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Dutch Marriage Certificate TranslationTranslate Dutch Marriage Certificate

Melbourne Translation Services NAATI Dutch translators provide certified marriage certificate translation service, commonly required for legal and visa application purposes. Besides Dutch 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 Dutch to English and English to Dutch. Our Dutch 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.


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  • Low Price, Fast Delivery
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  • Full-time, professional translators experienced in translating all kinds of documents
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The Dutch Language

More About The Dutch Language

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. The most south-eastern dialects of the Franconian languages became part of High—though not Upper—German even though a dialect continuum remained. The fact that Dutch did not undergo the sound changes may be the reason why some people say that Dutch is like a bridge between English and German. Within Old Low Franconian there were two subgroups: Old East Low Franconian and Old West Low Franconian, which is better known as Old Dutch. East Low Franconian was eventually absorbed by Dutch as it became the dominant form of Low Franconian, although it remains a noticeable substrate within the southern Limburgish dialects of Dutch. As the two groups were so similar, it is often difficult to determine whether a text is Old Dutch or Old East Low Franconian; hence most linguists will generally use Old Dutch synonymously with Old Low Franconian and mostly do not differentiate.

A process of standardisation started in the Middle Ages, especially under the influence of the Burgundian Ducal Court in Dijon (Brussels after 1477). The dialects of Flanders and Brabant were the most influential around this time. The process of standardisation became much stronger at the start of the 16th century, mainly based on the urban dialect of Antwerp. In 1585 Antwerp fell to the Spanish army: many fled to the Northern Netherlands, especially the province of Holland, where they influenced the urban dialects of that province. In 1637, a further important step was made towards a unified language, when the Statenvertaling, the first major Bible translation into Dutch, was created that people from all over the United Provinces could understand. It used elements from various, even Dutch Low Saxon, dialects but was predominantly based on the urban dialects of Holland.


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Dutch Marriage Certificate Translation

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