- Windows 11 24h2 would have a bug where it mixes two languages
- After a change from one language to another, the menus end up being displayed in these two languages
- This seems to be a specific problem at 24H2, although Microsoft’s last (optional) correction (optional) can have fixed things
Windows 11 24H2 would have another strange bug and this time the Microsoft operating system makes a tongue waste, although a correction for the problem is available (I will come back to this later).
The XDA developers were on the case to highlight this problem, noting publications on Reddit and the Microsoft support forum, Answers.com, which explains the problem by which an installation of Windows 11 mixes two different languages.
What is happening according to the different reports is that if a PC executes Windows 11 24H2 and is configured with, say, Spanish as a language, then the operating system has passed through English, the interface ends as a mixture of the two languages.
Screening evidence (see below) are provided for a Windows 11 24H2 system which has been changed from Japanese to English, and the menus are a disorderly mixture of the two (in fact, more Japanese, the original language, than English).
Unfortunately, even delete the original language of the installation of Windows 11 in question does not heal the problem, the interface remaining obstinately the same, a confusing combo of the two languages.
Apparently, this has been a problem since October 2024, when the 24h2 update was published for the first time – so in other words, it was a buckt under way from the start.
There are some system administrators saying that they are faced with the problem with their 24 -hour PC fleet, and some devices are affected, while others are not, without rhyme or apparent reason regarding the affected systems. (Even computers with exactly the same material are affected in one case, not in another).
What seems clear is that the problem does not relate to Windows 11 23:2m machines, but is only a problem for those who upgrade (or clean installation) of the 24H2 version of the operating system.
Was this bug literally corrected?
There are better news among the confused chatter and the scratch of the head about this problem, and this is the revelation of the Reddit wire above – by the original poster – that the installation of the last update for Windows 11 apparently healed the problem.
This is the optional corrective for Windows 11 24h2 published earlier this week, which is delivered with a whole bunch of repair work for various problems in the operating system, and apparently the correction of this language bug. Obviously, take this with a certain seasoning, but if you have experienced this strange mixture of two languages in the Windows 11 interface, it is probably worth installing the update of the preview to cure these blues.
Or, if you prefer, you can simply wait until next month, when this overview will become the full March cumulative update for 24-hour users, after being carried out by its final test (this is what the optional update is for-and the reason why it is optional, because it can still have wrinkles to postpone, then consider yourself).
Windows 11 24h2 Having another bug will not surprise as much for those who follow the latest version, which has been struck by a multitude of problems since it emerged at the end of last year.