Cairns Translation Services » Cairns Turkish Translator
Cairns Turkish Translator
Get certified Turkish translation from NAATI certified Turkish translators in Cairns. Our NAATI Turkish translators provide both English to Turkish translation and Turkish to English translation for all types of documents.
- Cairns migration translation
- Cairns legal translation
- Cairns technical document translation
- Cairns financial document translation
- Cairns advertising and marketing translations
Get a quote for your Turkish translation services using the form on this page or email us directly.
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Cairns Turkish Translation Service
Our Turkish translators offer a fast translation services for all types of documents. You can use the form on this page to upload multiple files for a confirm quote and delivery time. Our Turkish translator is ready to assist you.
- Delivering quality translations in Australia since 2011
- High quality team of senior NAATI certified translators
- Experienced in delivering multilingual projects with design component
- Local support for Cairns and Australia-Wide
Cairns NAATI Translation Services
Cairns, considered the gateway to Australia's Great Barrier Reef, is a city in tropical Far North Queensland. Its Tjapukai Aboriginal Cultural Park tells the stories of indigenous Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people with music and dance. Cairns Esplanade, lined in bars and restaurants, has a swimming lagoon. Northwest of the city, Daintree National Park spans mountainous rainforest, gorges and beaches.
Certified Turkish translation of the following types of documents are prepared by our experienced NAATI certified Turkish translators:
- Turkish death certificate translation
- Turkish degree translation
- Turkish diploma translation
- Turkish divorce certificate translation
- Turkish driver licence translation
- Turkish employment record translation
- Turkish financial document translations such as bank statements
- Turkish legal contract translation
- Turkish marriage certificate translation
- Turkish medical report translation
- Turkish name-change certificate translation
- Turkish passport translation
- Turkish personal letters and cards
- Turkish police check translation
- Turkish police report translation
- Turkish school transcript translation
- Turkish utility bill translations
- Wills and Power of Attorney translation
Turkish Business Translation Services

- Turkish brochure translation
- Turkish website translation
- Turkish marketing translation
- Turkish technical translation
- Turkish medical translation
About the Turkish Language
After the foundation of the Republic of Turkey and the script reform, the Turkish Language Association (TDK) was established in 1932 under the patronage of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, with the aim of conducting research on Turkish. One of the tasks of the newly established association was to initiate a language reform to replace loanwords of Arabic and Persian origin with Turkish equivalents. By banning the usage of imported words in the press, the association succeeded in removing several hundred foreign words from the language. While most of the words introduced to the language by the TDK were newly derived from Turkic roots, it also opted for reviving Old Turkish words which had not been used for centuries.
Turkish Community in Australia
Australia's Turkish community is more modest in size than Turkey's large diaspora communities in Germany and the Netherlands, but it is well-established — particularly in Melbourne and Sydney, where Turkish cultural associations, mosques, and restaurants have been fixtures for decades. The community arrived primarily through the 1960s and 70s guest worker programs and their subsequent family reunions, making it one of the older non-English-speaking communities in Australia. Turkish translation covers the usual range of immigration and family documents, along with property matters in Turkey for longer-established families. Turkish real estate is also a common subject of translation for Australian investors and retirees — Turkey has attracted significant foreign property investment, and contracts, title deeds, and related legal documents require certified translation. Turkish uses Latin script, which Atatürk introduced in 1928 to replace the Ottoman Arabic script — a deliberate modernisation that also greatly improved literacy rates. This means modern Turkish documents are in an accessible script, though the language itself has agglutinative grammar that makes word-for-word translation impractical. Turkey is a Hague Apostille Convention signatory; documents are apostille-stamped and the civil registration system is centralised and generally well-maintained.
