This is what makes the plugin “multilingual”: one setting lets the AI write your entire article – title, body, FAQs, and even SEO data – in the language your readers actually speak.
Overview
Under Post Options in Settings, the Post language setting controls what language every generated article is written in. You can match your WordPress site’s own language automatically, pick from over twenty ready-made languages, or type in absolutely any language you like using the Custom language field. Unlike a translation tool that converts existing text, this plugin has the AI write the article natively in that language from the very first word – including headings, the FAQ section, and SEO meta data.
How It Works
When you choose a language other than English, the plugin adds a mandatory “Language” instruction to every AI request, telling it to write the entire article – including localized section headings like “What Happened,” “Background,” and “Why It Matters,” and the FAQ heading and questions – natively in that language, not translated afterward. The language you choose at generation time is permanently saved with each post (so you always know what language a specific article was written in, even if you change the setting later), and it’s also used to write that post’s SEO title and meta description in the same language.
Step-by-Step Guide
1. Open the Post Options panel
Go to AI News Publisher → Settings and scroll to the Post Options panel.
2. Open the Post language dropdown
Find Post language. The first option, Site language, automatically matches whatever language your WordPress site is already set to (shown in parentheses next to it).
3. Pick a ready-made language
Choose from over twenty built-in options, including English, Spanish, French, German, Italian, Portuguese (and Portuguese – Brazil), Dutch, Polish, Russian, Japanese, Korean, Chinese (Simplified), Arabic, Hindi, Gujarati, Bengali, Turkish, Vietnamese, Thai, Indonesian, Swedish, and Ukrainian.
4. Or choose Custom for any other language
If your language isn’t in the list, select Custom (specify below). A new field, Custom language, appears – type any language name at all, such as “Tamil,” “Swahili,” or “Catalan,” and the AI will write the full article in that language.
5. Save your settings
Click Save Settings at the bottom of the page.
6. Generate a test article
Go to the Dashboard and click Generate Now for one post. Open the resulting article and confirm the title, body, headings, and FAQ are all written naturally in your chosen language – not just translated word-for-word.
7. Check the SEO data matches
Open your SEO plugin’s fields on that same post (See News SEO, Meta Data & Schema) and confirm the meta title and description are also written in your chosen language, not left in English.
8. Run different languages side by side (optional)
You can change Post language at any time – every already-published post keeps the language it was originally written in, while new articles use whatever language is currently selected, letting you run different language “seasons” for the same site if needed.
Fields Table
| Field Name | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
Post language |
The language the AI writes the entire post in – title, body, FAQs, and SEO meta. |
Spanish |
Site language |
A special option that automatically matches your WordPress site’s own configured language. |
Site language (English (US)) |
Custom language |
A free-text field for any language name not in the built-in list. |
Tamil, Swahili, Catalan |
Content language (saved per post) |
The exact language a specific already-published article was written in, stored permanently with that post. |
French |
Field Explanations
Choosing Site language is the safest default for most users – it keeps your articles in the same language as the rest of your WordPress site (menus, widgets, theme text) without you needing to check what that language code actually is.
Because the language used is saved individually on every post, changing this setting never rewrites or breaks your existing articles – it only affects articles generated from that point forward.
The Custom language field is genuinely open-ended – the AI will attempt to write fluently in whatever language name you type, though very ready-made languages (the twenty-plus built into the dropdown) will generally be the most reliable and polished.
Tips
- Always generate and review at least one test article after changing the language, especially for languages using non-Latin scripts (Arabic, Japanese, Hindi, etc.).
- Pick Site language if you’re not sure – it keeps your blog consistent with the rest of your WordPress site automatically.
- If you run a multi-language news site, consider keeping separate category structures per language season so readers can find related articles easily.
Common Mistakes
- Assuming existing published posts will change language. Only newly generated articles use an updated Post language setting – past posts keep whatever language they were written in.
- Choosing Custom without typing anything in Custom language. An empty custom language field gives the AI no language instruction to follow.
- Forgetting to check SEO fields after switching languages. A mismatched English meta title on a Spanish article looks unprofessional to both readers and search engines.