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Click on the video tab on the toolbar and search for the subtitle option to disable subtitles. However, if the subtitles are "hardsubbed", that is they are part of the video itself, they cannot be disabled.
If you want to permanently add subtitles to the video, you will burn the subtitles into the video image. You can use a free program like Free HD Video Converter Factory to do it. Add your video to the program > select output format > hardcode subtitles > export the file.
I ripped a dvd with WinX pro and got the file, but when i go to edit it in Corel Video Studio it shows the subtitles. and when i watch it on Windows Media Player it doesnt show subtitles, how do i get rid of them on Corel? Help?
You can hardcode subtitles to AVI file through a program called Free HD Video Converter Factory. It has a subtitle option which allows you to add .srt and other types of subtitles to videos permanently.
Some videos have an option to have them on or off. Look at the bottom of the video for a "CC" button (closed captions). If it's there then try that. Otherwise, the video might have been rendered with the subtitles on it, therefore they cannot be removed, you have to either put up with them or find the same video somewhere else.
No. You would need to download the video and add subtitles using software designed for editing. On the other hand, if you are talking about television or movies; most contain closed captioning options, even if they do not have subtitles. Most televisions or playback machines have the option to turn on CC. CC quality is generally lower than subtitles, but better than nothing. Regardless of the source, whatever you are playing needs to contain the CC or subtitle info in order for your player or television to activate it, or you will need to create it for yourself through an editing program. No device can display subtitles or CC if they do not exist in the recorded data already.
Just right click the screen, scroll down the options to video, subtitles and then choose the desired subtitle or choose open file to use subtitles which aren't attached to the file or are under a different name.
External subtitles files are not loadable into winamp in the standard functionalism of the program. No one has released a plugin to add this functionality either, but someone could do it in the future. You will have to use another program. Actually, you may try Video Converter Studio that allows you to load subtitle file and merge it to video. There's a how-to tutorial about how to do this job, Hope it's helpful to you.
I use iDealshare VideoGo to add subtitles to MP4, it also helps to add subtitles to other video like AVI, MKV, WMV, MOV, VOB and etc. Step by step guide at http://www.idealshare.net/video-converter/add-subtitles-to-mp4.html It has both Mac version and Windows version. It even has the feature of extract subtitles from video or removing subtitles from video
No
Import the video file into a video editing program, add the subtitles using separate Title layers and by adjusting the length and time they appear over the video for each instance of speech, then render the video out again. The subtitles will then be part of the video, not a separate setting that can be toggled on or off.
YouTube supports subtitles if the person who uploaded the video created them, but most online video sites don't have subtitles. For downloaded movies, first download VLC media player open it (the player not the file). Select File > Open File (not Quick Open File) in the File tab. Open: Browse Use a subtitles file: Check the box Advanced Settings: File : Browse First select browse on the first line and choose your media file Then check the box in the second line and choose your subtitle file.