Google Translate has a developer tool that will enable google translate on a website. Is there a way to tell Google Translate to not translate a section of the website? Perh
using <span class="notranslate"></span>
stops translation but does not suppress the popup.
I used Chrome's "Translate to English" context menu to see which words were being translated.
My site used the word "Handicaps". Google wanted to do a French to English translation, suggesting "Handicaps" be changed to "Disabilities". Dropping "Handicaps" for "Player Handicap" solved my issue.
Just a quick update, the HTML5 translate="no" attribute seems to work as intended by now :)
I tested it in a simple HTML that I passed to the translator and it seems to accept both forms of instruction (the class works fine as well)
According to Google instructions, setting class="notranslate"
prevents Google translation. This appears to work, though using it inline (e.g., for a single word) may imply some confusion, so you need to check out what happens.
For example,
Welcome to the <span class="notranslate">Cool</span> company website!
translates into Spanish as “Bienvenido a la Coolweb de la compañía!”, which isn’t that cool, though it demonstrates that “Cool” has been taken as a proper name; without the markup, the text would translate as “Bienvenido a la fresca web de la empresa!”.
Reformulating the text as
Welcome to the website of <span class="notranslate">Cool</span>!
would result in “Bienvenido a la página web de Cool!”, which looks better except that “site” has been mistranslated.
For different target languages, different problems may and will arise. In general, the simpler the grammatical structure of a sentence is, the more often it will get translated reasonably well.
The bottom line is: you can try to prevent translation using class=notranslate
, but the problems of Google Translator may cause confusion.
You could make the name of the site an image.
To disable translation of an entire page, try this in the header:
<meta name="google" content="notranslate" />
From Meta tags that Google understands (bold added by me):
When we recognize that the contents of a page are not in the language that the user is likely to want to read, we often provide a link to a translation in the search results. In general, this gives you the chance to provide your unique and compelling content to a much larger group of users. However, there may be situations where this is not desired. This meta tag tells Google that you don't want us to provide a translation for this page.