> On Saturday, 11 Feb 2017 at 22:38, Uwe Brauer wrote:
> It does not strictly speaking correspond to English but to the "default"
> language for each individual application which may, of course, be
> English in many if not most cases.
> Good examples and further explanations can be found in
>
http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/87745/what-does-lc-all-c-do#87748
thanks,
Meanwhile I found out that I can switch manually in emacs (and not
touching the shell variables) via,
(set-locale-environment "es_ES.UTF-8")
(set-locale-environment "de_DE.UTF-8")
(setq system-time-locale "C")