Translate Pashto Marriage Certificate
Melbourne Translation Services NAATI Pashto translators provide certified marriage certificate translation service, commonly required for legal and visa application purposes. Besides Pashto marriage certificate translation, our translators are also specialised in translating all kinds of personal documents for official use in Australia.
Marriage certificates are typically used on occasions where proof of the marriage between two persons is required.
- applying for citizenship / immigration
- applying social welfare benefits
- claiming the life insurance of a spouse
Marriage Certificate Translation for Australia or Overseas
Melbourne Translation Services provides certified marriage certificate translation for both Pashto to English and English to Pashto. Our Pashto translators are full-time certified translators experienced in marriage certificate translation.
If you have a marriage certificate that needs certified translation, please use the form on this page to submit your documents for a quote. You can upload multiple documents using the form.
- Low Price, Fast Delivery
- Discount for repeat customers or large orders
- Full-time, professional translators experienced in translating all kinds of documents
- Personal, friendly service
- Sydney
- Melbourne
- Brisbane
- Perth
- Canberra
- Darwin
- Hobart
- Adelaide
- Wollongong
- Newcastle
- Cairns
More About The Pashto Language
Pashto (English pronunciation: /ˈpʌʃtoʊ/, rarely /ˈpæʃtoʊ/; Pashto: پښتو Pax̌tō [ˈpəʂt̪oː]), also known in older literature as Afghānī (افغانى) or Paṭhānī, is the South-Central Asian language of the Pashtuns. Its speakers are called Pashtuns or Pukhtuns and sometimes Afghans or Pathans. It is an Eastern Iranian language, belonging to the Indo-European family. Pashto is one of the two official languages of Afghanistan, and it is the second-largest regional language of Pakistan, mainly spoken in the west and northwest of the country.
Pashto belongs to the Northeastern Iranian group of the Indo-Iranian branch, but Ethnologue lists it as Southeastern Iranian. Pashto has two main dialect groups, “soft” and “hard”, the latter known as Pakhtu. Pashto spoken in FATA has many distinctive dialects
As a national language of Afghanistan, Pashto is primarily spoken in the east, south, and southwest, but also in some northern and western parts of the country. The exact numbers of speakers are unavailable, but different estimates show that Pashto is the mother tongue of 45–60% of the total population of Afghanistan.