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Bridging Cultures Through Website Translation

Cultures and languages determine a foreign market. Ensure that you are fully informed when launching a multilingual website. Rely on our translation expertise, culturally appropriate content review and localization advice. Your foreign language website will sell your products and services only if you are addressing your target audience in a culturally and linguistically appropriate manner. Read More

Many Languages & Cultures & Solutions

LingoStar's language services encompass more than just translations. Our flexibility to meet clients' complex requirements have resulted in our ability to provide value-added language services: multilingual voice-overs, transcriptions, typesetting, website localization, interpretation, bilingual staff and language training. We will listen to your needs and resolve your language challenges. Read More

Language Translation Mosaic

There are more than 7,000 languages in the world. Language is one of the first concepts we learn as children. Humans rely on languages in daily communications. You rely on a translation company to convey a well-written message to your market anywhere in the world. Reach your audience while utilizing the linguistic expertise of more than 1,000 LingoStar qualified translators. Read More

Support Network & Quality Assurance

LingoStar is your support network for any language need. We have a resourceful database of language providers for any language, any industry and any specialization. Your language needs will be analyzed by professional project managers and linguists and well-executed translations or other language solutions will be delivered on-time to your inbox. Read More

Clients that Trust Our Work

Clients that entrust LingoStar with their translations and language services. Read More

English

Often Used Language Pairs for Translation with English

Arabic     Italian Mandarin
Dutch     Japanese (Simplified Chinese)
Farsi (Persian)     Korean Cantonese
French     Portuguese (Traditional Chinese)
German     Punjabi Spanish
Indonesian (Malay)     Russian Tagalog (Filipino)

About English Language

Part of the Germanic language family, English has 400 million native speakers and over 200 million non-native speakers in the world. Up to an estimated 1.8 billion people speak it worldwide. It is considered to be a lingua franca of the world. Also, it is one of the European Union languages since 1973 and the official language in more than 50 countries.

Four phases may be distinguished in the development of the English language: Old English, Middle English, Early Modern English and Late Modern English, which has been in use from 1600 to the present day. One of the main reasons for its widespread growth is due to the prowess of the British Empire, which ruled many countries all over the world for centuries.

 

American English

American English or U.S. English is a set of dialects of the English language used in the United States. American English differs from British, Australian or Canadian, but most of the time the differences between them are in terms of pronunciation of certain words, some spelling and vocabulary, and slang terms and idioms.

American English has been a topic of considerable interest for at least 100 years, and has led to the creation of a Dictionary of American Regional English. There are many dialects in the north, south, east and west areas of the U.S., and well-known differences in accents from Boston, New York, L.A. to the South.

 

British English

British English or UK English is the language used in the United Kingdom. However, there are many dialects and accents depending on the region within Great Britain, Wales, Scotland and Ireland. 

American English is commonly considered the new English; however, British English is often influenced by new words or phrases coming from new generations and cultures from neighbouring countries, as well as immigrants, which does not happen as much in the U.S. For this reason it is thought that British English is actually developing faster than American.

 

Canadian English

English used in Canada is called Canadian English and was first recognized as an individual language in 1957.  It combines both American and British English.

Canadian English has more common pronunciation with American and more common vocabulary and spelling with British English. The originality of the language is the influence of Quebec French. Over the past 200 years, Canadian English has developed rapidly with its historical background of settlement and immigration.

 

Australian English

Australian English is the name given to the group of dialects spoken in Australia to distinguish it from all the varieties of the English language. It has basically the same grammatical rules as British, however it is different in slang and pronunciation.

Australian English rules are governed by the rules of either American English or British English. After all, Australia has much stronger cultural ties to Great Britain.

In the early 20th century, Australian English was recognized as an individual language and later celebrated with such works as the Australian National Dictionary of 1988.

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