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Professional Dutch document translation for Ungarie residents. Personal, business and legal documents translated by NAATI-certified translators.
Upload your documents for a free quote. We translate all types of Dutch documents with NAATI certification for official use in Australia.
Our Dutch translators handle all types of personal documents for Ungarie residents.
For businesses in Ungarie requiring Dutch translation services:
Required for government submissions, visa applications, court proceedings and institutional use. Our NAATI-certified Dutch translators provide official certification accepted across Australia.
Suitable for internal business use, personal reference and general understanding. Still translated by professional Dutch translators but without the NAATI stamp.
For businesses in Ungarie with large volumes of documents, we offer project-based pricing with dedicated project management and consistent terminology. Email [email protected] for a custom quote.
Dutch is a West Germanic language spoken by about 24 million people as a first language and 5 million people as a second language, constituting the majority of people in the Netherlands (where it is the only official language countrywide) and Belgium (as one of three official languages). It is the third most widely spoken Germanic language, after its close relatives English and German.
Outside the Low Countries, it is the native language of the majority of the population of Suriname where it also holds an official status, as it does in Aruba, Curacao and Sint Maarten, which are constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Netherlands and are located in the Caribbean. Historical linguistic minorities on the verge of extinction remain in parts of France and Germany, and in Indonesia, while up to half a million native speakers may reside in the United States, Canada and Australia combined. The Cape Dutch dialects of Southern Africa have evolved into Afrikaans, a mutually intelligible daughter language[n 3] which is spoken to some degree by at least 16 million people, mainly in South Africa and Namibia.
Dutch is one of the closest relatives of both German and English and is colloquially said to be "roughly in between" them. Dutch, like English, has not undergone the High German consonant shift, does not use Germanic umlaut as a grammatical marker, has largely abandoned the use of the subjunctive, and has levelled much of its morphology, including most of its case system. Features shared with German include the survival of two to three grammatical genders-albeit with few grammatical consequences-as well as the use of modal particles, final-obstruent devoicing, and a similar word order. Dutch vocabulary is mostly Germanic and incorporates slightly more Romance loans than German but far fewer than English. As with German, the vocabulary of Dutch also has strong similarities with the continental Scandinavian languages, but is not mutually intelligible in text or speech with any of them.