Translation of East European languages
ETS is a leading translation service provider in Europe. Our core competencies include the translation of East European languages, from which we can translate into any other language. Our internal and external employees are put together to match the requirements of your project, in order to enable such a streamlined coordination that based on this we can provide qualitatively high-class translations to you at excellent prices. See for yourself.
| Language | Standard texts | Technical texts | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| from € per word | to € per word | from € per word | to € per word | ||
Russian, Polish, Hungarian, Czech, Slovakian, Bulgarian, Romanian, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Estonian, Belarusian, Ukrainian etc. | 0.09 | 0.14 | 0.14 | 0.18 | |
| Please ask for a Cost Estimate! | |||||
Billing in other currencies available.
Translation English to Russian Polish Czech and Hungarian
Apart from other factors, the yardstick for technical and general documentation, above all, is their suitability of use. The task is, on the one hand, to make the product understandable for a target group, and, at the same time, to present the information such that it satisfies the needs. In order to live up to this demand, our teams of translators and proof-readers consist of jurists, doctors, technicians, computer scientists, physicists and other specialists trained in the relevant disciplines having many years of experience in their field of expertise and excellent linguistic skills. At ETS, translators always translate only into their own mother tongue.
Technical translations at a glance
Translations for East Europe Export & Import
Balance sheets and corporate information
Annual reports and business letters
Localisation of corporate presentations
Translators for publicity and marketing
Sales, logistics and goods traffic
Translation of tender documents, patents and contract agreements
Translators for press releases
Technical translations
Technical translation for railway technology, aviation and shipping
CE and telecommunication technology
Electrical engineering and home electronics
technical translators for machinery construction & micro-electronics
Plant engineering, broadband communication and Operating Systems
Translations for architecture, statics & civil engineering
Translations in the medical field
Translations in human and veterinary medicine
Medical technology and medical information systems
Website translation
Software translators
Translators for scientific works
Translation of dissertations, doctor's theses, post-doctoral theses
Master's theses, degree theses, master, bachelor
Translation of presentations, essays and publications
Legal translations
Translators for testimonials, certificates and degree certificates
Document translations in Russian, Polish and Czech
Travel & Tourism, Translations of travel guides
Translation of e-mail correspondence
Background: Classification of Serbo-Croatian
Serbian is derived from the Slavic branch of the Indo-German languages. Within this, it is attributed to the south Slavic languages. Serbian is spoken as the mother tongue by more than 8 million people. Serbs live primarily in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Serbian has been chosen as the national official language in these states. Over and above this, Serbs live as a minority in Croatia (above all, in the regions of the earlier military border) and are also a minority since recently in Slovenia and Macedonia.
Both the Cyrillic and Latin alphabets are used in Serbian. As a matter of fact, the Cyrillic font has been fixed in the Serbian state for official use, but, however, both fonts are used in day-to-day applications. Thus, for example, religious or traditional pieces of text and official documents have been created primarily with the Cyrillic font, whereas the Latin font is used more extensively in business correspondence, the Boulevard Press and also in the printing of books.
Serbo-Croatian was the official national language in former Yugoslavia until the time of its disintegration at the beginning of the 90's in the 20th century. In fact, in communist Yugoslavia, in the initial years after 1945, Serbian and Croatian were recognised as two independent languages, so that at that time there were four official languages coexisting in Yugoslavia (Serbian, Croatian, Slovenian and Macedonian), English to Hungarian translators but, however, the official political line changed in the years to follow. In 1954, a uniform language was fixed for Croats, Serbs, Bosnians, Herzegovinians and Montenegrins – Serbo-Croatian or Croato-Serbian. The Government tolerated merely the differences in the pronunciation and the use of the two different alphabets (Cyrillic and Latin). Thereafter, Serbian was usually called the eastern and Croatian the western variant of Serbo-Croatian. In contrast, Slovenian and Macedonian retained their official status as independent languages.
With the break-up of Yugoslavia, even its languages separated, and Serbian, Bosnian, Croatian and Montenegrin are considered to be autonomous languages since then. The term "Serbo-Croatian" is barely used in the former Serbo-Croatian speaking countries.
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