Town of Cambridge Malay Translation Services
Perth Translation Services » Perth » Town of Cambridge Translation Services » Town of Cambridge Malay Translation Service
Town of Cambridge Malay Translation Services
Get fast and professional translation services in Town of Cambridge. Our Malay translators provide translation of all types of documents. These include confidential legal, financial and migration document translations.
Upload Document For Translation
Town of Cambridge
The Town of Cambridge is a local government area in the inner western suburbs of the Western Australian capital city of Perth, about 5 kilometres (3 mi) west of Perth's central business district and extending to the Indian Ocean at City Beach. The Town covers an area of 22.0 square kilometres (8.5 sq mi) and had a population of almost 27,000 as at the 2016 Census. It was originally part of the City of Perth before the restructuring by the Western Australian State Government in 1994.
Town of Cambridge History
Historically the area was part of the North Perth municipality, gazetted in 1901, which was absorbed into the City of Perth in 1915 after becoming unsustainable as an autonomous political entity. In 1993 the Government of Western Australia decided to split up the local government area (LGA) of the City of Perth, creating three additional LGAs and retaining a smaller City of Perth. The new LGAs were Town of Vincent, Town of Cambridge and the Town of Victoria Park.
Town of Cambridge Suburbs
City Beach, Floreat, Jolimont, Mount Claremont, Wembley, West LeedervilleAbout the Malay Language
The Malay language, or Bahasa Melayu, is a language spoken by ethnic Malays, an ethnic group that live in the Malay Peninsula and the Malay Archipelago in Southeast Asia, as well as the Austronesian people of the area.
The Malay language is the national language of Malaysia (Malaysian), Brunei, Indonesia (Indonesian), an official language in Singapore, a working language in East Timor (Indonesian), and a recognized and significant minority in Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines and Cambodia.
Standard Malay, also called Court Malay, was the literary standard of the pre-colonial Malacca and Johor Sultanates, and so the language is sometimes called Malacca, Johor or Riau Malay (or various combinations of those names) to distinguish it from the various other Malayan languages. According to Ethnologue 16, several of the Malayan varieties they currently list as separate languages, including the Orang Asli varieties of Peninsular Malay, are so closely related to standard Malay that they may prove to be dialects. There are also several Malay trade and creole languages which are based on a lingua franca derived from Classical Malay as well as Macassar Malay, which appears to be a mixed language.
Malay is a member of the Austronesian family of languages, which includes languages from Southeast Asia and the Pacific Ocean, with a smaller number in continental Asia. Malagasy, a geographic outlier spoken in Madagascar in the Indian Ocean, is also a member of this language family. Although these languages are not necessarily mutually intelligible to any extent, their similarities are rather striking. Many roots have come virtually unchanged from their common ancestor, Proto-Austronesian language. There are many cognates found in the languages' words for kinship, health, body parts and common animals. Numbers, especially, show remarkable similarities.
Within Austronesian, Malay is part of a cluster of numerous closely related forms of speech known as the Malayic languages, which were spread across Malaya and the Indonesian archipelago by Malay traders from Sumatra. There is disagreement as to which varieties of speech popularly called "Malay" should be considered dialects of this language, and which should be classified as distinct Malay languages. The vernacular of Brunei—Brunei Malay—for example, is not readily intelligible with the standard language, and the same is true with some lects on the Malay Peninsula such as Kedah Malay. However, both Brunei and Kedah are quite close.
The closest relatives of the Malay languages are those left behind on Sumatra, such as the Minangkabau language, with 5.5 million speakers on the west coast.
Town of Cambridge Malay Translator Services
Malay translator for certified translation services:
- Malay driving license translation
- Malay financial translation and bank statement translations
- Malay birth certificate translation
- Malay marriage certificate translation
- Malay name-change certificate translation
- Malay degree translation
- Malay diploma translation
- Malay school transcript translation
- Malay passport translation
- Malay police report translation
- Malay police check translation
- Malay personal letters and cards
- Malay utility bill translations
- Malay death certificate translation
Perth Translation provides fast and affordable Malay translation services in the Town of Cambridge for all types of personal documents by NAATI translators.
Languages Translated
- Arabic translation service
- Czech translation service
- Chinese translation service
- Croatian translation service
- Danish translation service
- Dutch translation service
- French translation service
- Finnish translation service
- Greek translation service