Perth Translation Services » Retail & E-Commerce Translation » Urdu Retail & Ecommerce Translation
Urdu Retail & E-Commerce Translation
Perth Translation provides professional Urdu translations for retailers and e-commerce stalls. Our English <> Urdu translations enable companies to internationalise and localise their products and services.
Reliable and accurate Urdu translations are an essential part for marketing products and services globally. We are a pro-business translation company, with managers experienced in providing only the best Urdu translations for our business clients.
Our Urdu translators are experts in translating for retail or website marketing literature.
- Translating Website Product or Website Content to Urdu
- Translating Restaurant Menu, Name-card and Brochures to Urdu
- Translating Marketing Material for Food and Beverage Companies
- Translation memory saved from each delivery, saving translation cost for customers requiring translation with repeated phrases
- Dedicated account manager for each client's translation projects
Enquire with us today with your translation requirement.
Upload your documents for translation
Our Valued Clients
Retail and E-Commerce Translation For All Major Languages
- Arabic retail ecommerce translation
- Chinese retail ecommerce translation
- Catalan retail ecommerce translation
- Croatian retail ecommerce translation
- Czech retail ecommerce translation
- Estonian retail ecommerce translation
- Dutch retail ecommerce translation
- Finnish retail ecommerce translation
- French retail ecommerce translation
- German retail ecommerce translation
- Greek retail ecommerce translation
- Hindi retail ecommerce translation
- Hungarian retail ecommerce translation
- Indonesian retail ecommerce translation
- Italian retail ecommerce translation
- Japanese retail ecommerce translation
- Korean retail ecommerce translation
- Macedonian retail ecommerce translation
- Malay retail ecommerce translation
- Norwegian retail ecommerce translation
- Persian retail ecommerce translation
- Polish retail ecommerce translation
- Portuguese retail ecommerce translation
- Punjabi retail ecommerce translation
- Romanian retail ecommerce translation
- Russian retail ecommerce translation
- Serbian retail ecommerce translation
- Slovak retail ecommerce translation
- Spanish retail ecommerce translation
- Swedish retail ecommerce translation
- Tagalog retail ecommerce translation
- Thai retail ecommerce translation
- Turkish retail ecommerce translation
- Ukrainian retail ecommerce translation
- Urdu retail ecommerce translation
- Vietnamese retail ecommerce translation
About the Urdu Language
The origin of the Urdu language is the Mughal Empire's word for army, Urdu. However, contrary to popular belief, Urdu was not created in the army camps of the Mughal Army. Urdu is spoken the same as present-day Hindi, but Hindi uses the traditional Devanagari script (a decedent of Sanskrit), whereas Urdu uses the Persio-Arabic alphabet.
The poet Ghulam Hamadani Mushafi coined the term Urdu for this language in 1780. However, this began to alienate the two major cultures in India/Pakistan, the Muslims and Hindus. Hindus began to speak and write Hindi, whereas Muslims would begin to speak Urdu.
In Pakistan, Urdu is mostly learned as a second or a third language as nearly 93% of Pakistan's population has a native language other than Urdu. Despite this, Urdu was chosen as a token of unity and as a lingua franca so as not to give any native Pakistani language preference over the other. Urdu is therefore spoken and understood by the vast majority in some form or another, including a majority of urban dwellers in such cities as Karachi, Lahore, Okara District, Sialkot, Rawalpindi, Islamabad, Multan, Faisalabad, Hyderabad, Peshawar, Quetta, Jhang, Sargodha and Skardu. It is written, spoken and used in all provinces/territories of Pakistan although the people from differing provinces may have different indigenous languages, as from the fact that it is the "base language" of the country. For this reason, it is also taught as a compulsory subject up to higher secondary school in both English and Urdu medium school systems. This has produced millions of Urdu speakers from people whose native language is one of the other languages of Pakistan, who can read and write only Urdu. It is absorbing many words from the regional languages of Pakistan.
Although most of the population is conversant in Urdu, it is the first language of only an estimated 7% of the population who are mainly Muslim immigrants (known as Muhajir in Pakistan) from different parts of South Asia. The regional languages are also being influenced by Urdu vocabulary. There are millions of Pakistanis whose native language is not Urdu, but because they have studied in Urdu medium schools, they can read and write Urdu along with their native language. Most of the nearly five million Afghan refugees of different ethnic origins (such as Pashtun, Tajik, Uzbek, Hazarvi, and Turkmen) who stayed in Pakistan for over twenty-five years have also become fluent in Urdu. With such a large number of people(s) speaking Urdu, the language has acquired a peculiar Pakistani flavour further distinguishing it from the Urdu spoken by native speakers and diversifying the language even further.
Urdu Document Translation
Urdu is mutually intelligible with Hindi in spoken form but uses distinct vocabulary drawn from Arabic and Persian for formal and literary registers. Documents from Pakistan use standard Urdu terminology, while those from Indian states like Uttar Pradesh and Telangana may reflect regional Urdu varieties with localised administrative vocabulary. The Dakhni Urdu of southern India, while spoken, does not typically appear in official documents.
Urdu Document Types
Pakistani birth certificates are titled پیدائشی سرٹیفکیٹ (paidaishi certificate) and marriage certificates as نکاح ناما (nikah nama). Educational transcripts from Pakistani universities are commonly called ڈگری ٹرانسکرپٹ, and police clearance is a پولیس کلیئرنس سرٹیفکیٹ.
Urdu is the national language of Pakistan, where it serves as the lingua franca and language of government, though only about 7% of Pakistanis speak it as a first language. In India, Urdu holds official status in the states of Jammu and Kashmir, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, and West Bengal, and is one of India's 22 scheduled languages. It is widely used across South Asian diaspora communities globally, including a substantial population in Australia.
Industry Requirements
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) enforces consumer protection laws including product labelling and safety standards. Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) sets food labelling requirements, and the Australian Border Force (ABF) manages import compliance for goods entering Australia.
Commonly translated documents include product labels and packaging for imported goods (mandatory under Australian Consumer Law), e-commerce terms and conditions for multilingual websites, supplier contracts and purchase orders with international manufacturers, customs declarations and import documentation, product safety certifications, and consumer warranty information.
Product labelling translations must meet Australian Consumer Law accuracy requirements, though NAATI certification is not typically mandatory for commercial labels. Customs documentation may require certified translation for disputed classifications, and import licences or permits in foreign languages need certified translation for ABF processing.
Perth's retail sector imports heavily from Asia, with Fremantle Port handling consumer goods from China, South-East Asia, and Japan. The growing Asian grocery and specialty retail scene in suburbs like Northbridge, Victoria Park, and Balcatta generates demand for product label translations, and WA-based e-commerce businesses expanding into Asian markets require website and marketing content translation.
