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Mighty Translation provides professional Malay bank statement translation. We translate individual bank statements daily, with only experienced translators detailed in financial document translations assigned for Malay bank statement translation.
We have expert Malay translators for both Malay to English and English to Malay document translation. Most of our Malay translators have more than 5 years' professional translation experience.
If you're looking for fast and affordable Malay bank statement translation, look no further. Our Malay translators ensure that all Malay bank statement translations are checked properly before delivery.
Bank statement translations are commonly used as proof of income, assets, proof of residency or proof of relationship. If you only require an extract translation of the bank statements, so the translation is clearer to the reader, feel free to let us know after payment, when you submit the bank statement documents for translation.
Malay is a major language of the Austronesian family. It is the official language of Malaysia (as Malaysian), Indonesia (as Indonesian), Brunei (as Melayu Brunei) and Singapore (as the national language and one of four official languages of Singapore). It is spoken natively by 40 million people across the Malacca Strait, including the coasts of the Malay Peninsula of Malaysia and southern Thailand, the eastern coast of Sumatra, and the Riau Islands in Indonesia, and has been established as a native language of part of western coastal Sarawak and West Kalimantan in Borneo.
Malay, also called Court Malay, was the literary standard of the pre-colonial Malacca and Johor Sultanates and so the language is sometimes called Malacca, Johor or Riau Malay (or various combinations of those names) to distinguish it from the various other Malayic languages. According to Ethnologue 16, several of the Malayic varieties they currently list as separate languages, including the Orang Asli varieties of Peninsular Malay, are so closely related to standard Malay that they may prove to be dialects. There are also several Malay trade and creole languages based on a lingua franca derived from Classical Malay as well as Macassar Malay, which appears to be a mixed language.