Gujarati Legal Translation Service

Our specialist Gujarati legal translators work for a wide range of legal and associated professions. Solicitors, courts, police stations, prisons, accountants, public sector organisations, EU organisations, businesses and individuals have all used our services.

Our Gujarati legal translators translate letters, certificates, statements, audits, contracts, patents, summons, and other legal papers.

Our vetted translators specialise in different areas of law or types of legal documentation, so you can be sure that the right specialist will be assigned to the work.

Many Gujarati translations of documents and certificates need to be notarised or certified before they will be accepted as “true” translations. To find out more, visit our Certified, Notarised , FCO Legalisation pages.

As well as offering a professional and confidential Gujarati legal translation service, Knockhundred also has available a team of Gujarati legal transcribers in a wide range of languages. To find out more, visit our Gujarati transcription service page.

Confidentiality during the translation process

As part of our contract with you, we and our Gujarati linguists are required to keep all material confidential that is not in the public domain. We are also happy to sign more specific confidentiality agreements if required.

Please refer to our client feedback page to learn more about the unbeatable Gujarati language service we offer.

UPLOAD YOUR FILES

If you have a project you would like to discuss, do please call us on +44 (0)1544 388040 or contact us via our free Quote & File Uploads form.

WHILE YOU’RE HERE... SOME QUITE INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THE Gujarati LANGUAGE

Gujarati is an Indo-Aryan language spoken by about 46 million people in the Indian states of Gujarat, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh, and also in Bangladesh, Fiji, Kenya, Malawi, Mauritius, Oman, Pakistan, Réunion, Singapore, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, United Kingdom, USA, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

The Gujarati script was adapted from the Devanāgarī script to write the Gujarati language. The earliest known document in the Gujarati script is a manuscript dating from 1592, and the script first appeared in print in a 1797 advertisement. Until the 19th century it was used mainly for writing letters and keeping accounts, while the Devanagari script was used for literature and academic writings.

Gujarati SAMPLE TEXT

જે કર ઝુલાવે પારણું તે જગ પર શાસન કરે. – ગુજરાતી કહેવત

AND LASTLY, A Gujarati PROVERB

આ પૃથ્વી પર એક જ સુંદર બાળક છે અને દરેક માતા પાસે એ હોય છે