Language Services in Suffolk

Hero Curve Element

Knockhundred offers professional interpreting and translation solutions throughout Suffolk.

To date, our linguists have worked in over 190 languages and the list continues to grow. You can find a full list of our languages here.

Knockhundred Translations provides several types of interpreting, including telephone interpreting.

Our teams of qualified, skilled language interpreters can attend your assignment 24/7 in

  • Ipswich
  • Bury St. Edmunds
  • Lowestoft
  • Felixstowe
  • Sudbury
  • Haverhill
  • Bungay
  • Newmarket
and throughout Suffolk.

Knockhundred Translations provides several types of interpreting, including telephone interpreting. For more information on our interpreters and the interpreting services we offer in Bedfordshire, please visit our main interpreting page.

Alternatively you can visit the relevant language service page below:

Do you have a certificate or official document that needs translating and/or certifying?

If you live in Suffolk, we can help with your certified document translation requirements.

Visit our certified, notarised or FCO legalised translation page for more information.

While you’re here… Some quite interesting facts about Suffolk.

Bungay. Did you know that Bungay in Suffolk is the only place in the UK with an active Town Reeve?

(There are Portreeves, however, at Ashburton in Devon and Laugharen in South Wales).

The role of Bungay’s Reeve was until the late 19th century to run the town’s administration.

These days the title-holder still has control of the market and various lands willed to the settlement.

Originally a Saxon introduction, the title is familiar perhaps from Chaucer. Each Reeve is appointed for a year by his predecessor.

Bury St Edmunds. Did you know that the smallest pub in Britain is the aptly named Nutshell in Bury St Edmunds?

It opened as a pub in 1867, having previously been a fruit shop. The bar measures just 15 feet by 7 feet, a space into which 15 customers would normally constitute a squeeze, but where the record number of people fitted in stands at 102 – though like all good pubs you’d imagine there’s always room for one more.

Ipswich. Did you know that the world’s first commercially marketed powered lawn mower was built by Ransomes in Ipswich in 1902?

A bit of a difference in scale between that and some of their other lines – combine harvesters, traction engines, and ploughs.

The 1902 model, powered by a petrol engine, was not their first venture into lawn maintenance – in 1867 they produced a hand-powered mower.

Do you have any questions?

If you would like more information or to discuss our language services, you can call us on +44 (0)1544-388040 send an email to info@knockhundred.com or complete the form and we’ll get back to you as soon as possible.

Name(Required)
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Menu