Gujarati Medical Document Translation
Get affordable Gujarati medical translation for doctor's report, medical journals, medical equipment manuals or medical questionnaires. Our Gujarati translators can translate from Gujarati to English or from English to Gujarati.
- translate medical articles, patient documents (informed consensus)
- translate doctors letters, medical sheets, hospital discharge notes
- translate medical receipts, medical prospectus
- translate user guides for medical personnel and patients
- translate manuals and presentation booklets for medical equipment
- translate medical questionnaires
- translate clinical, pharmacology, biology studies
- translate medical questionnaires
- translate text in any other medical specialty
All Gujarati medical translation delivery is guided by our terms of service and privacy policy. To begin, please use the form on this page to submit your documents for a quote.
- 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 Gujarati Language
Modern Gujarati (AD 1800 — ). A major phonological change was the deletion of final ə's, such that the modern language has consonant-final words. Grammatically, a new plural marker of -o developed. In literature, the third quarter of the 19th century saw a series of milestones for Gujarati, which previously had had verse as its dominant mode of literary composition.
- 1840s, personal diary composition; Nityanondh, Durgaram Mahetaji.
- 1851, first essay; Maniaḷī Maḷvāthi thātā Lābh, Narmadashankar Lalshankar Dave.
- 1866, first novel; Karaṇ Ghelo, Nandashankar Mehta.
- 1866, first autobiography; Mārī Hakīkat, Narmadashankar Lalshankar Dave.