Khmer (Cambodian) is the official language of Cambodia, spoken by approximately 16 million people. Singapore's Cambodian community includes students, hospitality workers, and professionals in developing business sectors.
Singapore's economic engagement with Cambodia has grown through ASEAN integration and bilateral investment. Cambodian workers and students in Singapore need translation for educational qualifications, employment documents, and work pass-related paperwork. Business translation is required for real estate development contracts, agricultural trade agreements, and manufacturing partnership documents as Singaporean companies invest in Cambodia's growing economy.
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.
Cambodian (Khmer), is the language of the Khmer people and the official language of Cambodia. It is the second most widely spoken Austroasiatic language (after Vietnamese), with speakers in the tens of millions. Khmer has been considerably influenced by Sanskrit and Pali, especially in the royal and religious registers, through the vehicles of Hinduism and Buddhism. It is also the earliest recorded and earliest written language of the Mon–Khmer family, predating Mon and by a significant margin Vietnamese. The Cambodian (Khmer) language has influenced, and also been influenced by, Thai, Lao, Vietnamese and Cham, all of which, due to geographical proximity and long-term cultural contact, form a sprachbund in peninsular Southeast Asia. The Cambodian (Khmer) language is written with an abugida known in Khmer as âksâr khmêr.1