If you are not among the people native to the blue regions of the following map, and are reading this, you are more likely to know English as a second language.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_speakers Still, if you are among the majority of internet users, most likely your language of computer usage is exclusively English. Do you know if Windows supports your language or not? By the time you finish reading this post, you will, and the answer is more likely to be “yes”. Take a look at the partial list of supported languages in the screenshot below. What’s more, you can keep the default language English, enable writing in another language, or two, and switch seamlessly between them. You can write your emails, blogs, or fill up blog comments or web forms effortlessly in either or both languages. Here is a self-explanatory screenshot, followed by an easy tutorial.

Windows languages

Here’s the quick tutorial:

Step 1: Go to Control Panel.
Step 2: Click “Regional and Language Options”.
Step 3: Choose the “Languages” tab.
Step 4: If the input language you want to add is East Asian, Indic or among other complex scripts, etc. check the relevant box under “Supplemental Language Support”. For Indic languages check the first box. Click “Apply”. You may be prompted to insert Windows installation CD, and may have to reboot your PC. After rebooting, start from step 1.
Step 5: Click on “Details” under “Text services and input languages”.
Step 6: Under “Installed services” click “Add”.
Step 7: Choose the desired language from the drop down menu, and keep clicking “OK” to close open dialog boxes.

Now, this is how the language bar on your Windows status bar should look like.

Multilingual typing with Windows-XP

Just choose the input language and start typing. Default keyboard shortcut to switch between the input methods is Alt+Shift. You can change this by returning to the above dialog boxes. If you have questions, ask in the comments section.

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