Interpreters » English to Czech » Art/Literary » Medical: Pharmaceuticals

The English to Czech translators listed below specialize in the field of Medical: Pharmaceuticals. For more search fields, try an advanced search by clicking the link to the right.

27 results (paying ProZ.com members)

Freelance Interpreter native in

Specializes in

21
Lukas Kadidlo
Lukas Kadidlo
Native in Czech Native in Czech
Life science, clinical trials, informed consent forms, instructions for use, manuals and software for medical devices, patient information, production manuals, SAE and SOP procedures, package inserts and labels, regulatory documents, ...
22
Priya Ponmalai
Priya Ponmalai
Native in Tamil Native in Tamil, Malayalam Native in Malayalam
Translation, DTP, Typesetting, Voice Over, Localization, Subtitling, Dubbing, Data Conversion, PDF to Word Conversion, OCR, ...
23
Martina Eaves
Martina Eaves
Native in Slovak 
NHS interpreting, public services, police, courts. Legal translations.
24
Eva Šoltésová
Eva Šoltésová
Native in Slovak (Variant: Czech) 
slovak, czech, translation, technical, medical, legal, EU documents
25
Ina Maertens
Ina Maertens
Native in Russian Native in Russian, Czech Native in Czech
conference interpreter, sworn translator, English, Russian, Czech, law, legal translation, finance, banking, medical, ...
26
zuzana kmetova
zuzana kmetova
Native in Slovak Native in Slovak, Czech Native in Czech, English (Variants: Canadian, US, British, UK, Irish) Native in English
....agriculture, environment, EU documents, garda station, law, solicitors office, courts and legislation, medical, report, business, ...
27
Klara Kramolisova
Klara Kramolisova
Native in Czech 
Czech translation, traducciones checo, technology, software, marketing, localization, fashion, překladatel španělština, překladatel angličtina, tourism, ...


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Interpreters, like translators, enable communication across cultures by translating one language into another. These language specialists must thoroughly understand the subject matter of any texts they translate, as well as the cultures associated with the source and target language.

Interpreters differ from translators in that they work with spoken words, rather than written text. Interpreting may be done in parallel with the speaker (simultaneous interpreting) or after they have spoken a few sentences or words (consecutive interpreting). Simultaneous interpreting is most often used at international conferences or in courts. Consecutive interpreting is often used for interpersonal communication.