Arabic to English Translation Services
English to Arabic Legal Translations
Certified Arabic to English legal translation services, Arabic deposition interpreters for on-site live depositions and Arabic remote deposition interpreting services are required by law firms, businesses and corporations on a daily basis along with other Semitic languages, such as Hebrew, Aramaic, Amharic, and Tigrinya. Because it uses a special script instead of Roman letters, most English speakers assume that Arabic is one of the hardest languages to learn (or even to try and do business in through an interpreter!). Amazingly, though, there are actually a few similarities between Arabic and English.
In fact, several English words that you probably use every day come directly from Arabic — like coffee, mattress, sugar, candy, and sofa.
Plus, Arabic letters may look totally different, but they’re not as different as you might think. Modern Standard Arabic has 28 consonants (compared to 21 in English) and three vowels (compared to five in English), since Arabic only uses A, I, and U.
OK, nuances aside, what do you need to know if you’re planning on doing an English to Arabic translation?
First and foremost, you’re not alone! Arabic is spoken by more than 300 million people every day, in 23 different countries throughout the Middle East — including Egypt, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and Libya. It is the fifth most-commonly spoken language in the world. It’s also an official language of the United Nations.
And, since Arabic is the language of the Koran, it is relied on heavily in the Muslim world. In fact, it’s estimated that one billion people understand it, because of its ties to Islam.
Why does that matter to you?
The Middle East is becoming a bigger force in business every day — especially when it comes to exporting. So, if you have any kind of global business, you’ll need to make your way into the area at some point. And, if you’re in the oil industry, having a major presence in the Middle East is an absolute necessity
And that means your business is going to need Arabic to English translation services that you can count on. Once you’ve got the right Arabic business translation service, what do you need to do on your end to make sure that your English to Arabic translation runs smoothly?
English to Arabic Business Translation Service
First, keep honor in mind. No matter where you are in the Arab world, honor is extremely important. Your English to Arabic business document translations will have to be worded very carefully to make sure they don’t accidentally offend someone.
Part of that honor involves being humble. Those over-the-top marketing materials with their hyped-up sales pitches will not go over well in the Middle East, so give your corporate documents a makeover before they go through an Arabic translation. Here, good advertising mentions the quality of the products and not much else. In fact, when in doubt, opt on the side of being too conservative!
Next, keep the “small talk” to a minimum. It’s one thing to ask how the wife is doing, but anything beyond that is too much. Arabs don’t want to establish a personal relationship with you. To them, business is business. If you ask personal questions during business correspondence, it’s considered bad manners.
Usually, you won’t get an outright “no” on something. (Arabs consider it a major sign of disrespect to openly disagree with you.) As a result, it will be crucial to make sure that everyone is really on the same page before you move on to any type of binding English to Arabic or Arabic to English legal translation.
Contact our Arabic document translation service to obtain Arabic to English translation of ediscovery documents, retain a competent Arabic deposition interpreter for a live deposition, an Arabic remote deposition interpreter for a video deposition via Zoom, to hire an Arabic interpreter for a doctor’s office or a hospital, or to retain an Arabic translator for Arabic ediscovery document review. And rest assured knowing that in addition to Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), our interpreters speak Moroccan Arabic; Moroccan Darija; Lebanese Arabic; Iraqi Arabic; Egyptian Arabic; Sudanese Arabic; Saudi Arabic; Jordanian Arabic; Chadian Arabic; Palestinian Arabic; Levantine Arabic spoken in the Levant, and, namely, in Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, Israel, and some parts of Turkey. We even provide deposition interpreters for Sudanese Arabic spoken in Sudan, and for Hassaniya Arabic (sometimes called Maghrebi Arabic) which is spoken in Mauritania, Morocco, Algeria, Libya, Mali, Niger, Senegal and the Western Sahara. We also deliver certified translation of Islamic marriage contracts from Arabic to English for the U.S. immigration and visas.
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