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I have a non-English blog, but users in our country don't usually search via our local language even they like to read local language articles.

Ex: People search like "Lates Sinhala News", "Make Money Online Sinhala Guide", etc. They never use Sinhala when searching.

So I thought to use English for h1 tag and title tag. Is it bad? Will my site be penalized by Google?

FYI : There is around 10k organic traffic per month for currently for this blog. 95% them are for English search quires... The landing pages of those pages titles are non-English+English mix.

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  • What if a user searches for an English phrase that isn't in the title tag? Mixing the on-page language in this way doesn't feel right at all. Is English often mixed with this other language in common usage?
    – MrWhite
    Commented Jul 24, 2018 at 9:19
  • Is English often mixed with this other language in common usage Yes, even we talking we use some English words like news, bus stand, train, etc.... very rarely use Sinhala words for those words, but now I am going to use total English titles...... Commented Jul 24, 2018 at 9:51

3 Answers 3

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The guide of Google Managing multi-regional and multilingual sites directly informs:

Make sure the page language is obvious

Therefore, do not use more than one language for the contents of the web page.

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  • Thanks, but this isn't multilingual or multi-regional website Commented Jul 23, 2018 at 5:04
  • "this isn't multilingual or multi-regional website" - but maybe it should be?
    – MrWhite
    Commented Jul 24, 2018 at 9:20
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This is an interesting case, I also managed some sites in similar locales, were people use a mix of English and local languages in the same sentences. (although most of the search would be in local language, just some terms in English)

What we did, is we used both language version for certain keywords in the title, description and headings.

If the subject of the page is blue widget, we might use:

blue widget local language version ([Blue widget english])

This seemed to serve us well, we would rank and get traffic for both terms.

Some people may ask why we didn't have separate pages for the different languages (as posed in the comments), and actually we did have the choice, you could select English or local language setting. However it was implemented in such a way it used dynamic serving on the single URL, the default being local language which is the only one google could see. (non seo friendly)

We proposed using a correct multiple language page set up, but it would be a big undertaking, a huge change to the platform, so it needed a good ROI. However, when looking at the data for how many people clicked the button to switch to English, it was very small,and the search demand in Google for English key terms was also very small. So the site was never updated to use separate language URLs, as the ROI wasn't there.

However your case is a bit different, where the entire search is in English, but you say they want to read it in Sinhala.

In this case even using separate URLs might not be the best option

  1. If they search in English, land on English page, but then have to switch language, they may bounce.
  2. Using separate language URLs, it means you local language pages will most likely not rank for English search terms, so you wont get the traffic anyway.

However, having your pages in just local languages with English or English mix titles, I would have thought they will have trouble ranking for pure English search terms any? However, you say it's getting traffic doing this now?

I might do some testing, you certainly have the traffic to test and if you have large amounts pages, or new content you could create, I might make 3 test groups.

A. Group of pages keep doing what you are doing (non-English+English mix meta data)

B. Group of pages using multiple page set up for different languages. (using correct hreflang set up)

C. Group of pages with a mix of local and English content (I mean the entire content, not just meta data). So you have a translated transcript. I mention this, as I think it would be an interesting test to do, and I saw a site doing it recently but cant find it now.

Or you could do nothing, carry on what you are doing, if you see performance drop and you suspect because of this, then do something about it.

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In short do anything you like that benefits the users search term(s) if the content is actually related. That is the purpose of search engines.

If you feel you are doing anything to trick the user then you will be penalized. It really is that simple.

Here is an example. I want to learn Persian and I read and speak English natively. How could I learn the language if it is only in English or only Persian?

They(Google) have 10,000 math PHD's writing their algorithms for a reason. To bring the most relevant content to the user without deceptive means.

Make sense?

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