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  • Perth Translation Services » Malay Legal Translation

    Malay Legal Translator

    Perth Translation provides professional Malay legal translation services both in Australia and abroad.

    Our team of Malay legal translators are able to prepare large-volume Malay translations for research, business and litigation use, often producing business and legal Malay <> English translations within deadlines considered impossible by other translation companies.

    Depending on your requirements, Malay legal translations can be prepared by NAATI Malay translators or non-NAATI, professional Malay translators based around the globe. Example of legal documents translated:

    • Malay Birth and Death Certificates
    • Malay Business Contracts
    • Malay Divorce Papers Or Single-status Certificates
    • Malay 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.


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    About 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.


    Who We Work With

    Our Valued Clients

    Malay Translation Expertise

    Malay (Bahasa Melayu) has straightforward grammar with no verb conjugation, no grammatical gender, and no plural inflection, but translation complexity arises from its extensive use of affixes that create nuanced meaning shifts. The language shares significant mutual intelligibility with Indonesian but has distinct vocabulary for official and legal terms, and Malaysian legal documents use terminology influenced by English common law and Islamic jurisprudence. Context-dependent formality and the distinction between Malay as used in Malaysia, Brunei, and Singapore must be carefully navigated.

    Modern Malay is written in the Latin alphabet (Rumi) with no special diacritics required. However, some official Islamic documents and historical records may use Jawi script, an adapted Arabic alphabet, particularly for marriage and religious certificates from Malay states with strong Islamic governance traditions.

    Common Malay Documents

    Malay documents commonly requiring translation include the sijil kelahiran (birth certificate), sijil perkahwinan (marriage certificate), sijil peperiksaan (examination certificate), and surat akuan sumpah (statutory declaration). Islamic marriage documents from Jabatan Agama (Religious Department) are also frequently encountered.

    NAATI does not distinguish between Malay and Indonesian for certification purposes, and translators certified in one are generally accepted for the other, though awareness of vocabulary differences is expected. There is a reasonable number of NAATI-certified translators for this language pair in Australia.

    About the Malay Language

    Malay was historically written in Jawi (Arabic-based) script for over 700 years before the Latin alphabet was adopted in the 20th century, and Jawi remains an official script in Brunei and is still used for religious and royal documents in Malaysia. The language has one of the simplest pluralisation systems imaginable — you simply say the word twice (buku-buku for "books") — though this reduplication system actually carries subtle meaning beyond mere plurality. Malay served as the lingua franca of Southeast Asian maritime trade for centuries, which is why Malay loanwords appear in languages from Tagalog to Malagasy, even reaching as far as South Africa.

    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.

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