Bassa Translation Services
Professional Bassa Translator
Sydney Translation Services offers professional Bassa translation services by Bassa translators for all types of documents required for legal, business, migration, marketing or personal use.
Our English <> Bassa translators are tertiary qualified and experienced in English Bassa translations. We also have translators specialised in technical or medical terminology to ensure accurate and fast translations.
For accurate and reliable Bassa translator services, email us your documents for a quick no-obligations quote.
Examples of Bassa translations we provide
| Advertisement Translation | Bassa Brochure Translation | Bassa Passport Translation | Bassa Driving License Translation |
| Bassa Police Report Translation | Bassa Birth Certificate Translation | Bassa Marriage Certificate Translation | Bassa Academic Transcript Translation |
| NAATI Bassa Translator | Bassa Business Translation | Bassa Technical Translator | Bassa Legal Translator |
| Multilingual Translation and Typesetting Services | Bassa Medical Report Translation | Bassa Contract Translation | Website Translation |
| Translate Bassa Hand-written Documents | Bassa Video Transcription and Translation | Professional Bassa Translator | Single-status Certificate Translations |
| Name-change Certificate Translation | Employment Contract translations | Electricity bill translations | Resume Translation Services |
| Wills translation | Bassa Rental Contract Translation | Translation for Insurance Claims | Divorce certificate translation |
| Bassa Diploma Translation | Bassa Degree Translation | Bassa Bank Statement Translation | Migration Translators |
NAATI Bassa Translator
Being NAATI certified means our Bassa translator is required to renew their certification with NAATI at regular intervals as to remain up-to-date and committed to the highest level of competency and currency in the profession.
More about the Bassa Language
The Bassa language is a Kru language spoken by about 350,000 people in Liberia and 5,000 in Sierra Leone by Bassa people. It has an indigenous script, Vah, developed before 1907 by Thomas Narvin Lewis (c.1880-?) while he was studying at Syracuse University in the United States. The first primer was printed by Lyman Brothers circa 1907. Dr. Lewis returned to Liberia where he began teaching his script to Bassa children. The language was taught in some of the Poro society schools. The script has been described as one which, "like the system long in use among the Vai, consists of a series of phonetic characters standing for syllables." In fact, however, the Vah script is alphabetic. It includes 30 consonants, seven vowels, and five tones that are indicated by dots and lines inside of each vowel.
