Make a word cloud

Your word cloud

Omitted words

Number of words: 0 / 0

The following words could not fit in the word cloud:

To try to fit more: reduce the difference in word sizes, alter the layout of the word cloud or regenerate.

Word cloud controls

Word cloud settings

Font

  • sans-serif
  • serif
  • monospace
  • Daniel
  • Essays1743
  • Gentium
  • Gruenewald-VA
  • Isabella
  • Jura
  • Sniglet
  • Yiggivoo

Colour

from to
For an unlimited number, set to 0.

Layout

  • Portrait
  • Landscape
1.6 : 1
:
Width cannot be more than 10× height, & vice versa.
Word clouds always scale to fit.

Size

Words

Generating from a new source will not change your current word cloud settings. However, changes made to individual words will be lost because a new word list will be created.
0 were found in the initial source.
Only display words found at least this often.
The highest frequency is 0.

0 match the filtering criteria.

Word settings

Set by filtering criteria.
Set manually by you.

Save your word cloud

Initial source

Normal text

Copy and paste the text of your document or .
By default, the more frequently a word is found, the larger it becomes in the word cloud.

No filter

Text is repeated in the word cloud as given. It is not counted, filtered or sorted.

Table

Copy and paste from a spreadsheet or manually enter your own.
Separate columns with a tab, comma, colon or a space (see ).

Initial source settings

For example, enter a table, or apply no filter if words do not repeat.

Separate by a space or a new line. .

Each will be removed from the beginning or end of any word. .

Each character is replaced by a non-breaking space, keeping words together.

How to get started

  1. From the Normal text menu, copy and paste your text into the textbox (or use an ).
  2. Hit the Generate button to create your first word cloud.

About word clouds

A word cloud is an image made of words that together resemble a cloudy shape.
The size of a word shows how important it is e.g. how often it appears in a text — its frequency.

People typically use word clouds to easily produce a summary of large documents (reports, speeches), to create art on a topic (gifts, displays) or to visualise data (tables, surveys).