Short sentences, strong verbs, and concrete nouns reduce ambiguity and stress. Present one idea per paragraph, front‑load key actions, and define unfamiliar terms in context. Research shows plain language improves comprehension for all readers, especially people with cognitive disabilities, ADHD, fatigue, or limited bandwidth.
Respect how people self‑identify, and avoid labels that reduce individuals to conditions or stereotypes. Replace violent or exclusionary metaphors with accurate, neutral descriptions. Write alt text, captions, and image copy that reflect diversity in race, gender, and ability, inviting readers to see themselves with dignity.
Localization goes beyond words. Adjust examples, dates, idioms, humor, and reading direction. Validate machine translation with native reviewers, and watch for false friends. Provide multilingual search, language switcher persistence, and consistent terminology, so international audiences feel truly welcomed rather than tolerated by a monolingual default.
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