sworn translations

Certified Translations Spanish-English-Bulgarian

Official translations, legally signed, stamped and certified in English, Bulgarian and more than 30 languages. Sworn Translations issued by Spanish Official Authorities and other regulatory bodies in Bulgaria.

Trustworthy Certified Translations

Certified Translations of certificates from or into Bulgarian issued by official authorities.

Our translation agency offers you a fast service for official and certified translations Spanish-English-Bulgarian. Sworn or Certified translations are considered official documents for all purposes. Certified Translators in Spain act as Notaries Public or attesting officials. They certify that your translation in Bulgarian faithfully renders the original document. For some paperwork like birth or marriage certificates, police records, academic certificates or last wills and testaments you may be asked to produced a certified and legally binding translation into Bulgarian or from Bulgarian, either in your country or in Bulgaria.

The words “sworn” or “certified” imply that the translation has been signed, sealed and certified by an authorized translator officially acknowledged for the Bulgarian language. A sworn translation does not necessarily mean that the document has a legal nature (for more information, see Bulgarian Legal Translators).

If you want to know how much the cost is going to be, send us a quality scanned copy (photos are not accepted), your language combination (from or into Bulgarian) and your deadline.

Where is Bulgarian spoken?

Bulgarian (български език in Bulgarian) is the national language of Bulgaria and is spoken by about 8 million inhabitants. Bulgarian is written in Cyrillic characters.

 

Certified Translators

Our official translators for Bulgarian are native speakers with an extensive background and experience in the translation of legal documents, technical specifications like patents or medical reports that need an exact and faithful translation into English, Spanish and any given language.

The Hague Apostille

The Apostille is a form in which a Notary Public or official certifies that the signature initialed on a document is authentic. Many official documents in Bulgarian are authenticated with an Apostille. If you have to submit a document in another country (like Bulgaria), it is probably best to apostille the translation.

Hague Apostille

 Government Agencies

In Spain, Sworn and Certified translations from or into Bulgarian are carried out by Translators appointed by the Spanish Department of Foreign Affairs. In other countries, translators get an authorization from courts, official bodies and in some cases professional associations of translators.

Delivery deadlines

Certified translations of Bulgarian of short documents usually take no more than 2 or 3 business days, but it all depends on availability. Upon request, we can send you a scanned copy by e-mail, followed by the original by courier.

Price for a certified translation of Bulgarian

Certified Translation from or into Bulgarian are usually quoted based on a word count, if possible. In any case a minimum fee is always applied for short documents. The quote will always include courier costs.

Get a free quote for your Bulgarian Certified Translation

Documents

Among the documents for which a certified/official translation is usually required, from or into Bulgarian, are: diplomas, academic certificates, birth/marriage/death certificates, company annual accounts, divorce decrees, bank statements, police criminal records, regulatory documents, patents, etc.

How much do you know about Bulgarian?

Within the Slavic languages, Bulgarian takes a particular place because of the use of the determined article in the form of a suffix and the loss of infinitive forms.

The current Bulgarian developed from the Old Bulgarian (9th-11th century), through the Middle Bulgarian (12th-14th century) and the New Bulgarian (15th century) to its present form. It was influenced by Turkish, Greek and, of course, Russian. There is also a close relationship with the Macedonian language.

Bulgarian is a South Slavic language with about 12 million speakers mainly in Bulgaria, but also in the Ukraine, Macedonia, Serbia, Turkey, Greece, Romania, Canada, the USA, Australia, Germany and Spain. Bulgarian is mutually intelligible with Macedonian, and is related to Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian and Slovenian.

Bulgarian was the first written Slavic language. The first writings appeared in the 9th century in glagolitic script, which was gradually replaced by an early version of the Cyrillic alphabet in later centuries.

At the end of the 18th century, the Russian version of Cyrillic, or "civil writing" by Peter the Great (1672-1725), was adapted to write Bulgarian, as a result of the influence from Russian printed books. During the 19th century, several versions of this alphabet were used, containing between 28 and 44 letters. In the 1870s, a 32-letter version of the alphabet, proposed by Marin Drinov, came into use. This version remained in use until the spelling reform of 1945, when the letters yat (Ѣ ѣ) and yus (Ѫ ѫ) were removed from the alphabet.

The modern literary language, based on vernacular Bulgarian, underwent a process of normalization after Bulgaria became independent in 1878. Many Turkish words were passed on to Bulgarian during the long period of Ottoman rule. Latin, Greek, Russian, French, Italian, German and, increasingly, English words have also been borrowed.

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The Bulgarian language

Within the Slavic languages, Bulgarian takes a particular place because of the use of the determined article in the form of a suffix and the loss of infinitive forms.

The current Bulgarian developed from the Old Bulgarian (9th-11th century), through the Middle Bulgarian (12th-14th century) and the New Bulgarian (15th century) to its present form. It was influenced by Turkish, Greek and, of course, Russian. There is also a close relationship with the Macedonian language.

Bulgarian is a South Slavic language with about 12 million speakers mainly in Bulgaria, but also in the Ukraine, Macedonia, Serbia, Turkey, Greece, Romania, Canada, the USA, Australia, Germany and Spain. Bulgarian is mutually intelligible with Macedonian, and is related to Serbian, Croatian, Bosnian and Slovenian.

Bulgarian was the first written Slavic language. The first writings appeared in the 9th century in glagolitic script, which was gradually replaced by an early version of the Cyrillic alphabet in later centuries.

At the end of the 18th century, the Russian version of Cyrillic, or "civil writing" by Peter the Great (1672-1725), was adapted to write Bulgarian, as a result of the influence from Russian printed books. During the 19th century, several versions of this alphabet were used, containing between 28 and 44 letters. In the 1870s, a 32-letter version of the alphabet, proposed by Marin Drinov, came into use. This version remained in use until the spelling reform of 1945, when the letters yat (Ѣ ѣ) and yus (Ѫ ѫ) were removed from the alphabet.

The modern literary language, based on vernacular Bulgarian, underwent a process of normalization after Bulgaria became independent in 1878. Many Turkish words were passed on to Bulgarian during the long period of Ottoman rule. Latin, Greek, Russian, French, Italian, German and, increasingly, English words have also been borrowed.