NAATI Laotian Translator for Marriage Certificate Translation
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Adelaide is the capital and most populous city of the Australian state of South Australia, and is the fifth-largest city in Australia. Adelaide has an estimated population of more than 1.28 million. The adjectival form "Adelaidean" is used in reference to the city and its residents. Adelaide is a coastal city situated on the eastern shores of Gulf St Vincent, on the Adelaide Plains, north of the Fleurieu Peninsula, between Gulf St Vincent and the low-lying Mount Lofty Ranges. Named in honour of Queen Adelaide, the German-born consort of King William IV, the city was founded in 1836 as the planned capital for a freely settled British province in Australia.
Laotian Marriage Certificate Translation for Adelaide
Getting your marriage certified translated for official use in Adelaide is easy. Our NAATI certified Laotian translators are ready to assist you and everything can be done online.
- Leading provider for NAATI certified Laotian translation
- Fast Laotian translation with no extra charges
- Experienced NAATI certified translators based in Australia
Laotian NAATI Translators
Adelaide Document Translation Services
Get professional document translation for personal or business use. Our translators can handle any type of financial, technical or medical document, with the support of a specialised language DTP team for typesetting translations into design material such as brochures, product packaging and technical reports.
All documents received are confidential. Get in touch today for any translation requirement.
More about the Laotian Language
Lao or Laotian is a tonal language of the Tai–Kadai language family. Lao, like all languages in Laos, is written in an abugida script.
The Lao language is descended from Tai languages spoken in what is now southern China and northern Vietnam in areas believed to be the homeland of the language family and where several related languages are still spoken by scattered minority groups. Due to Han Chinese expansion, Mongol invasion pressures, and a search for lands more suitable for wet-rice cultivation, the Tai peoples moved south towards India, down the Mekong River valley, and as far south as the Malay Peninsula. Tai speakers in what is now Laos pushed out or absorbed earlier groups of Mon–Khmer and Austronesian languages.
