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  • Perth Translation Services » Perth » City of Nedlands Translation Services » City of Nedlands Danish Translation Service

    City of Nedlands Danish Translation Services

    Get fast and professional translation services in City of Nedlands. We have NAATI certified Danish translators providing translation of all types of documents. These include confidential legal, financial and migration document translations.

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    The 'Wirin' sculpture at Perth's Yagan Square

    City of Nedlands

    The City of Nedlands is a local government area in the inner western suburbs of the Western Australian capital city of Perth, about 7 kilometres (4 mi) west of Perth's central business district. The City covers an area of 20.0 square kilometres (7.7 sq mi), maintains 137 km of roads and a little over 380 hectares of parks and gardens, and has a population of over 21,000 as of 2016.

    City of Nedlands History

    The City of Nedlands had its origins in the Claremont Road District, which was created in 1893 after a petition from ratepayers who lived in the areas of Nedlands and Claremont, which had grown substantially in population at the end of the 19th century. Seven men were nominated to the new Board, which became the first local government authority for the Nedlands/Claremont area. In 1898, Claremont itself split away to form a municipal government, which still exists today as the Town of Claremont.

    In 1932, the Claremont Road Board was renamed Nedlands, and on 1 July 1959, it became a city. The City was made up of four wards – Melvista, Hollywood, Dalkeith and Coastal. These wards continue to the present day.

    "On 1 July, 1959 the City of Nedlands was proclaimed at the command of Governor Sir Charles Gairdner, in the packed Dalkeith Civic Hall. Mr Allan Jenkins read out the proclamation and the Minister for Local Government, Mr Leslie Logan, M.L.C. conducted the official swearing in ceremony of the new Mayor, John Charles Smith, the twelve new Councillors and the auditors. He then appointed Mr Allan Jenkins as the City's first Town Clerk. Among those present was MLA for Nedlands, Deputy Premier Charles Court." - From the City of Nedlands Council Website https://www.nedlands.wa.gov.au/history. City of Nedlands community Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/nedlands/.

    City of Nedlands Suburbs

    Dalkeith, Floreat, Karrakatta, Mount Claremont, Nedlands, Shenton Park, Swanbourne

    About the Danish Language

    Danish is the Germanic language spoken in Denmark, the Faroe Islands, and parts of Greenland and Germany (Southern Schleswig). Around 5.5 million people speak Danish. It is used as a second language in Greenland and the Faroe Islands. The Danish people, or Danes, call their language dansk.

    Following the first Bible translation, the development of Danish as a written language, as a language of religion, administration, and public discourse accelerated. In the second half of the 17th century, grammarians elaborated grammars of Danish, first among them Rasmus Bartholin's 1657 Latin grammar De studio lingvæ danicæ; then Laurids Olufsen Kock's 1660 grammar of the Zealand dialect Introductio ad lingvam Danicam puta selandicam; and in 1685 the first Danish grammar written in Danish, Den Danske Sprog-Kunst ("The Art of the Danish Language") by Peder Syv. Major authors from this period are Thomas Kingo, poet and psalmist, and Leonora Christina Ulfeldt, whose novel Jammersminde (Remembered Woes) is considered a literary masterpiece by scholars. Orthography was still not standardized and the principles for doing so were vigorously discussed among Danish philologists. The grammar of Jens Pedersen Høysgaard was the first to give a detailed analysis of Danish phonology and prosody, including a description of the stød. In this period, scholars were also discussing whether it was best to "write as one speaks" or to "speak as one writes", including whether archaic grammatical forms that had fallen out of use in the vernacular, such as the plural form of verbs, should be conserved in writing (i.e. han er "he is" vs. de ere "they are").

    The East Danish provinces were lost to Sweden after the Second Treaty of Brömsebro (1645) after which they were gradually Swedified; just as Norway was politically severed from Denmark, beginning also a gradual end of Danish influence on Norwegian (influence through the shared written standard language remained). With the introduction of absolutism in 1660, the Danish state was further integrated, and the language of the Danish chancellery, a Zealandic variety with German and French influence, became the de facto official standard language, especially in writing — this was the original so-called rigsdansk ("Danish of the Realm"). Also beginning in the mid-18th century, the skarre-R, the uvular R sound ([ʁ]), began spreading through Denmark, likely through influence from Parisian French and German. It affected all of the areas where Danish had been influential, including all of Denmark, Southern Sweden, and coastal southern Norway.

    City of Nedlands Danish Translator Services

    Danish translator for certified translation services:

    Perth Translation provides fast and affordable Danish translation services in the City of Nedlands for all types of personal documents by NAATI translators.


    Danish Document Translation

    Danish has significant dialectal variation between Jutlandic, Insular, and Bornholmian dialect groups, though standard Danish (Rigsdansk) based on Copenhagen speech is used in all official documentation. Documents from the Faroe Islands and Greenland, while under Danish sovereignty, are typically issued in Faroese or Greenlandic respectively, with Danish as a secondary language. These require different translation considerations than mainland Danish documents.

    Danish Document Types

    Danish civil documents include the fødselsattest (birth certificate) or fødsels- og dåbsattest (birth and baptism certificate, from church records pre-digitalisation), vielsesattest (marriage certificate), and kørekort (driving licence). The civil registration system is administered through the Folkeregistret (National Register).

    Where Danish Is Official

    Danish is the official language of Denmark, including the Faroe Islands and Greenland (where it is co-official with Faroese and Greenlandic respectively). It is also a recognised minority language in the Schleswig region of northern Germany. As an EU member state, Denmark issues many official documents in formats standardised across Europe, though the Danish CPR (Civil Registration) system produces documents with unique formatting conventions.

    Danish uses the Latin alphabet plus three additional letters: æ, ø, and å, which appear at the end of the alphabet. These characters are essential for correct Danish and must be preserved in all translations. The letter å replaced the older spelling aa in 1948, though some proper nouns (notably the city of Aalborg) retain the older form. Danish naming conventions use patronymic-derived surnames (ending in -sen).

    About City of Nedlands

    The City of Nedlands covers approximately 20 square kilometres on the northern bank of the Swan River, west of Perth CBD. With a population of around 23,000, it is one of Perth's most established and affluent residential areas, shaped significantly by the presence of the University of Western Australia and several major hospital campuses.

    The LGA includes Nedlands, Dalkeith, Mount Claremont, Karrakatta, Shenton Park, and Floreat Park, with Hampden Road and Broadway serving as the main local commercial strips.

    Council offices are on Stirling Highway in Nedlands, with the Nedlands Library located nearby. The area houses several state-level institutions including QEII Medical Centre, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, and Hollywood Private Hospital.

    Stirling Highway is the primary east-west corridor connecting to both Perth CBD and Fremantle. The Loch Street and Shenton Park stations are on the Fremantle line, and multiple bus routes operate along Stirling Highway and through the UWA campus.

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