon Translator covers Star Trek-style wording instead.