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We proudly offer: Over 70+ certified/qualified languages On-Site and Remote Interpretation
1. Somali Languages Umbrella
Standard Somali (Baari dialect) – Official dialect in education and government, mainly from Baari (North/Central Somalia)
Benadiri Dialect – Coastal dialect spoken in Mogadishu and Marka
Maay-Maay – Spoken in Southern Somalia among Digil-Mirifle clans
Somali Bantu Variants – Spoken by Somali Bantu communities in Jubba and Shabelle
💬 “From Baari to Bay — Somali spoken across all regions with pride.”
2. Indian Languages Umbrella
Hindi – Widely spoken in North and Central India
Urdu – Common in North India and Pakistan
Tamil – South India, Sri Lanka, Malaysia
Telugu – Andhra Pradesh and Telangana
Kannada – Karnataka
Malayalam – Kerala
Gujarati – Western India
Marathi – Maharashtra
Bengali – Eastern India and Bangladesh
Punjabi – Northern India and Pakistan
💬 “From Delhi to Chennai — Indian languages interpreted with rich cultural depth.”
3. Arabic Languages Umbrella
Modern Standard Arabic – Formal/official across Arab nations
Egyptian Arabic – Widely understood, used in media
Levantine Arabic – Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Palestine
Gulf Arabic – UAE, Qatar, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia
Maghrebi Arabic – Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia
Sudanese Arabic – Influenced by Nubian and local dialects
Yemeni Arabic – Unique phonology and vocabulary
💬 “From Casablanca to Baghdad — Arabic dialects united in clarity.”
4. Nigerian Languages Umbrella
Yoruba – Southwest Nigeria
Igbo – Southeast Nigeria
Hausa – North Nigeria and Niger
Pidgin English – Widely spoken across all regions
💬 “From Lagos to Kano — Nigeria’s voices interpreted with cultural insight.”
5. Ethiopian Languages Umbrella
Amharic – Official language of Ethiopia
Tigrinya – Spoken in Northern Ethiopia and Eritrea
Oromo – Widely spoken across Ethiopia
Sidamo – Southern Ethiopia
Afar – Northeast Ethiopia and Djibouti
💬 “From Addis Ababa to Mekelle — Ethiopia’s languages carried with honor.”
6. Swahili Languages Umbrella
Standard Swahili – Tanzania and Kenya (official)
Coastal Swahili Dialects – Mombasa, Lamu, Zanzibar
Congo Swahili – Eastern DR Congo variation
💬 “From Mombasa to Kinshasa — Swahili unites the African coast.”
7. Mexican Indigenous Languages Umbrella
Nahuatl – Central Mexico
Zapotec – Oaxaca
Mixtec – Mixteca region
Maya – Yucatán
Tzotzil & Tzeltal – Chiapas
💬 “From Oaxaca to Chiapas — Mexico’s native voices honored.”
8. French Languages Umbrella
Standard French – France, Belgium, Switzerland
Canadian French – Quebec, Acadian
African French – West and Central Africa
💬 “From Paris to Dakar — French spoken with local nuance.”
9. Spanish Languages Umbrella
Latin American Spanish – Mexico, Colombia, Argentina, etc.
Castilian Spanish – Spain
Caribbean Spanish – Cuba, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic
💬 “From Madrid to Mexico City — Spanish with global reach.”
10. Portuguese Languages Umbrella
Brazilian Portuguese – Spoken across Brazil
European Portuguese – Portugal, Angola, Mozambique
💬 “From Lisbon to São Paulo — Portuguese interpreted with rhythm.”
11. Chinese Languages Umbrella
Mandarin (Putonghua) – Official in China and Taiwan
Cantonese – Hong Kong, Guangdong
Hokkien/Taiwanese – Fujian, Taiwan
💬 “From Beijing to Hong Kong — Chinese dialects clearly conveyed.”
12. Vietnamese Languages Umbrella
Northern Vietnamese (Hanoi)
Southern Vietnamese (Ho Chi Minh)
Central Vietnamese
💬 “From Hanoi to Saigon — Vietnamese interpreted with tonal care.”
13. Korean Languages Umbrella
Standard Korean (Seoul)
North Korean Dialect (Pyongyang)
💬 “From Seoul to Pyongyang — Korean voices united.”
14. Japanese Languages Umbrella
Standard Japanese – Tokyo-based dialect
Kansai Dialect – Osaka, Kyoto
Okinawan Variants – Ryukyu Islands
💬 “From Tokyo to Okinawa — Japanese spoken with precision.”
15. Thai Languages Umbrella
Central Thai – Standard dialect
Northern Thai (Lanna) – Chiang Mai
Isan – Northeastern region, close to Lao
💬 “From Bangkok to Chiang Mai — Thai spoken with regional depth.”
16. Burmese Languages Umbrella
Standard Burmese – Mandalay and Yangon
Shan, Karen, Chin – Ethnic minority groups
💬 “From Yangon to the hills — Burmese and ethnic voices heard.”
17. Nepali Languages Umbrella
Standard Nepali – National language
Tamang, Gurung, Newar – Indigenous groups
💬 “From Kathmandu to Pokhara — Nepali spoken with honor.”
18. Malay/Indonesian Languages Umbrella
Bahasa Indonesia – National language of Indonesia
Bahasa Malaysia – Malaysia
Javanese, Sundanese – Local dialects in Java
💬 “From Jakarta to Kuala Lumpur — Malay languages connected.”
19. Tagalog/Filipino Languages Umbrella
Tagalog – Basis of Filipino, national language
Cebuano, Ilocano, Waray-Waray – Major regional languages
💬 “From Manila to Mindanao — Filipino voices expressed with care.”
20. Farsi/Persian Languages Umbrella
Iranian Farsi – Standard dialect
Dari (Afghan Persian) – Official in Afghanistan
Tajik Persian – Cyrillic script in Tajikistan
💬 “From Tehran to Kabul — Persian languages clearly conveyed.”
21. Pashto Languages Umbrella
Northern Pashto – Pakistan (Peshawar, Kohat)
Southern Pashto – Kandahar and southern Afghanistan
💬 “From Kabul to Peshawar — Pashto dialects interpreted faithfully.”
22. Kurdish Languages Umbrella
Kurmanji – Northern dialect (Turkey, Syria)
Sorani – Central dialect (Iraq, Iran)
Zazaki & Gorani – Minority dialects
💬 “From Erbil to Diyarbakır — Kurdish voices clearly expressed.”
23. Turkish Languages Umbrella
Istanbul Turkish (Standard)
Anatolian Dialects
Cypriot Turkish
💬 “From Ankara to Nicosia — Turkish interpreted with heritage.”
24. Greek Languages Umbrella
Modern Greek – Greece, Cyprus
Pontic Greek – Historic dialect
💬 “From Athens to Thessaloniki — Greek with classical clarity.”
25. Ukrainian Languages Umbrella
Standard Ukrainian – Kyiv
Western Ukrainian – Lviv and surroundings
💬 “From Kyiv to Lviv — Ukrainian spoken with resilience.”
26. Russian Languages Umbrella
Standard Russian – Moscow and official use
Siberian & Central Russian – Regional accents
💬 “From Moscow to Vladivostok — Russian fluently delivered.”
27. Uzbek Languages Umbrella
Standard Uzbek – Latin alphabet
Karakalpak – Autonomous region
💬 “From Tashkent to Nukus — Uzbek languages honored.”
28. Hmong Languages Umbrella
White Hmong
Green Hmong
💬 “From Laos to Minnesota — Hmong voices respected.”
29. Khmer Languages Umbrella
Standard Khmer – Cambodia
Northern Khmer – Thailand border areas
💬 “From Phnom Penh to Surin — Khmer interpreted with precision.”
30. Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian Umbrella
Bosnian – Spoken in Bosnia & Herzegovina
Croatian – Official in Croatia
Serbian – Serbia and Montenegro (Cyrillic and Latin scripts)
💬 “From Sarajevo to Belgrade — Balkan voices bridged with clarity.”
31. Haitian Creole Umbrella
Yoruba – Southwest Nigeria
Igbo – Southeast Nigeria
Hausa – North Nigeria and Niger
Pidgin English – Widely spoken across all regions
💬 “From Lagos to Kano — Nigeria’s voices interpreted with cultural insight.”
32. Malagasy Languages Umbrella
Merina Malagasy (Standard) – Highlands of Madagascar
Sakalava, Betsimisaraka – Coastal dialects
💬 “From Antananarivo to the coasts — Malagasy spoken in full spirit.”
33. Uyghur Languages Umbrella
Standard Uyghur (Xinjiang) – Widely spoken in Xinjiang, China; official in schools and media.
Ili Variant – Northwestern Xinjiang, distinct phonology and vocabulary.
Qashqari Variant – Southern Xinjiang, often requested in community/medical settings.
💬 “From Kashgar to Ürümqi — Uyghur voices carried with resilience.”
34. Karen Languages Umbrella
Sgaw Karen – Most widely spoken
Pwo Karen, Pa’o Karen – Variants across Myanmar and Thailand
💬 “From Kayin State to refugee camps — Karen languages brought to light.”
35. Tibetan Languages Umbrella
Lhasa Tibetan (Standard) – Central Tibet
Amdo & Kham Dialects – Eastern regions
💬 “From Lhasa to Ladakh — Tibetan voices carried with reverence.”
36. Chechen & Caucasian Languages Umbrella
Chechen – North Caucasus
Avar, Lezgi, Ingush – Neighboring languages
💬 “From Grozny to Dagestan — Caucasus languages voiced with pride.”
37. Berber (Amazigh) Languages Umbrella
Tamazight – Central Morocco and Algeria; recognized in both constitutions.
Tachelhit – Southern Morocco and Atlas Mountains.
Kabyle – Northeastern Algeria, especially in Kabylia region.
Tuareg – Spoken across Niger, Mali, Libya, and southern Algeria.
💬 “From the Atlas to the Sahara — Amazigh voices carried through time.”
38. Assyrian/Chaldean/Syriac Umbrella
Assyrian Neo-Aramaic – Iraq, Syria
Chaldean Neo-Aramaic – Catholic communities
Classical Syriac – Liturgical use
💬 “From Nineveh to diaspora — Assyrian identity in every tone.”
39. Rohingya Languages Umbrella
Standard Rohingya – Spoken by the Rohingya people in Rakhine State, Myanmar.
Chittagonian-influenced Rohingya – Spoken in refugee communities in Bangladesh.
Arabic/Burmese loanword variants – Reflecting Islamic and regional influence.
💬 “From Rakhine to Cox’s Bazar — Rohingya language honored with dignity.”
40. Romani Languages Umbrella
Kalderash, Lovari, Sinti – Europe-wide variations
Balkan Romani
💬 “From Bucharest to Berlin — Romani voices brought forward.”
41. Balochi Languages Umbrella
Western Balochi – Iran, Afghanistan
Eastern Balochi – Pakistan
💬 “From Quetta to Sistan — Balochi interpreted with care.”
42. Igboid Languages Umbrella
Igbo (Standard) – Nigeria
Nsukka, Owerri, Umuahia Dialects
💬 “From Enugu to Onitsha — Igbo spoken with ancestral power.”
43. Hebrew Languages Umbrella
Modern Hebrew (Ivrit) – Official language of Israel; used worldwide in schools, healthcare, and legal systems.
Liturgical Hebrew – Used in religious, cultural, and educational contexts.
Diaspora Familiarity – Spoken or understood in global Jewish communities.
💬 “From Jerusalem to New York — Hebrew interpreted with clarity and tradition.”
44. Wolof & Senegalese Languages Umbrella
Wolof – Lingua franca of Senegal
Pulaar, Serer, Jola – Ethnic dialects
💬 “From Dakar to Saint-Louis — Senegalese languages flow with rhythm.”
45. Lingala & Central African Languages Umbrella
Lingala – DRC and Republic of Congo
Tshiluba, Kongo, Sango – Central African Republic and surroundings
💬 “From Kinshasa to Brazzaville — Central African tongues interpreted.”
46. Chichewa/Nyanja Umbrella
Chichewa (Chewa) – Malawi’s national language
Nyanja – Spoken in Zambia, Mozambique
💬 “From Lilongwe to Lusaka — Chichewa family spoken with unity.”
47. Shona Languages Umbrella
Standard Shona – Zimbabwe
Zezuru, Karanga, Manyika – Dialect clusters
💬 “From Harare to Masvingo — Shona voices harmonized.”
48. Zulu & Nguni Languages Umbrella
Zulu (isiZulu) – South Africa
Xhosa, Ndebele, Swati – Southern Bantu family
💬 “From Durban to Eastern Cape — Nguni languages celebrated.”
49. Tswana/Sotho Languages Umbrella
Setswana – Botswana, South Africa
Sesotho, Northern Sotho (Sepedi) – Lesotho, South Africa
💬 “From Gaborone to Johannesburg — Sotho-Tswana voices uplifted.”
50. Kurdish Zaza-Gorani Extension Umbrella
Zazaki & Gorani – Minority dialects in Kurdish regions
💬 “From Diyarbakır to Kermanshah — Zaza-Gorani identities heard.”
51. Nuer & Dinka Umbrella
Nuer – South Sudan, Ethiopia
Dinka (Jieng) – Largest South Sudanese group
💬 “From Juba to Gambella — Nilotic voices empowered.”
52. Acholi/Luo Languages Umbrella
Acholi – Northern Uganda
Luo – Kenya, Tanzania
💬 “From Gulu to Kisumu — Luo peoples’ languages expressed.”
53. Bantu Languages (Generalized Regional Umbrella)
Kinyarwanda – Rwanda
Kirundi – Burundi
Luganda – Uganda
Bemba – Zambia
💬 “From Kigali to Lusaka — Bantu languages interpreted with unity.”
54. Tuareg/Tamasheq Umbrella
Tamasheq – Mali, Niger, Algeria
Tuareg Variants – Sahara region
💬 “From Timbuktu to Agadez — Tuareg voices carried on desert winds.”
55. Fulani/Fula/Pulaar Umbrella
Fula (Pulaar, Fulfulde) – Senegal to Cameroon
💬 “From Fouta Djallon to Nigeria — Fulani spoken with nomadic pride.”
56. Marshallese & Micronesian Languages Umbrella
Marshallese – Marshall Islands
Kosraean, Chuukese – Micronesian region
💬 “From Majuro to Micronesia — Pacific voices preserved.”
57. Samoan & Polynesian Languages Umbrella
Samoan – Samoa, American Samoa
Tongan, Tokelauan, Niuean – Polynesian family
💬 “From Apia to Tonga — Pacific Islander pride in every word.”
58. Māori & Aboriginal Oceanic Umbrella
Te Reo Māori – New Zealand
Cook Islands Māori, Tuvaluan
💬 “From Aotearoa to Rarotonga — Polynesian identity spoken.”
59. Indigenous North American Umbrella
Navajo (Diné) – US Southwest
Ojibwe, Lakota, Cherokee, Yup’ik – U.S. & Canada tribes
💬 “From Arizona to Manitoba — Native voices respectfully honored.”
60. American Sign Language (ASL) & Global Signed Umbrella
American Sign Language (ASL) – The primary signed language used by Deaf communities in the United States and parts of Canada.
International Sign – A simplified, visual-gesture-based sign system used in global Deaf gatherings and conferences.
Signing Exact English (SEE) – A manually coded system that represents English grammar and syntax.
Pidgin Signed English (PSE) – A blended form combining ASL signs with English word order.
💬 “Where voice is silent, hands speak — signed languages interpreted with love.”
61. Sundanese & Madurese (Indonesia)
Sundanese – Spoken mainly in West Java, Indonesia, with strong cultural and musical traditions.
Madurese – A Malayo-Polynesian language spoken on Madura Island and in parts of East Java.
💬 “Island tongues of culture and kinship.”
62. Macedonian & Albanian (Balkan)
Skopje Macedonian – Standardized variety spoken in North Macedonia; Slavic roots with Balkan influences.
Gheg Albanian – Spoken in the north of Albania, Kosovo, and parts of North Macedonia.
Tosk Albanian – Official dialect of Albania, spoken in the southern region.
💬 “The complex harmony of Balkan voices.”
63. Papuan & Tok Pisin (PNG)
Tok Pisin – A creole language widely spoken in Papua New Guinea and used in education and media.
Enga – One of the largest Papuan languages, spoken in the Enga Province.
Huli – A highland language known for its ceremonial speech and distinct warrior culture.
💬 “Over 800 languages on one island.”
64. Afar-Saho (Horn of Africa)
Afar – Spoken by nomadic people across Ethiopia, Djibouti, and Eritrea; rich oral traditions.
Saho – Closely related to Afar, spoken in southern Eritrea and northern Ethiopia.
💬 “Nomadic languages of desert and coast.”
65. Bassa-Kru (Liberian Languages)
Bassa – A Kwa language spoken in central Liberia, known for its unique writing system.
Kru – Spoken in coastal Liberia, known for musical tonality and oral storytelling.
Grebo – Another Kru family language, common in southeastern Liberia.
💬 “Voices of Liberia — rooted in tradition.”
66. Quechua & Aymara (Andean Languages)
Southern Quechua – The most widespread indigenous language in Peru and Bolivia.
Central Quechua – A diverse set of dialects spoken in central highlands of Peru.
Aymara – Spoken by Indigenous communities in Bolivia and Peru, with official status.
💬 “Languages of the Incas, still breathing.”
67. Georgian & Caucasian Cluster
Georgian – The official language of Georgia, written in its own unique script.
Mingrelian – A Kartvelian language related to Georgian, spoken in western Georgia.
Chechen – A Northeast Caucasian language spoken in Chechnya and Dagestan.
Avar – Spoken in Dagestan and eastern Caucasus with deep oral traditions.
Lezgian – Used in southern Dagestan and parts of Azerbaijan.
💬 “Mountain tongues carved in stone and resilience.”
68. Cree–Inuit (Native Canadian)
Plains Cree – One of the most widely spoken Cree dialects across the Canadian Prairies.
Inuktitut – The principal Inuit language spoken across the Arctic territories of Canada.
💬 “Sacred speech of the northern First Nations.”
69. Lao & Southeast Asian Highlands
Lao – Official language of Laos; tonal and closely related to Thai.
Khmu – Indigenous to northern Laos and parts of Vietnam.
Hmong Daw – Highland language in Laos and northern Vietnam (distinct from White/Green Hmong already listed).
💬 “From Vientiane to the highlands — voices of Laos carried with tradition.”
70. Malagasy–Comoros Corridor
Comorian (Shikomori) – Blend of Swahili, Arabic, and Malagasy, spoken in the Comoros Islands.
Mwani – Northern Mozambique coast, related to Comorian and Swahili.
Sakalava Malagasy – Western coastal Madagascar dialect (not already in your main Malagasy entry).
💬 “From Moroni to Mahajanga — ocean languages with island soul.”
71. Inuktun & Arctic Circle Languages
Inuktun (Polar Inuit) – Spoken by northern Greenland Inuit.
Kalaallisut – Official language of Greenland.
Siberian Yupik – Indigenous Arctic language of Russia and Alaska.
💬 “From Greenland to Chukotka — Arctic voices under the northern lights.”