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Mighty Translation provides professional Slovenian bank statement translation. We translate individual bank statements daily, with only experienced translators detailed in financial document translations assigned for Slovenian bank statement translation.
We have expert Slovenian translators for both Slovenian to English and English to Slovenian document translation. Most of our Slovenian translators have more than 5 years' professional translation experience.
If you're looking for fast and affordable Slovenian bank statement translation, look no further. Our Slovenian translators ensure that all Slovenian 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.
Standard Slovene is the national standard language that was formed in the 18th century, mostly based on Upper and Lower Carniolan dialect groups, the latter being a dialect spoken by Primož Trubar. Unstandardized dialects are more preserved in regions of the Slovene Lands where compulsory schooling was in languages other than Standard Slovene, as was the case with the Carinthian Slovenes in Austria, and the Slovene minority in Italy. For example, the Resian and Torre (Ter) dialects in the Italian Province of Udine differ most from other Slovene dialects.
The distinctive characteristics of Slovene are dual grammatical number, two accentual norms (one characterized by pitch accent), and abundant inflection (a trait shared with many Slavic languages). Although Slovene is basically an SVO language, word order is very flexible, often adjusted for emphasis or stylistic reasons. Slovene has a T–V distinction: second-person plural forms are used for individuals as a sign of respect.
Slovene and Slovak are the only two modern Slavic languages whose names for themselves literally mean "Slavic" (slověnьskъ in old Slavonic).