Perth Translation Services » Greek Legal Translation
Greek Legal Translator
Perth Translation provides professional Greek legal translation services both in Australia and abroad.
Our team of Greek legal translators are able to prepare large-volume Greek translations for research, business and litigation use, often producing business and legal Greek <> English translations within deadlines considered impossible by other translation companies.
Depending on your requirements, Greek legal translations can be prepared by NAATI Greek translators or non-NAATI, professional Greek translators based around the globe. Example of legal documents translated:
- Greek Birth and Death Certificates
- Greek Business Contracts
- Greek Divorce Papers Or Single-status Certificates
- Greek 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
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Legal Translations For All Major Languages
- Arabic legal translation
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- French legal translation
- German legal translation
- Greek legal translation
- Hindi legal translation
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- Macedonian legal translation
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- Romanian legal translation
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- Spanish legal translation
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- Tagalog legal translation
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About the Greek Language
The Greek language is the official language of Greece (Hellas) and Cyprus. It was first spoken in Greece and was also once spoken along the coast of Asia Minor (now a part of Turkey) and in southern Italy. It was also widely used in Western Asia and Northern Africa at one time. In Greek, the language is called Ελληνικά (elliniká).
Greeks write their language using the Greek alphabet. The Latin alphabet (used to write English and many other languages) came from the Greek alphabet. Many other alphabets around the world also came from the Greek one, such as the Cyrillic alphabet.
Greek is an independent branch of the Indo-European language family. The ancient language most closely related to it may be ancient Macedonian, which many scholars suggest may have been a dialect of Greek itself, but it is so poorly attested that it is difficult to conclude anything about it. Independently of the Macedonian question, some scholars have grouped Greek into Graeco-Phrygian, as Greek and the extinct Phrygian share features that are not found in other Indo-European languages. Among living languages, some Indo-Europeanists suggest that Greek may be most closely related to Armenian (see Graeco-Armenian) or the Indo-Iranian languages (see Graeco-Aryan), but little definitive evidence has been found for grouping the living branches of the family. In addition, Albanian has also been considered somewhat related to Greek and Armenian by some linguists. If proven and recognised, the three languages would form a new Balkan sub-branch with other dead European languages.
Modern Greek inherits most of its vocabulary from Ancient Greek, which in turn is an Indo-European language, but also includes a number of borrowings from the languages of the populations that inhabited Greece before the arrival of Proto-Greeks, some documented in Mycenaean texts; they include a large number of Greek toponyms. The form and meaning of many words have evolved. Loanwords (words of foreign origin) have entered the language, mainly from Latin, Venetian, and Turkish. During the older periods of Greek, loanwords into Greek acquired Greek inflections, thus leaving only a foreign root word. Modern borrowings (from the 20th century on), especially from French and English, are typically not inflected; other modern borrowings are derived from South Slavic (Macedonian/Bulgarian) and Eastern Romance languages (Aromanian and Megleno-Romanian).
Who We Work With
Greek Translation Expertise
Modern Greek retains a complex inflectional system with four cases (nominative, accusative, genitive, vocative), three genders, and extensive verb conjugation that marks tense, aspect, mood, voice, and person. A major translation challenge is the diglossia legacy — until 1976, official documents used Katharevousa (a formal archaising register), while modern documents use Dimotiki (the vernacular). Translators encountering older Greek documents need competence in both. Greek also uses a formal legal and ecclesiastical vocabulary heavily drawn from Ancient Greek roots that differs significantly from everyday Modern Greek.
Greek uses its own alphabet of 24 letters (alpha to omega), written left-to-right. The modern monotonic system (adopted in 1982) uses only the acute accent (τόνος) to mark stress, replacing the older polytonic system which used three accent types plus breathing marks. Translators must transliterate Greek names consistently — there is no single standard (Giorgos/Georgios, Papadopoulos/Papadopulos), and the spelling used on existing English-language identity documents should be matched.
Common Greek Documents
Greek documents commonly requiring translation include the ληξιαρχική πράξη γέννησης (lixiarkhiki praxi gennisis, birth certificate), πιστοποιητικό οικογενειακής κατάστασης (pistopoiitiko ikogeneiakis katastasis, family status certificate), ποινικό μητρώο (poiniko mitroo, criminal record), and πτυχίο (ptykhio, university degree). Older documents may be in Katharevousa (the formal archaising register used until 1976), requiring specialist knowledge to translate accurately.
NAATI offers certification for Greek translators and interpreters, with one of the larger pools of accredited practitioners in Australia. Greek has historically been among the top languages for NAATI accreditation, reflecting the size and longevity of the Greek-Australian community.
About the Greek Language
Greek has the longest documented history of any living language, with written records spanning over 3,400 years from Mycenaean Greek inscribed in Linear B script around 1450 BC. The Greek alphabet was the first to include vowels as separate letters (adapted from Phoenician around 800 BC), and it became the ancestor of both the Latin alphabet (used by English) and the Cyrillic alphabet (used by Russian). An estimated 30% of English vocabulary derives from Greek roots — words like "democracy," "philosophy," "telephone," "biology," and "catastrophe" are all Greek in origin.
Industry Translation Requirements
Australian courts and legal practitioners require certified translations of foreign-language documents for use in litigation, family law matters, immigration cases, and commercial disputes with international parties. Law firms handling cross-border transactions need translated contracts, corporate records, and due diligence documentation, while legal aid services require translations for clients from non-English-speaking backgrounds.
Legal translation requires deep understanding of both the source country's legal system and Australian common law terminology, as legal concepts often have no direct equivalents between civil law and common law jurisdictions. Translators must accurately convey legal meaning without interpreting or altering the substance of documents.
Common documents include court orders and judgments from foreign jurisdictions, statutory declarations and affidavits, powers of attorney, corporate registration documents (ASIC equivalents), family law evidence including marriage and divorce certificates, and contracts or commercial agreements for cross-border enforcement.
Australian courts generally require that translated documents be certified by a NAATI-certified translator, with some jurisdictions accepting sworn translations under the Evidence Act. The Hague Convention on Apostille applies to documents from member countries, and translations must accompany apostilled documents for Australian court acceptance.
