Legal Translation » Slovak Translator
Slovak Legal Translator

Adelaide Translation provides professional Slovak legal translation services both in Australia and abroad.
Our team of Slovak legal translators are able to prepare large-volume Slovak translations for research, business and litigation use, often producing business and legal Slovak <> English translations within deadlines considered impossible by other translation companies.
Depending on your requirements, Slovak legal translations can be prepared by NAATI Slovak translators or non-NAATI, professional Slovak translators based around the globe. Example of legal documents translated:
- Slovak Birth and Death Certificates
- Slovak Business Contracts
- Slovak Divorce Papers Or Single-status Certificates
- Slovak Employee Contracts
- Evidence Used in Court
- Interview Transcript Translation
- Insurance Claim Documents
- Intellectual Property
- Letters Responding to Complaints
- Property Transaction Documents
- Research Information for Court Cases
- Rental and Lease Letters
- Wills
Enquire with us today with your project requirement.
Adelaide Translation Services
Professional Slovak Translator
Adelaide Translation provides professional Slovak <> English translation services. You can use the form on this page to upload multiple files for a confirm quote and delivery time. Our Slovak translator is ready to assist with your translation project.
About the Slovak Language
The distinctive characteristics of Slovene are dual grammatical number, two accentual norms, one characterized by pitch accent, and abundant inflection (a trait shared with many Slavic languages). Although Slovene is basically a SVO language, word order is very flexible, often adjusted for emphasis or stylistic reasons. The primary principle of Slovak spelling is the phonemic principle, "Write as you hear". The secondary principle is the morphological principle: forms derived from the same stem are written in the same way even if they are pronounced differently. The tertiary principle is the etymological principle, which can be seen in the use of i after certain consonants and of y after other consonants, although both i and y are pronounced the same way.
Slovak Community in Australia
Slovakia's community in Australia is small but established, with roots in the same post-World War II and post-1968 migration waves that brought Czech-Australians here — Czechoslovakia was a single country until 1993, and many pre-independence migrants are counted together in historical records. Since Slovakia's peaceful separation (the Velvet Divorce) and subsequent EU accession in 2004, a newer generation of Slovaks has arrived through skilled migration pathways. Translation needs within the community span the standard range: immigration documents for recent arrivals, estate and property matters for longer-established families with ties to Slovakia. Slovakia's EU membership simplifies the document authentication process; documents are apostille-stamped through the Slovak Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Slovak uses Latin script with a distinctive diacritic system. It is closely related to Czech — the two languages share a written standard closely enough that educated speakers can read each other's language fairly readily — but they are distinct languages with their own NAATI accreditation streams. A Slovak document requires a Slovak-accredited translator, not a Czech one.
