Brisbane Translation Services provides certified Hebrew Translation Services in Australia.
For your document translations, simply email us a copy of your original documents for a free quote. We will reply to your email with payment instructions, as well as the estimated time for completion. We can also provide a price for urgent Hebrew translations.
Hebrew Translations
- Birth certificate translation
- Marriage certificate translation
- Name change certificate translation
- Degree certificate translation
- Academic transcripts translation
- Payslips translation
- Bank statements translation
- Legal contracts translation
- Hebrew <> English brochure translation
- Hebrew legal translation services
Get certified Hebrew translation services for immigration, academic accreditation and visa application purposes in Australia. Documents we translate include Hebrew technical reports, legal documents, passports, birth certificates, marriage certificates, payslips, degree translation, police clearance letter translation, bank statement translation and company annual report translations.
NAATI Certified Hebrew Translator
We are able to provide quality translations for both small personal documents (<10 pages) and large volume legal and financial documents. Brisbane translation services provides affordable and professional Hebrew translation services for the community in Brisbane and Queensland Australia.
Hebrew
We provide both Hebrew to English translation and English to Hebrew translation.
Hebrew is a language native to Israel, spoken by over 9 million people worldwide, of which over 5 million are in Israel. Historically, it is regarded as the language of the Israelites and their ancestors, although the language was not referred to by the name Hebrew in the Tanakh. The earliest examples of written Paleo-Hebrew date from the 10th century BCE. Hebrew belongs to the West Semitic branch of the Afroasiatic language family.
Hebrew had ceased to be an everyday spoken language somewhere between 200 and 400 CE, declining since the aftermath of the Bar Kokhba revolt. Aramaic and to a lesser extent Greek were already in use as international languages, especially among elites and immigrants. It survived into the medieval period as the language of Jewish liturgy, rabbinic literature, intra-Jewish commerce, and poetry. Then, in the 19th century, it was revived as a spoken and literary language, and, according to Ethnologue, had become, as of 1998, the language of 5 million people worldwide. After Israel, the United States has the second largest Hebrew speaking population, with 220,000 fluent speakers, mostly from Israel.