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Greenlandic Translation Services
With a large network of in-country, professional Greenlangic translators, Verbatim Solutions can respond quickly and effectively to your Greenlangic language translation needs.
Verbatim Solutions provides professional, high quality Greenlangic to English translations and English to Greenlangic translations. Our Greenlangic translation services will help you maximize your global strategy.
Native Speaking Greenlangic Translators
Verbatim Solutions Greenlangic translation teams are professional linguists performing translation from English to Greenlangic and Greenlangic to English for a variety of documents in various industries including:
Aerospace
Automotive
Defense
Desk-top publishing
E-Learning
Energy & power
Finance
Gaming & gambling
Government
Legal
Medical
Multimedia
Packaging
Rich media
Software
Technical
Tourism
Telecommunications
Varieties
It
is more in the nature of a dialect continuum than a single language;
this continuum can be divided into roughly sixteen varieties, in four
groups:
Iñupiaq (northern Alaska)
Inuinnaqtun
(Canadian Western Arctic)
Inuktitut proper (Canadian Eastern
Arctic)
Kalaallisut or Greenlandic (Greenland).
All
Inuktitut varieties taken together have a speaking population of
approximately 80,000.
Linguistics
It is related to
the Aleut language, and together they form the Eskimo-Aleut family;
while this has no proven wider affinities, some postulation has taken
place as to the relation of Inuktitut to the Indo-European languages
and to the Nostratic superphylum.
Inuktitut, like other
Eskimo-Aleut languages, represents a particular type of agglutinative
language called a polysynthetic language: it "synthesizes"
a root and various grammatical affixes to create long words with
sentence-like meanings.
The
Inuktitut syllabify is based on the Cree syllabify, which is in turn
based on that of Ojibwe. Both of these were created by missionary
James Evans. The syllabify for Inuktitut was adopted by the Inuit
Cultural Institute in Canada in the 1970s. Inuit in Alaska and
Greenland use a Roman script, and Inuit in Siberia use Cyrillic
letters.
Though conventionally called a syllabify, the
writing system is, strictly speaking, an abugida, since syllables
starting with the same consonant have related glyphs rather than
unrelated ones.
Legal status
Inuktitut is an official
language in the following areas:
Greenland (Greenlandic, with
Danish)
Nunavut, Canada (Inuktitut and Inuinnaqtun, with English
and French)
Northwest Territories, Canada (Inuktitut,
Inuinnaqtun, and Inuvialuktun, with Chipewyan, Cree, English, French,
Gwich'in, Slavey, and Tli Cho).
Also, according to the Charter
of the French Language in Quebec, Canada, Inuktitut is the official
language of instruction for Inuit school districts in Nunavik
(northern Quebec).
