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Mighty Translation provides professional Dutch birth certificate translation. We translate Dutch birth certificates daily, with only experienced translators detailed in personal document translations assigned for Dutch birth certificate translation.
We have expert Dutch translators for both Dutch to English and English to Dutch document translation. Most of our Dutch translators have more than 5 years' professional translation experience.
If you're looking for fast and affordable Dutch birth certificate translation, look no further. Our Dutch translators ensure that all Dutch birth certificate translations are checked properly before delivery.
Dutch is closely related to English and German and is said to be between them. The history of the Dutch language begins around AD 450–500 after Old Frankish, one of the many West Germanic tribal languages, was split by the Second Germanic consonant shift. At more or less the same time the Ingvaeonic nasal spirant law led to the development of the direct ancestors of modern Dutch Low Saxon, Frisian and English.
The northern dialects of Old Frankish generally did not participate in either of these two shifts, except for a small amount of phonetic changes, and are hence known as Old Low Franconian; the "Low" refers to dialects not influenced by the consonant shift.
Dutch is one of the closest relatives of both German and English and is colloquially said to be "roughly in between" them. Dutch, like English, has not undergone the High German consonant shift, does not use Germanic umlaut as a grammatical marker, has largely abandoned the use of the subjunctive, and has levelled much of its morphology, including most of its case system. Features shared with German include the survival of two to three grammatical genders—albeit with few grammatical consequences as well as the use of modal particles, final-obstruent devoicing, and a similar word order. Dutch vocabulary is mostly Germanic; it incorporates slightly more Romance loans than German but far fewer than English