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Quality Assurance


Simplified Chinese QA: Practical Checks Even a Non-Speaker Can Spot
A reviewer does not always need to speak Simplified Chinese to notice that something looks wrong. That does not mean a non-speaker can judge meaning, tone, or grammar. Those still need a native linguist. But Simplified Chinese has some very visible layout and punctuation rules that make it possible to spot certain QA issues on screen. Microsoft’s Simplified Chinese localization guidance and W3C’s Chinese layout requirements both treat punctuation, spacing, and line handling
20 hours ago5 min read


Japanese QA: Practical Checks Reviewers Should Not Miss
When people think about Japanese localization, they often assume the main challenge is understanding the language itself. Of course, language matters. But in Japanese QA, some of the most useful checks are not only linguistic. They are visual. That is what makes Japanese such a strong QA topic. A string can be translated correctly and still fail review because the character width is wrong, the brackets are the wrong style, the line break looks unnatural, or the UI does not ha
2 days ago5 min read


German QA: What Reviewers Should Actually Check
German QA is not only about grammar. In real localization projects, many of the problems reviewers catch are much more practical: number style, phone number display, capitalization, formal address, punctuation, and whether the wording still fits on a small screen. This is what makes German useful in QA. A translation can be accurate and still look wrong, inconsistent, or too heavy for the product. Below are some of the most useful German QA checks, with examples. 1. Check num
Apr 46 min read


Arabic QA Is Not Just About Translation
When people think about Arabic localization, they often assume that only an Arabic speaker can review it properly. Of course, a native speaker is essential for checking meaning, tone, grammar, and terminology. But Arabic QA is not only linguistic. It is also visual. That is what makes Arabic different from many other QA topics. A translation can be perfectly correct in meaning and still fail the reading experience because of layout, punctuation, directionality, or mixed-scrip
Apr 35 min read


French QA Is Not Just About Fluency
Why Locale Matters in Review When people review French translations, they often focus first on fluency. Does the sentence sound natural? Is the grammar correct? Is the terminology accurate? Those questions matter, but they are not the whole picture. A French translation can be completely fluent and still be wrong for the target locale. This is one of the most important things a reviewer needs to keep in mind when working with different French markets. In practice, French QA i
Apr 36 min read


Spanish QA Is Not Just About Meaning
When people talk about translation quality, they often focus on the obvious things first: meaning, terminology, and grammar. Those are important, of course. But in real localization work, Spanish QA often goes beyond that. A translation can be fully understandable and still feel wrong to a native reader. It can transfer the meaning correctly and still fail basic expectations of written Spanish. That is exactly why Spanish QA is not only about asking whether the sentence was t
Apr 15 min read
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