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Mighty Translation provides professional Arabic bank statement translation. We translate individual bank statements daily, with only experienced translators detailed in financial document translations assigned for Arabic bank statement translation.
We have expert Arabic translators for both Arabic to English and English to Arabic document translation. Most of our Arabic translators have more than 5 years' professional translation experience.
If you're looking for fast and affordable Arabic bank statement translation, look no further. Our Arabic translators ensure that all Arabic bank statement translations are checked properly before delivery.
Bank statement translations are commonly used as proof of income, assets, proof of residency or proof of relationship. If you only require an extract translation of the bank statements, so the translation is clearer to the reader, feel free to let us know after payment, when you submit the bank statement documents for translation.
Arabic is a name applied to the descendants of the Classical Arabic language of the 6th century AD, used most prominently in the Quran, the Islamic Holy Book. This includes both the literary language (Modern Standard Arabic or Literary Arabic, used in most written documents as well as in formal spoken occasions, such as lectures and radio broadcasts) and the spoken Arabic varieties, spoken in a wide arc of territory stretching across the Middle East and North Africa. Arabic is a Central Semitic language, closely related to Hebrew and the Neo-Aramaic languages, and also related to the South Semitic languages.
Arabic is traditionally written with the Arabic alphabet, a right-to-left abjad. This alphabet is the official script for MSA. Colloquial varieties were traditionally not written, however, with the emergence of social media, the amount of written dialects has significantly increased online. Besides the Arabic alphabet, dialects are also often written in Latin from left to right or in Hebrew characters (in Israel) with no standardized orthography. Maltese is the only colloquial variety officially written in a Latin alphabet.