World Translation Center can provide professional Croatian translation services for English to Croatian and Croatian to English. We can also translate Croatian to and from over 130 other languages, including all the principal languages of Europe, Asia, South America, the Middle East and a wide range of African languages, at competitive prices.
Our Croatian specialists will be able to provide translation for virtually any project you might have, including marketing materials, technical, financial, legal and medical documents, websites and software. Our skilled project managers will match your project with a translator team best suited for the area of expertise needed. Every linguist works exclusively in his or her own mother tongue and within his or her area of expertise guaranteeing not only quality translation, but proper localization as well. After each document is translated, it will be edited and proofread by another professional translator to assure maximum quality.
We also make available transcription, video recording and subtitling services. In the event that you need to have an existing video dubbed, a commercial narrated or a telephone system recorded, our native Croatian speakers are available to provide high quality voiceover services.
We pride ourselves in delivering high quality cost-effective services, whether your project is small or large, simple or highly complex.
Croatian Information
Serbian, Croatian and Bosnian are closely related, mutually intelligible Southern Slavonic languages formerly known collectively as Serbo-Croat. They are a significant number of speakers, mainly in Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro.
Croatian Language Facts
The division between the Croats and the Serbs originates in the 11th century, when both groups converted to Christianity. The Serbs aligned themselves with Constantinople and the Eastern Orthodox church, and adopted the Cyrillic alphabet, although the Latin alphabet is also used. The Croats favored the Roman Catholic church and the Glagolitic alphabet. The Latin alphabet was gradually adopted by the Croats, though they continued to use Glagolitic for religious writings until the 19th century. After the Turkish conquest of Serbia and Bosnia, Islam spread to parts of Bosnia and the Arabic script was introduced.
Writing Croatian
Today Croatian is written with the Latin alphabet.
Croatian contains many words of Latin and German origin but many new Croatian words are created by combining and adapting existing ones.