Spanish is the world's second-most spoken native language with over 500 million speakers across Spain, Latin America, and growing communities worldwide. Singapore's Spanish-speaking community includes diplomats, business professionals, and educators.
Singapore's increasing trade links with Latin America and the Pacific Alliance countries have grown demand for Spanish translation services. Companies expanding into Spanish-speaking markets need translation for marketing materials, legal contracts, and regulatory submissions. Spanish-speaking professionals in Singapore require translation for employment passes, academic qualifications, and personal documents from their home countries for employment and administrative processes.
Corporate communications, marketing collateral, brochures, website content, and advertising copy translated for the Singapore market.
Engineering manuals, software documentation, product specifications, patents, and technical reports with precise terminology.
Medical reports, clinical trial documents, patient records, pharmaceutical labels, and healthcare correspondence.
Contracts, court documents, affidavits, statutory declarations, powers of attorney, and regulatory filings.
Bank statements, audit reports, annual reports, tax documents, payslips, and financial compliance filings.
Government correspondence, policy documents, public sector reports, regulatory submissions, and official communications.
Spanish (español) is a Romance language named for its origins as the native tongue of a large proportion of the inhabitants of Spain. It is also named Castilian after the Spanish region of Castile where it originated.
The first documents regarded as precursors of modern Spanish are from the ninth century. The dialects reflected in those documents emerged from the ancestral Vulgar Latin (common Latin), which had been brought to Iberia by the Romans during the Second Punic War around 210 BC, absorbing influences from the native Iberian languages such as Celtiberian, Basque and other paleohispanic languages.
Spanish is a part of the Ibero-Romance group of languages, which evolved from several dialects of Latin in Iberia after the collapse of the Western Roman Empire in the fifth century. It was first documented in central-northern Iberia in the ninth century and gradually spread with the expansion of the Kingdom of Castile into central and southern Iberia. From its beginnings, Spanish vocabulary was influenced by its contact with Basque and by other related Ibero-Romance languages and later absorbed many Arabic words during the Muslim presence in the Iberian Peninsula. It also adopted many words from non-Iberian languages, particularly the Romance languages Occitan, French, Italian and Sardinian and increasingly from English in modern times, as well as adding its own new words.