French Legal Translation Services
Get fast and professional English <> French legal translation services from Singapore Translation.
Our experienced legal translators translate all types of legal documents from French to English or English to French.
To begin, simply provide a clear scan of your documents for translation, and send to our email enquiry@tnfast.com for a quote. All documents sent are treated in strict confidence.
- Certified and experienced full-time translators
- Legal contract and business document translations
- Adoption or name-change document translation
- Civil litigation and arbitration translations
- Conveyancing and bank loan document translations
- Monetary transaction records translation
- Inventory and accounts translation
- Intellectual property report translation
- Translation of wills and trusts
- Birth, marriages or death certificate translation
- Divorce letter translation
Legal Translators Ready to Assist
Once you get a quote, you can pay securely online using your credit card. You will get to preview the electronic copy of the translations before we post the harcopy.
Legal translation services are commonly required for legal court hearings, business transactions and business proposals. All our French legal translators are accredited translators with relevant qualifications to back up their experience in the translation profession.
Legal Translations We Support
About the French Language
French is a Romance language spoken as a first language in France and by various communities elsewhere.
French was the most important language of diplomacy and international relations from the 17th century to approximately the middle of the 20th century and remains one of the most important diplomatic languages, with the language being one of the working languages of NATO, the International Olympic Committee, the UN Secretariat, the Council of Europe, the International Court of Justice, European Commission, the European Space Agency and the World Trade Organisation.
French is written with the 26 letters of the basic Latin script, with four diacritics appearing on vowels (circumflex accent, acute accent, grave accent, diaeresis) and the cedilla appearing in "ç".
The majority of French words derive from Vulgar Latin or were constructed from Latin or Greek roots. In many cases a single etymological root appears in French in a "popular" or native form, inherited from Vulgar Latin, and a learned form, borrowed later from Classical Latin.
La langue française est un attribut de souveraineté en France, depuis 1992 « la langue de la République est le français » (article 2 de la Constitution de la Cinquième République française). Elle est également le principal véhicule de la pensée et de la culture française dans le monde. La langue française fait l’objet d’un dispositif public d’enrichissement de la langue, avec le décret du 3 juillet 1996 relatif à l'enrichissement de la langue française.