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Danish to English translation services - If you're looking to translate documents from Danish to English, Mighty Translation is ready to assist!
Danish Translator - Get a free quote for professional Danish to English document translation by experienced full-time translators. Our Danish to English translation services cater for all types of personal or business documents, often requested for for migration, marketing, general business and legal use. We provide both certified and non-certified Danish translations depending on what the translation is used for.
We are a registered translation company based in Australia (since 2016), and translations are delivered by email wherever you are based.
Get A QuoteMost Danish to English document translation projects of less than 5 pages take 1-2 business days from payment confirmation. If you have many pages for translation and the documents are legal or technical in nature, please allow sufficient time to ensure the professional translators are not rushed to produce sub-standard translation.
The cost for the Danish translations will depend on the content, layout, legibility, certification requirements and availability of Danish translators. The cost may range fron AUD$75-130 per page.
Yes, we have a large team of DTP specialists for language typesetting. We are able to produce translations for Adobe InDesign projects, as well as other working files such as Photoshop, Illustrator and PowerPoint. Getting translation and DTP services separately can be very costly, and tedious to manage communications between translators and designers - The good news is we take care of this process!
Whether it's a 1-2 page brochure or 100+ pages brochure, we have the available resource to deliver in a timely manner. We have prepared brochures for government departments, schools, financial services, travel and leisure businesses, mining and resource companies and more. If you have a brochure that needs translation to several languages, please get in touch with us.
We usually respond to emails within the hour (during normal working hours Monday-Friday). We also provide limited email support during the weekends and holidays. We are working primarily from the AEST time zone. If you're expecting but not receiving a response, please check your junk or spam folder, especially for Microsoft/Hotmail users. Please ensure the appropriate documents are submitted for review to get the fastest response from the delivery manager.
Submit Documents for Review and QuoteDanish is a North Germanic language spoken by around six million people, principally in Denmark and in the region of Southern Schleswig in northern Germany, where it has minority language status. Also, minor Danish-speaking communities are found in Norway, Sweden, Spain, the United States, Canada, Brazil, and Argentina. Due to immigration and language shift in urban areas, around 15–20% of the population of Greenland speak Danish as their first language.
Along with the other North Germanic languages, Danish is a descendant of Old Norse, the common language of the Germanic peoples who lived in Scandinavia during the Viking Era. Danish, together with Swedish, derives from the East Norse dialect group, while the Middle Norwegian language before the influence of Danish and Norwegian Bokmål are classified as West Norse along with Faroese and Icelandic. A more recent classification based on mutual intelligibility separates modern spoken Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish as "mainland Scandinavian", while Icelandic and Faroese are classified as "insular Scandinavian".
Danish has a very large vowel inventory comprising 27 phonemically distinctive vowels, and its prosody is characterized by the distinctive phenomenon stød, a kind of laryngeal phonation type. Due to the many pronunciation differences that set apart Danish from its neighboring languages, particularly the vowels, difficult prosody and "weakly" pronounced consonants, it is sometimes considered to be a difficult language to learn and understand, and some evidence shows that small children are slower to acquire the phonological distinctions of Danish. The grammar is moderately inflective with strong (irregular) and weak (regular) conjugations and inflections. Nouns and demonstrative pronouns distinguish common and neutral gender. Like English, Danish only has remnants of a former case system, particularly in the pronouns. Unlike English, it has lost all person marking on verbs. Its syntax is V2 word order, with the finite verb always occupying the second slot in the sentence.