LANGUAGES
Language is the ability to acquire and use complex systems of communication, particularly the human ability to do so, and a language is any specific example of such a system.
The scientific study of language is called linguistics.
Questions concerning the philosophy of language, such as whether words can represent experience, have been debated since Gorgias and Plato in Ancient Greece.
Thinkers such as Rousseau have argued that language originated from emotions while others like Kant have held that it originated from rational and logical thought. 20th-century philosophers such as Wittgenstein argued that philosophy is really the study of language.
Major figures in linguistics include Ferdinand de Saussure and Noam Chomsky.
Estimates of the number of languages in the world vary between 5,000 and 7,000. However, any precise estimate depends on a partly arbitrary distinction between languages and dialects.
Translation is the communication of the meaning of a source-language text by means of an equivalent target-language text. While interpreting—the facilitating of oral or sign-language communication between users of different languages—antedates writing, translation began only after the appearance of written literature. There exist partial translations of the Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh into Southwest Asian languages of the second millennium BCE.
We offer both indian and foregin languages for translation.
Indian languages
- Punjabi
- Hindi
- Telugu
- Tamil
- Urdu
- Malayalam
Foregin languages
- English
- Catalan
- Chinese
- French
- Croatian
- German
- Italian
- Albanian
- Arabic
- Bosnian
- Bulgarian
- Czech
- Danish
- Finnish
- Greek
- Hebrew
- Spanish
- Hungarian
- Polish
- Slovenian
- Swedish
- Turkish
- Ukrainian
- Dutch
- Hungarian
- Maltese