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  • Perth Translation Services » Biomedical Engineering Translation » French Translator

    French Biomedical Engineering Translation

    Perth Translation provide English <> French document translation services for health and medical research, getting the research out of the laboratory and into the marketplace. Through multilingual translations, we support the development of biomedical ventures in Australia to achieve significant national health and economic outcomes.

    Only French translators with the experience and background in translating for medicine, biology and engineering subjects are able to provide for accurate and reliable biomedical engineering translations.

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    Expert Linguist One-stop shop for French biomedical engineering document translations.
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    Consistency Always using the same trusted French translators and keeping the same resource for each client as far as possible.
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    Dedicated Service Dedicated project manager to deliver each translation project, your project will not be passed between different managers.

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    Reliable Translation
    Professional translators with many years' experience in French technical and engineering translations
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    Professional French Translator

    The 'Wirin' sculpture at Perth's Yagan Square

    Perth Translation provides professional French <> English translation services. You can use the form on this page to upload multiple files for a confirm quote and delivery time. Our French translator is ready to assist with your translation project.


    French Translation

    About the French Language

    The French language is a Romance language that was first spoken in France. French is also spoken in Belgium (Wallonia), Luxembourg, Quebec (Canada), Switzerland (Romandy) and many different countries in Africa (Francophone Africa).

    During the 17th century, French replaced Latin as the most important language of diplomacy and international relations (lingua franca). It retained this role until approximately the middle of the 20th century, when it was replaced by English as the United States became the dominant global power following the Second World War. Stanley Meisler of the Los Angeles Times said that the fact that the Treaty of Versailles was written in English as well as French was the "first diplomatic blow" against the language.

    During the Grand Siècle (17th century), France, under the rule of powerful leaders such as Cardinal Richelieu and Louis XIV, enjoyed a period of prosperity and prominence among European nations. Richelieu established the Académie française to protect the French language. By the early 1800s, Parisian French had become the primary language of the aristocracy in France.

    Near the beginning of the 19th century, the French government began to pursue policies with the end goal of eradicating the many minority and regional languages (patois) spoken in France. This began in 1794 with Henri Grégoire's "Report on the necessity and means to annihilate the patois and to universalise the use of the French language". When public education was made compulsory, only French was taught and the use of any other (patois) language was punished. The goals of the Public School System were made especially clear to the French speaking teachers sent to teach students in regions such as Occitania and Brittany: "And remember, Gents: you were given your position in order to kill the Breton language" were instructions given from a French official to teachers in the French department of Finistère (western Brittany). The prefect of Basses-Pyrénées in the French Basque Country wrote in 1846: "Our schools in the Basque Country are particularly meant to substitute the Basque language with French...". Students were taught that their ancestral languages were inferior and they should be ashamed of them; this process was known in the Occitan-speaking region as Vergonha.

    About 220 million people speak French as a native or a second language. Like the other Romance languages, French nouns have genders that are divided into masculine (masculin) and feminine (féminin) words.


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