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Mighty Translation provides professional Serbian translator services all types of medical reports and letters.
If you have a doctor's report or doctor's letter (including handwritten letters) that require Serbian to English translation, our Serbian translators are able to assist you.
Doctor letter translations are sometimes required for travel exemptions applications or for continual medical care between countries. Our professional Serbian translators take special care in translating medical information to ensure all equivalent medical terms are researched and used accurately.
Our Seelands Serbian translation service provides both Serbian to English and English to Serbian medical translations.
* All data submitted is strictly confidential.
* Please email [email protected] after payment is complete for confirmation.
Serbian is the standardized variety of the Serbo-Croatian language mainly used by Serbs. It is the official and national language of Serbia, one of the three official languages of Bosnia and Herzegovina and co-official in Montenegro, where it is spoken by the relative majority of the population. It is a recognized minority language in Croatia, North Macedonia, Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic.
Standard Serbian is based on the most widespread dialect of Serbo-Croatian, Shtokavian (more specifically on the dialects of Šumadija-Vojvodina and Eastern Herzegovina), which is also the basis of standard Croatian, Bosnian, and Montenegrin varieties[13] and therefore the Declaration on the Common Language of Croats, Bosniaks, Serbs and Montenegrins was issued in 2017. The other dialect spoken by Serbs is Torlakian in southeastern Serbia, which is transitional to Macedonian and Bulgarian.
Serbian is practically the only European standard language whose speakers are fully functionally digraphic, using both Cyrillic and Latin alphabets. The Serbian Cyrillic alphabet was devised in 1814 by Serbian linguist Vuk Karadžić, who created it based on phonemic principles. The Latin alphabet used for Serbian (latinica) was designed by the Croatian linguist Ljudevit Gaj in the 1830s based on the Czech system with a one-to-one grapheme-phoneme correlation between the Cyrillic and Latin orthographies, resulting in a parallel system.