Perth Translation Services » Advertising and Marketing Translation » Norwegian Translator for Advertising and Marketing Translation
Norwegian Advertising and Marketing Translation
Perth translation provides Norwegian advertising translations for various types of documents. We provide translation and typeset for brochures, websites, Powerpoint slides or other presentation files for business use.
Using the best translators for your advertising and marketing translations is critical for communicating your product or service to the right target audience. A professional translation company ensures quality checks and translators are carefully vetted before commencing on any translation.
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Professional Norwegian Translator
Perth Translation provides professional Norwegian <> English translation services. You can use the form on this page to upload multiple files for a confirm quote and delivery time. Our Norwegian translator is ready to assist with your translation project.
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About the Norwegian Language
The Norwegian language is the official language of Norway. It is spoken by over four and a half million people, and it belongs to the group of North Germanic languages which are spoken in Scandinavia. These include Swedish, Danish, Icelandic and Faeroese.
The Norwegian language exists in two forms: bokmål (which means "book language") and nynorsk (which means "new Norwegian"). Bokmål developed from the Dano-Norwegian koiné language that evolved under the union of Denmark-Norway in the 16- and 17-century, while Nynorsk was developed based upon a collective of spoken Norwegian dialects. Norwegian is one of the two official languages in Norway. The other is Sami, spoken by some members of the Sami people, mostly in the Northern part of Norway. Norwegian and Sami are not mutually intelligible, as Sami belongs to the Finno-Ugric group of languages. Sami is spoken by less than one percent of people in Norway.
From the 1840s, some writers experimented with a Norwegianised Danish by incorporating words that were descriptive of Norwegian scenery and folk life, and adopting a more Norwegian syntax. Knud Knudsen proposed to change spelling and inflection in accordance with the Dano-Norwegian koiné, known as "cultivated everyday speech." A small adjustment in this direction was implemented in the first official reform of the Danish language in Norway in 1862 and more extensively after his death in two official reforms in 1907 and 1917.
Meanwhile, a nationalistic movement strove for the development of a new written Norwegian. Ivar Aasen, a botanist and self-taught linguist, began his work to create a new Norwegian language at the age of 22. He traveled around the country collecting words and examples of grammar from the dialects and comparing the dialects among the different regions. He examined the development of Icelandic, which had largely escaped the influences under which Norwegian had come. He called his work, which was published in several books from 1848 to 1873, Landsmål, meaning "national language". The name "Landsmål" is sometimes interpreted as "rural language" or "country language", but this was clearly not Aasen's intended meaning.
The name of the Danish language in Norway was a topic of hot dispute through the 19th century. Its proponents claimed that it was a language common to Norway and Denmark, and no more Danish than Norwegian. The proponents of Landsmål thought that the Danish character of the language should not be concealed. In 1899, Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson proposed the neutral name Riksmål, meaning national language like Landsmål, and this was officially adopted along with the 1907 spelling reform. The name "Riksmål" is sometimes interpreted as "state language", but this meaning is secondary at best. (Compare to Danish rigsmål from where the name was borrowed.)
After the personal union with Sweden was dissolved in 1905, both languages were developed further and reached what is now considered their classic forms after a reform in 1917. Riksmål was in 1929 officially renamed Bokmål (literally "book language"), and Landsmål to Nynorsk (literally "new Norwegian"). A proposition to substitute Danish-Norwegian (dansk-norsk) for Bokmål lost in parliament by a single vote. The name Nynorsk, the linguistic term for modern Norwegian, was chosen to contrast with Danish and emphasis on the historical connection to Old Norwegian. Today, this meaning is often lost, and it is commonly mistaken as a "new" Norwegian in contrast to the "real" Norwegian Bokmål.
Norwegian Document Translation
Norway has two official written standards: Bokmal (used by approximately 85% of the population) and Nynorsk. Official documents may be issued in either standard depending on the municipality. While both are mutually intelligible, they differ in vocabulary, morphology, and spelling conventions. A translator must identify which standard is used in the source document.
Norwegian Document Types
Key Norwegian civil documents include fodselsattest (birth certificate), vigselsattest (marriage certificate), and vitnemal (academic transcript).
Norwegian (both Bokmal and Nynorsk) is the official language of Norway. Sami languages hold co-official status in designated municipalities. Norwegian is also used in documents from Svalbard and Jan Mayen. The two written standards have equal legal standing, and citizens may request official documents in either form.
Industry Requirements
The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) regulates advertising standards, while Ad Standards (formerly the Advertising Standards Bureau) handles complaints under the AANA Code of Ethics. The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) enforces truth-in-advertising under the Australian Consumer Law.
Common documents requiring translation include marketing collateral and brochures for export markets, advertising compliance documentation, brand guidelines for international subsidiaries, market research reports, and consumer terms and conditions. Product packaging copy and digital advertising content for multilingual campaigns also frequently need professional translation.
Translated advertising materials must comply with Australian Consumer Law accuracy requirements when used domestically. NAATI-certified translation is generally not required for marketing materials, though accuracy certification may be requested for regulatory submissions to ACMA or Ad Standards.
Perth's marketing sector services the resources and mining industry, with agencies producing multilingual safety communications and corporate materials for international joint venture partners. Major employers include local agencies servicing Woodside, BHP, and Rio Tinto, as well as Tourism Western Australia's international marketing campaigns.
