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Kazakh Letter Converter: Cyrillic ↔ Arabic (Töte)

Use this Kazakh letter converter to change Kazakh text between Cyrillic and the Arabic-based Töte writing system. The Kazakh alphabet converter handles both directions and keeps punctuation, numbers, spaces, and line breaks intact.

Normal text conversion runs locally in your browser.

TEXT CONVERTER Cyrillic → Töte

Kazakh Cyrillic

Қазақ тілі

Kazakh Arabic · Töte

قازاق ءتىلى

Built for real text

A focused Kazakh script converter

KazTool separates alphabet conversion from translation. Your Kazakh wording remains Kazakh; only its writing system changes.

Two conversion directions

Switch between Kazakh Cyrillic → Arabic (Töte) and Arabic (Töte) → Kazakh Cyrillic from one workspace.

Structure preserved

Numbers, punctuation, multiple spaces, line breaks, and unknown characters are preserved instead of silently deleted.

Browser-based privacy

Ordinary text conversion is processed on your device. Your converter text is not sent to an external conversion API.

Three simple steps

How to use the Kazakh letter converter

1

Choose a direction

Select Cyrillic to Töte or Töte to Cyrillic. The input and output areas automatically use the correct text direction.

2

Paste Kazakh text

Enter a letter, word, paragraph, or multi-line document. Mixed numbers and punctuation can stay in the source text.

3

Convert and copy

Run the conversion, review the output, and copy it. For publishing or formal documents, always complete a human language review.

Cyrillic input

Қазақ тілі

Töte output

قازاق ءتىلى

About Kazakh Cyrillic and Töte

Modern Kazakh is commonly written in Cyrillic in Kazakhstan. Arabic-based Kazakh writing, often called Töte or Töte Jazu, is used by Kazakh communities in China and appears in books, archives, education, publishing, and cross-border communication. A script converter helps readers move the same Kazakh content between these writing systems without translating it into another language.

Conversion is not translation

Transliteration or script conversion changes how a word is written. Translation changes its language and meaning expression. KazTool's converter is intended for Kazakh-to-Kazakh script conversion. English, Chinese, Russian, and other characters that do not belong to a conversion rule are preserved by default.

Why some words still need review

Kazakh Cyrillic contains letters used in Russian loanwords, while Arabic-script Kazakh can represent vowels and word structure differently. Context, established spelling, names, and borrowed terminology may require human judgment. KazTool uses deterministic conversion rules and a tested vocabulary layer, but formal publishing should still include review by a fluent reader.

Frequently asked questions

Kazakh converter FAQ

What is a Kazakh letter converter?

A Kazakh letter converter, also called a Kazakh alphabet converter or Kazakh script converter, changes Kazakh text from one writing system to another. KazTool supports Cyrillic to Arabic-based Töte and Töte to Cyrillic conversion.

Does KazTool support both conversion directions?

Yes. Select Cyrillic to Töte or Töte to Cyrillic in Text Mode before entering your text.

Is my text uploaded to a server?

Normal text conversion runs locally in the browser. KazTool does not upload ordinary converter input to a server. Optional AI and document features have their own clearly identified processing flows.

Does conversion preserve punctuation and line breaks?

The converter is designed to preserve punctuation, numbers, spacing, line breaks, and characters outside its conversion rules.

Can I use the result for formal publication?

You can use the output as a working result, but names, loanwords, contextual spellings, and formal publications should be reviewed by a fluent Kazakh reader.

Convert Kazakh Cyrillic and Töte in one workspace

Open the converter, choose a direction, and process your text without installing software.

Use the free converter