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Mongolian Translation Services
With a large network of in-country, professional Mongolian translators, Verbatim Solutions Translations can respond quickly and effectively to your Mongolian language translation needs.
Verbatim Solutions provides professional, high quality Mongolian to English translations and English to Mongolian translations. Our Mongolian translation services will help you maximize your global strategy.
Native Speaking Mongolian Translators
Verbatim Solutions Mongolian translation teams are professional linguists performing translation from English to Mongolian and Mongolian 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
The Mongolic
languages, together with Turkic (of which Turkish is a member) and
Tungusic, belong to the Altaic language family.
The
best-known member of this language family, Mongolian is the primary
language of most of the residents of Mongolia. The majority of
speakers speak the Khalkha dialect. It is also spoken in some of the
surrounding areas in provinces of China and the Russian Federation.
Mongolian has been written in a variety of alphabets over the
years.
The official Mongolian alphabet was created in the
12th century, although it has undergone transformations and
occasionally been supplanted by other scripts since then. The
Mongolian alphabet had been used in Mongolia until 1943, when it
switched to the Cyrillic alphabet, and Cyrillic is still the most
common script found in Mongolia today, while the traditional alphabet
is currently being slowly reintroduced in the public school system.
Related languages include Kalmyk spoken near the Caspian Sea
and Buriat of East Siberia, as well as a number of minor languages in
China and the Moghol of Afghanistan.
If the Ural-Altaic
hypothesis is true, Mongolian is also a distant relative of
Hungarian, Finnish, Sami, and Estonian.
