How To Set Up HTTP Language For Your Website Traffic
Martin Freiwald
Sept 28, 2023
2 min read
What are HTTP Language Codes?
HTTP language codes, also known as "Accept-Language" codes, specify the user's preferred language for the content returned by the server. They are sent in the "Accept-Language" header of an HTTP request and indicate the languages the client can understand.
Examples of language codes include "en-US" for American English, "fr-FR" for French, and "zh-CN" for Simplified Chinese. The codes follow the format of a two-letter language code, followed by a two-letter country code, separated by a hyphen.
Why Should You Use HTTP Language Codes?
Yes, HTTP language codes can also help you track in Google Analytics which languages your visitors speak, informing decisions about which languages to prioritize when creating new content or expanding your website's reach.
List of Common HTTP Language Codes:
Here, we provide a list of commonly used HTTP Language Codes, such as "en" for English, "es" for Spanish, and "de" for German. Knowing these codes can help you better target your audience.
Language | ISO Code |
---|---|
Abkhazian | ab |
Afar | aa |
Afrikaans | af |
Akan | ak |
Albanian | sq |
Amharic | am |
Arabic | ar |
Aragonese | an |
Armenian | hy |
Assamese | as |
Avaric | av |
Avestan | ae |
Aymara | ay |
Azerbaijani | az |
Bambara | bm |
Bashkir | ba |
Basque | eu |
Belarusian | be |
Bengali (Bangla) | bn |
Bihari | bh |
Bislama | bi |
Bosnian | bs |
Breton | br |
Bulgarian | bg |
Burmese | my |
Catalan | ca |
Chamorro | ch |
Chechen | ce |
Chichewa, Chewa, Nyanja | ny |
Chinese | zh |
Chinese (Simplified) | zh-Hans |
Chinese (Traditional) | zh-Hant |
Chuvash | cv |
Cornish | kw |
Corsican | co |
Cree | cr |
Croatian | hr |
Czech | cs |
Danish | da |
Divehi, Dhivehi, Maldivian | dv |
Dutch | nl |
Dzongkha | dz |
English | en |
Esperanto | eo |
Estonian | et |
Ewe | ee |
Faroese | fo |
Fijian | fj |
Finnish | fi |
French | fr |
Fula, Fulah, Pulaar, Pular | ff |
Galician | gl |
Gaelic (Scottish) | gd |
Gaelic (Manx) | gv |
Georgian | ka |
German | de |
Greek | el |
Greenlandic | kl |
Guarani | gn |
Gujarati | gu |
Haitian Creole | ht |
Hausa | ha |
Hebrew | he |
Herero | hz |
Hindi | hi |
Hiri Motu | ho |
Hungarian | hu |
Icelandic | is |
Ido | io |
Igbo | ig |
Indonesian | id, in |
Interlingua | ia |
Interlingue | ie |
Inuktitut | iu |
Inupiak | ik |
Irish | ga |
Italian | it |
Japanese | ja |
Javanese | jv |
Kalaallisut, Greenlandic | kl |
Kannada | kn |
Kanuri | kr |
Kashmiri | ks |
Kazakh | kk |
Khmer | km |
Kikuyu | ki |
Kinyarwanda (Rwanda) | rw |
Kirundi | rn |
Kyrgyz | ky |
Komi | kv |
Kongo | kg |
Korean | ko |
Kurdish | ku |
Kwanyama | kj |
Language | ISO Code |
---|---|
Lao | lo |
Latin | la |
Latvian (Lettish) | lv |
Limburgish ( Limburger) | li |
Lingala | ln |
Lithuanian | lt |
Luga-Katanga | lu |
Luganda, Ganda | lg |
Luxembourgish | lb |
Manx | gv |
Macedonian | mk |
Malagasy | mg |
Malay | ms |
Malayalam | ml |
Maltese | mt |
Maori | mi |
Marathi | mr |
Marshallese | mh |
Moldavian | mo |
Mongolian | mn |
Nauru | na |
Navajo | nv |
Ndonga | ng |
Northern Ndebele | nd |
Nepali | ne |
Norwegian | no |
Norwegian bokmål | nb |
Norwegian nynorsk | nn |
Nuosu | ii |
Occitan | oc |
Ojibwe | oj |
Oriya | or |
Oromo (Afaan Oromo) | om |
Ossetian | os |
Pāli | pi |
Pashto, Pushto | ps |
Persian (Farsi) | fa |
Polish | pl |
Portuguese | pt |
Punjabi (Eastern) | pa |
Quechua | qu |
Romansh | rm |
Romanian | ro |
Russian | ru |
Sami | se |
Samoan | sm |
Sango | sg |
Sanskrit | sa |
Serbian | sr |
Serbo-Croatian | sh |
Sesotho | st |
Setswana | tn |
Shona | sn |
Sichuan Yi | ii |
Sindhi | sd |
Sinhalese | si |
Siswati | ss |
Slovak | sk |
Slovenian | sl |
Somali | so |
Southern Ndebele | nr |
Spanish | es |
Sundanese | su |
Swahili (Kiswahili) | sw |
Swati | ss |
Swedish | sv |
Tagalog | tl |
Tahitian | ty |
Tajik | tg |
Tamil | ta |
Tatar | tt |
Telugu | te |
Thai | th |
Tibetan | bo |
Tigrinya | ti |
Tonga | to |
Tsonga | ts |
Turkish | tr |
Turkmen | tk |
Twi | tw |
Uyghur | ug |
Ukrainian | uk |
Urdu | ur |
Uzbek | uz |
Venda | ve |
Vietnamese | vi |
Volapük | vo |
Wallon | wa |
Welsh | cy |
Wolof | wo |
Western Frisian | fy |
Xhosa | xh |
Yiddish | yi, ji |
Yoruba | yo |
Zhuang, Chuang | za |
Zulu | zu |
About The Author
Martin Freiwald is the CEO of Traffic Bot, a leading digital marketing agency specializing in driving organic traffic and converting leads into loyal customers. With over a decade of experience in the industry, Martin is passionate about helping businesses grow their online presence and achieve their marketing goals.
An expert in SEO, content marketing, and customer acquisition strategies, Martin has been featured in numerous industry publications and podcasts. He believes in the power of data-driven decision-making and is committed to delivering actionable insights for businesses of all sizes.