Emotions and Language — How the Words We Choose Shape What We Feel
Language doesn't just describe emotions — it shapes them. Why Imotara supports 22 languages and how it protects those who feel in one language but work in another.
Founder, Imotara
There is a word in Portuguese — saudade — that describes a deep, melancholic longing for something or someone you love that is absent. English doesn't have a single word for this. Neither does Hindi. But the feeling exists in every language.
Language doesn't just describe emotions. It shapes them. The words available to you determine, in part, how precisely you can identify what you're feeling — and research suggests that naming an emotion reduces its intensity. "Name it to tame it," as neuroscientist Dan Siegel puts it.
The problem with English-only emotional AI
Most AI wellness tools are built for English speakers. If you think in Portuguese, feel most naturally in your mother tongue, or switch languages mid-sentence, a tool that only understands your words in English is only understanding part of you.
How Imotara approaches this
Imotara supports 22 languages — including Brazilian and European Portuguese. Language support isn't just translation. It's recognition. The system works with your expression as it arrives — in the language and register in which it was written. Your feelings are valid in every language you speak. Imotara is listening in all of them.
Emotional safety often lives in the mother tongue. Imotara is the space where you don't have to translate yourself first.
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