World Translation Center can provide professional Uzbek translation services for English to Uzbek and Uzbek to English. We can also translate Uzbek to and from over 150 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 Uzbek 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 Uzbek 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.
Uzbek is mainly spoken in Uzbekistan, but also in Australia, China, Germany, Israel, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and the USA.
Uzbek is a Turkic language and the official language of Uzbekistan.
The influence of Islam, and by extension, Arabic, is evident in Uzbek, as well as the residual influence of Russian, from the time when Uzbekistan was under tsarist and Soviet domination. Most of the Arabic words have found their way into Uzbek through Persian. Uzbek vocabulary has been heavily influenced by neighboring Persian languages and dialects, such as Farsi, Tajik and Dari. Uzbek vocabulary also has a high percentage of Arabic loan words, which were introduced into the language via Persian.
Understandably, the Uzbek language has many dialects, varying widely from region to region. There is, however, a commonly understood dialect used in mass media and in most printed material.
An early form of Uzbek, known as Chagatai (the name of one of the sons of Genghis Khan) was written with the Arabic font. A version of the Latin alphabet replaced the Arabic font in 1927, and Joseph Stalin replaced it with the Cyrillic alphabet in 1940. Recently, moves have been made to reintroduce the Latin alphabet. Following is the Latin version of the Uzbek alphabet circa 1995:
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Uzbek Translation Services
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Uzbek to English Translation
English to Uzbek Translator
Uzbek to English Translator
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Uzbek Translator
Translate Uzbek
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