The Ultimate
AI Translator for Web, PDFs and Videos
AI Translator Your All-in-One AI Translation Solution
What is Cambridge University Press?
Cambridge University Press publishes prestigious academic books and journals. While invaluable for research, the complex, high-level English often poses a significant language barrier for international students and non-native researchers.
Need a Cambridge University Press translator?
Readers want native language access without losing context. Common translators often garble math formulas, misinterpret citations, and erase the original text, making academic verification and technical accuracy impossible.
This is what Immersive Translate delivers
Read foreign websites with bilingual context
Open the original webpage you actually want to read
Start from the live source instead of switching to copied text elsewhere.
Turn on Immersive Translate and keep both languages together
Read the translation while still checking the original wording and structure.
Follow posts, comments, and articles without losing context
Stay accurate when browsing social media, forums, and news across languages.
Ultimate Academic Content Translator

Intelligent adapters leave math formulas, numbered citations, and figures intact, ensuring no broken equations or garbled references appear.
Displays original text and translation together, allowing you to verify sources accurately before quoting or citing foreign academic papers.


Powered by 20+ engines like DeepL and OpenAI to handle complex scientific, medical, and engineering terminology with high accuracy.
Works seamlessly across arXiv, PubMed, Google Scholar, Coursera, edX, and university pages without requiring any special configuration.


Hover over any unfamiliar technical term to translate it instantly without disrupting your flow or translating the entire document.
Provides parallel subtitles for lecture videos, showing one line of original text and one line of translation for better comprehension.

Academic Research Essentials

Formula Breakdowns

Terminology Errors



















