Office 2016 Mac Change Language

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  1. Ms Office 2016 Mac
  2. Office 2016 Mac Os
  3. Office 2016 Mac
  4. Office 2016 Mac Change Interface Language

Summary: Learn about the language packs and language interface packs that are available for Office.

Change Language Office 2016. This setting does not present itself when installing either, and there are no different installers per language. The only way to change the language that Office for Mac 2016 uses in it's menus and settings is by changing the OSX language. I want to change the language manually, so that it can be different from OSX's language.

An installation of Office 2016 can include applications or user interface elements in more than one language because some Office 2016 products are not available in every language.

This article describes the language versions that are available for a subset of Office 2016 applications, the Office 2016 applications that will work with Language Interface Packs, and the recommended base languages to install for Office 2016 Language Interface Packs.

Important

This article describes methods of deploying and managing language packs for versions of Office 2016 that use the Windows Installer (MSI) installation technology, which are available for enterprises through volume licensing. If you have an Office subscription and you're deploying Microsoft 365 Apps, which uses the Click-to-Run installation technology, see Overview of deploying languages for Microsoft 365 Apps.

Applications and language availability

In some non-English language versions of Office 2016, a specific Office 2016 application may not be available. For example, Access 2016 is not available in Hindi. Therefore, the Hindi language version of Office 2016 is installed in English.

Some Office applications are not available in some languages. Project 2016 and Visio 2016 are available in a subset of languages, as shown in the following table.

Language availability for the 2016 versions of Project and Visio

LanguageProject 2016Visio 2016
Arabic
yes
yes
Brazilian
yes
yes
Bulgarian
no
no
Chinese - Simple
yes
yes
Chinese - Traditional
yes
yes
Croatian
no
no
Czech
yes
yes
Danish
yes
yes
Dutch
yes
yes
English
yes
yes
Finnish
yes
yes
French
yes
yes
German
yes
yes
Greek
yes
yes
Hebrew
yes
yes
Hindi
no
no
Hungarian
yes
yes
Italian
yes
yes
Japanese
yes
yes
Korean
yes
yes
Norwegian (Bokmål)
yes
yes
Polish
yes
yes
Portuguese (European)
yes
yes
Romanian
no
no
Russian
yes
yes
Serbian (Latin)
no
no
Slovak
yes
yes
Slovenian
yes
yes
Spanish
yes
yes
Swedish
yes
yes
Thai
no
no
Turkish
yes
yes
Ukrainian
yes
yes

Language Interface Packs

For some languages, Microsoft localizes only some Office 2016 applications and releases them as Language Interface Packs (LIPs). These LIPs localize the user interface only, and not the Help content. Administrators must first install a fully localized base language version (see the table later in this section) of Office 2016, and then install the LIP. Users can then work in their preferred language in the following applications and features:

  • Excel 2016

  • OneNote 2016

  • Outlook 2016

  • PowerPoint 2016

  • Shared Office features

  • Word 2016

  • Skype for Business 2016, but only for the following languages:

    • Albanian: sq-SQ

    • Azerbaijani (Latin): az-Latn-AZ

    • Basque: eu-ES

    • Belarusian: be-BE

    • Catalan: ca-ES

    • Farsi (Persian): fa-IR

    • Filipino: fil-PH

    • Galician: gl-ES

    • Macedonian: mk-MK

    • Serbian (Cyrillic): sr-Cyrl-RS

    • Uzbek (Latin): uz-Latn-UZ

The remaining Office applications appear in the base Office 2016 installation language. The following table lists the base language for each LIP language.

Base languages available for Language Interface Packs

LIP languageBase language
Afrikaans
English
Albanian
English
Amharic
English
Armenian
English
Assamese
English
Azerbaijani - Latin script
English
Bangla (Bangladesh)
English
Basque (Basque)
Spanish
Belarusian
Russian
Bengali - India
English or Hindi
Bosnian - Latin script
English
Catalan
Spanish
Dari
English
Filipino
English
Galician
Spanish
Georgian
English
Gujarati
English
Icelandic
English
Irish - Gaelic
English
Kannada
English
Khmer
English
Kiswahili
English
Konkani
English
Krygyz
Russian
Luxembourgish
French
Macedonian (FYROM)
English
Malayalam
English
Maltese
English
Maori
English
Marathi
English
Mongolian - Cyrillic script
English
Nepali
English
Norwegian (Nynorsk)
Norwegian (Bokmål)
Odia
English
Persian (Farsi)
English
Punjabi (India)
English
Quechua (Peru)
Spanish
Scottish Gaelic
English
Serbian - Cyrillic script
Serbian (Latin)
Serbian - Cyrillic script (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
English
Sindhi (Pakistan)
English
Sinhala
English
Tamil (India)
English
Tatar
Russian
Telugu
English
Turkmen
Russian
Urdu
English
Uyghur
Chinese (Simplified)
Uzbek - Latin script
English or Russian
Valencian
Spanish
Welsh
English

For information about how to obtain the LIP you need for your deployment, see Download language packs, language interface packs, and proofing tools for volume license versions of Office.

Related topics

And the related FAQ: Where can I find the Office Proofing Tools?

The primary purpose of Office language packs — now called language accessory packs for Office 2016 — is to change the display language of Office menus, dialogs and Help into your native language, just as Windows language packs do for the overall system. But they are accompanied by a free handy toolset you can use across languages: the Office Proofing Tools.

In the past, many users purchased Office language packs only to obtain the proofing tools, but in recent versions all or most of these tools have been made available for free separate download.

Office Proofing Tools include an option to right-click and select 'Translate' from the context menu, and a 'Translation ScreenTips' feature that displays explanations in another language while you hover over buttons and other options in the program.

The proofing tools will also allow you to sort Simplified Chinese by number of strokes or Pinyin, and Traditional Chinese by strokes or Zhuyin. In English and most other non-Chinese editing languages, Hanzi will sort by Unicode code point values. That is generally in Kangxi dictionary order, although I believe it gets weird once you get into the number ranges of rare characters. But after installing Chinese proofing tools, sorting in Word and Excel will work the way most Chinese speakers expect. See the FAQ page on sorting Chinese characters in MS Excel and Word for instructions on setting up and using this feature.

Office

Simplified/Traditional Chinese character conversion is also included. In recent versions of Office, that feature lives in the Review ribbon. If you try to run that converter and get a message saying 'More than one file necessary to do TC/SC translation is missing', you don't actually have the feature installed and will need to download proofing tools or a language pack by following the instructions below.

Where to Get Office Language Packs & Tools:

For Office 2016 you can download entire 'Language Accessory Packs' free, including Chinese display (ribbons, menus, dialogs, and more in Chinese), Chinese help, and Chinese proofing tools, in separate packages for 简体 and 繁體 direct from the Microsoft Office 2016 Language Accessory Pack download page .

Ms Office 2016 Mac

For Office 2013 you can download the Chinese Proofing Tools and Translation ScreenTips for free. And although Microsoft also sells USD $24.99 简体 and 繁體 Office Language Packs for those needing the entire user interface in Chinese, you can just reinstall Office entirely in Chinese at no additional cost if you have an Office 365 subscription or education/enterprise license. Office 2013 'Language Preferences' (in your Start menu with Office) contains links to the Microsoft download page, but here it is direct: Office 2013 Language Packs, Proofing Tools and ScreenTips

For Office 2010 Microsoft offers a free download of Chinese ScreenTips and they were selling single-language Office Language Packs with the proofing tools included (for USD $24.95 each, in 简体 or 繁體 versions, with Chinese-language installers only), but last time I checked those language packs had once again disappeared from the Microsoft Store and other sites.

Feel free to search for these 600MB Office 2010 language pack files yourself, or let me know if you need help:

Office 2016 Mac Change Language
32-bit SimplifiedX16-37690.exe
32-bit TraditionalX16-37692.exe
64-bit SimplifiedX16-37627.exe
64-bit TraditionalX16-37628.exe

If you only need the free 2010 input method updates, those are still available free. See my FAQ pages on the mainland/Singapore MSPY 2010 IME update and the Taiwan/HK/Macau 'Office'IME 2010 update.

For Office 2007, all three features were inside downloadable single-language packs, but I can't find those online anymore. They were also on the last of three discs, 'Proofing Tools', in the full 36-language Office Multi-Language Pack 2007 DVD package. It offered English-language installers, but was rather expensive. It is usually out of stock but sometimes is posted for sale by independent sellers on Amazon.com. You might also try auction sites like eBay.

2016

You can also try searching for the following 500MB Office 2007 language pack files, or let me know if you need help:

SimplifiedX12-34004.exe
Traditional, TaiwanX12-34005.exe
Traditional, HKX12-34006.exe

For Office 2003 you had the same choices once, except they were called MUI (Multilingual User Interface) Packs. These are no longer sold retail, so you may need to hunt around on sites like eBay where you may find a good deal. Here are is an eBay search for Office MUI / Language Packs.

Office 2016 Mac Os

NOTE: the single-language packs sold anywhere except Microsoft's own site are almost always Spanish, even if the seller doesn't specify.

Office 2016 Mac

Free online character converters abound, and this may be all you need. Check the Free Online Chinese Tools section of my More Apps & Tools page. But when you do this you may have problems with the invisible underlying code points in your documents, so see also my instructions on traditional/simplified encoding if the characters keep changing back or other strange symbols appear. (Even though that FAQ page is meant to help people with ruby text, the same trick works for text you've converted online.)

Office 2016 Mac Change Interface Language

It's hard to keep up with Microsoft's changes — and ever-changing download links — without help and prodding from all of you out there, so please feel free to contact me with questions, comments, and suggestions anytime.