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Professional Chinese document translation for Figtree residents. Personal, business and legal documents translated by NAATI-certified translators.
Upload your documents for a free quote. We translate all types of Chinese documents with NAATI certification for official use in Australia.
Our Chinese translators handle all types of personal documents for Figtree residents.
For businesses in Figtree requiring Chinese translation services:
Required for government submissions, visa applications, court proceedings and institutional use. Our NAATI-certified Chinese translators provide official certification accepted across Australia.
Suitable for internal business use, personal reference and general understanding. Still translated by professional Chinese translators but without the NAATI stamp.
For businesses in Figtree with large volumes of documents, we offer project-based pricing with dedicated project management and consistent terminology. Email [email protected] for a custom quote.
Chinese is a group of language varieties that form the Sinitic branch of the Sino-Tibetan languages, spoken by the ethnic Han Chinese majority and many minority ethnic groups in Greater China. About 1.3 billion people (or approximately 16% of the world's population) speak a variety of Chinese as their first language.
Standard Chinese (Standard Mandarin), based on the Beijing dialect of Mandarin, was adopted in the 1930s and is now an official language of both the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China (Taiwan), one of the four official languages of Singapore, and one of the six official languages of the United Nations. The written form, using the logograms known as Chinese characters, is shared by literate speakers of mutually unintelligible dialects. Since the 1950s, simplified Chinese characters have been promoted for use by the government of the People's Republic of China, while Singapore officially adopted simplified characters in 1976. Traditional characters remain in use in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Macau, and other countries with significant overseas Chinese speaking communities such as Malaysia (which although adopted simplified characters as the de facto standard in the 1980s, traditional characters still remain in widespread use).