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Duplicate Consonants in Text

Repeat every consonant a number of times. Runs entirely in your browser, so your data never leaves your device.

0 chars · 0 lines

Output

The result appears here as you type.

Options

How to use Duplicate Consonants in Text

  1. 1. Paste the text to stutter. Paste or type the sentence you want stretched into the input pane. Duplicate Consonants in Text finds every consonant and leaves vowels exactly as they are.
  2. 2. Set the Copies value. Enter a number in the Copies field to control how many times each consonant repeats. A value of 2 turns hello into hhellllo, giving the word a stammering, stretched-out feel.
  3. 3. Copy the stuttered result. Click copy on the output pane and drop the result into dialogue, a character's voice line or any place you want a stammering, drawn-out consonant effect.

When to use Duplicate Consonants in Text

Duplicate Consonants in Text repeats every consonant a set number of times while leaving vowels alone, producing a stammering or stuttering version of a word. It's a fast way to script a hesitant voice line without retyping each letter by hand.

  • Writing a stuttering character's dialogue. A script or story with a nervous character needs words like h-h-hello to read as a stammer. Running the line through the tool applies the effect consistently across a whole passage.
  • Creating stylized text art. Doubling or tripling consonants gives plain words a chunky, exaggerated look that suits a poster headline, a banner or a piece of stylized display typography where a denser word shape helps it stand out.
  • Scripting a video game character voice. Some game dialogue systems render a monster or glitching character's speech with duplicated letters. Feeding a line through this tool generates that stammering text without hand-editing every consonant.
  • Testing emphasis in casual writing. Doubling consonants in a casual message, unlike stretching vowels, gives a harder, more clipped kind of emphasis that reads differently in a chat message, a caption or a comment reply.

Examples

Double consonants

Input

hello

Output

hhellllo

About the Duplicate Consonants in Text tool

Duplicate Consonants in Text does its work locally, right in the browser. Repeat every consonant a number of times. There is no upload step, no queue and no account, and your data never travels over the network.

It belongs to the Text Tools collection on EditSafely, a set of 211 small, focused Text utilities that share the same instant, private workspace.

You can shape the output with the Copies setting, and the result refreshes the moment you change it. A worked example further down the page shows exactly what the tool produces for a real input.

Running locally also makes the tool fast and dependable: results appear as you type or drop a file, there is no server outage that can take it down mid-task, and confidential data can be processed without a second thought.

Frequently asked questions

Is Duplicate Consonants in Text free to use?

Yes, it is completely free. All 2,658 tools on EditSafely work without an account, a subscription or usage limits.

Is it safe to paste sensitive or confidential data?

Everything happens locally. Your browser downloads the tool's code once, then does all the processing itself; nothing you enter is transmitted, stored or logged. You can even go offline after the page loads and it will still work.

How much text can I process at once?

There is no fixed limit. Because the work happens on your own device rather than on a shared server, the practical ceiling is your machine's memory, which comfortably handles inputs far larger than typical online tools allow.

Do I need to sign up or install anything?

No. The tool works in any modern browser on desktop, tablet or phone. There is no account to create, no extension to add and no software to install.

How do I use the result?

The output panel has a one-click copy button, and you can keep refining the input while you work; the result updates in place as you type.

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