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  • Thai language

    Thai (ภาษาไทย)
    Spoken in: Thailand
    Region:  --
    Total speakers: 46–50 million
    Ranking: 24
    Genetic classification: Tai-Kadai

     Kam-Tai
      Be-Tai
       Tai-Sek
        Tai
         Southwestern
          East Central
           Chiang Saeng
            Thai

    Official status
    Official language of: Thailand
    Regulated by: The Royal Institute
    Language codes
    ISO 639-1 th
    ISO 639-2 tha
    SIL THJ
    See also: LanguageList of languages

    The Thai language (ภาษาไทย, phasa thai, meaning "the language of Thais"), is the national and official language of Thailand and the mother tongue of the Thai people, Thailand's dominant ethnic group. Thai is a member of the Tai group of the Tai-Kadai language family. The Tai-Kadai languages are thought to have originated in what is now southern China, and some linguists have proposed links to the Austroasiatic, Austronesian, or Sino-Tibetan language families. It is a tonal and analytic language. The combination of tonality, a complex orthography, relational markers and a distinctive phonology can make Thai difficult to learn for speakers of many unrelated and highly differing languages.

    Contents

    Languages and dialects

    Standard Thai, also known as Central Thai or Siamese, is the official language of Thailand, spoken by about 25 million people (1990) including speakers of Bangkok Thai (although the latter is sometimes considered as a separate dialect). Khorat Thai is spoken by about 400,000 (1984) in Nakhon Ratchasima; it occupies a linguistic position somewhere between Central Thai and Isan on a dialect continuum, and may be considered a variant or dialect of either.

    In addition to Standard Thai, Thailand is home to several other related Tai languages, including:

    • Isan (Northeastern Thai), the language of the Isan region of Thailand, is considered by some to be a dialect of the Lao language, which it closely resembles. It is spoken by about 15 million people (1983).
    • (Tai Lue, Dai), spoken by about 78,000 (1993) in northern Thailand.
    • Northern Thai (Lanna, Kam Mueang, or Tai Yuan), spoken by about 6 million (1983).
    • Phuan, spoken by an unknown number of people in central Thailand and Isan.
    • Phu Thai, spoken by about 156,000 around Nakhon Phanom province (1993).
    • Shan (Thai Luang, Tai Long), spoken by about 56,000 in north-west Thailand (1993).
    • Song, spoken by about 20,000 to 30,000 in central and northern Thailand(1982).
    • Southern Thai (Pak Dtai or Dambro), spoken about 5 million (1990).
    • Tai Dam, spoken by about 20,000 (1991) in Isan and Saraburi province.

    Statistics are from Ethnologue 2003-10-4.

    Many of these languages are spoken by larger numbers outside Thailand. Most speakers of dialects and minority languages speak Central Thai in addition.

    Standard Thai is composed of several distinct registers, forms for different social contexts:

    • Street Thai: informal, without polite terms of address, as used between close relatives and friends.(ภาษาพูด)
    • Elegant Thai: official and written version, includes respectful terms of address; used in simplified form in newspapers.(ภาษาเขียน)
    • Rhetorical Thai: used for public speaking.
    • Sacred Thai.
    • Royal Thai. (ราชาศัพท์)

    Less-educated Thais can speak only at the first level. Few can speak the Sacred or Royal forms.

    Script

    Main article: Thai alphabet

    The Thai alphabet derived from the Khmer alphabet (อักขระเขมร), which is modeled after the Brahmic script from the Indic family. Much like the Burmese adopted the Mon script (which also has Indic origins), the Thais adopted and modified Khmer script to create their own writing system. While the oldest known inscription in the Khmer language dates from 611 CE, inscriptions in Thai writing began to appear around 1292 CE. Notable features include:

    1. It is an abugida script, in which the implicit vowel is a short /a/ for consonants standing alone and a short /o/ if the initial consonant or cluster is followed by another consonant.
    2. Tone markers are placed above the initial consonant of a syllable or on the last consonant of an initial consonant cluster.
    3. Vowels associated with consonants are nonsequential: they can be located before, after, above or below their associated consonant, or in a combination of these positions.

    The latter in particular causes problems for computer encoding and text rendering.

    There is no universal standard for transliterating Thai into English. For example, the name of King Rama IX, the present monarch, is transliterated variously as Bhumibol, Phumiphon, or many other versions. Guide books, text books and dictionaries may each follow different systems. For this reason, most language courses recommend that learners master the Thai alphabet. In scholarly usage, French scholars tend to romanize Thai with a letter-for-letter transcription according to the original Sanskrit value of the characters. Anglophone scholars generally prefer either a simplified phonetic rendering or some variation on the International Phonetic Alphabet. This article uses a simplified IPA system which does not indicate tone or vowel length.

    The Thai Royal Institute [1] publishes sets of rules for transliterating Thai words into the Roman alphabet and vice versa (the Royal Thai General System of Transcription), but these are far from universally applied.

    The ISO published an international standard for the transliteration of Thai into Roman script in September 2003 [2].

    Grammar

    From the perspective of linguistic typology, Thai can be considered to be an analytic language. The word order is Subject-Verb-Object, although the subject is often omitted. As in many Asian languages, the Thai pronominal system varies according to the sex and relative status of speaker and audience.

    Adjectives

    Adjectives follow the noun. A duplicated adjective is used for emphasis, e.g. คนอ้วนๆ (khon uan uan, IPA [kʰon uɑn uɑn])- "a really fat person."

    Comparatives take the form "A X กว่า (kwa, IPA [kwaː]) B" (A is more X than B). The superlative is expressed as A X ที่สุด (thisut, IPA [tʰiːsut])).

    Verbs

    Verbs do not inflect (i.e. do not change with person, tense, voice, mood or number) nor are there any participles. Duplication conveys the idea of doing the verb a lot. The passive voice is indicated by the insertion of โดน (don, IPA [doːn])) or ถูก (thuk, IPA [tʰuːk])) before the verb. Tense is conveyed by tense markers before or after the verb: กำลัง (kamlang, IPA [kɑmlɑŋ]) before the verb for ongoing action (like English -ing form) or อยู่ (yuu, IPA [juː]) after the verb for the present; จะ (cha, IPA [tɕaʔ]) before the verb for the future; ได้ (dai, IPA [dɑːj]) before the verb (or a time expression) for the past.

    Adverbs

    Many adverbs are the same as adjectives. Intensity can be expressed by a duplicated adjective. Adverbs usually follow the verb.

    Nouns

    Nouns are uninflected and have no gender; there are no plural forms or articles. Plurals are expressed by adding "nouns of multitude" (ลักษณนาม) or classifiers in the form of noun-number-classifier, e.g. "teacher five person" for "five teachers".

    While in English, such classifiers are usually absent ("four chairs") or optional ("two bottles of beer" or "two beers"), a classifier is almost always used in Thai (hence "chair four item" and "beer two bottle").

    Pronouns

    Subject pronouns are often omitted, while nicknames are often used where English would use a pronoun. There are specialised pronouns in the royal and sacred Thai languages. The following are appropriate for conversational use:

    word RTGS IPA meaning
    ผม phom [pʰǒm] I/me (masculine)
    ดิฉัน dichan [dìːtɕʰɑ́n]) I/me (feminine)
    ฉัน chan [tɕʰɑ́n] I/me (masculine or feminine; informal)
    คุณ khun [kʰun] you (polite)
    เธอ thoe [tʰɤː] you (informal)
    เรา rao [raw] we
    เขา khao [kʰǎw] he/she
    มัน man [mɑn] it
    พวกเขา phuak-khao [pʰûɑk kʰǎw] they
    พี่ phi [pʰîː] older brother or sister (often used loosely for older non-relatives)
    น้อง nong [nɔ́ːŋ] younger brother or sister (often used loosely for younger non-relatives)

    Particles

    The particles are often untranslatable words added to the end of a sentence to indicate respect, a request, encouragement or other moods (similar to the use of intonation in English), as well as varying the level of formality. They are not used in written Thai. The most common particles indicating respect are ครับ (khrap, IPA [kɔrɑp] with a high tone, the "r" sound is usually omitted) for a man, and ค่ะ (kha, IPA [kɔa]with a falling tone) for a woman; these can also be used to indicate an affirmative.

    Other common particles are:

    word RTGS IPA meaning
    จ๊ะ cha [tɕaʔ] indicating a request
    จ้ะ, จ้า or จ๋า cha [tɕaː] indicating emphasis
    ละ or ล่ะ la [laʔ] indicating emphasis
    สิ si [siʔ] indicating emphasis or an imperative
    นะ na [naʔ] indicating a request

    Phonology

    Tones

    There are five phonemic tones: middle, low, high, rising and falling. They are indicated in the written script by a combination of the class of the initial consonant (high, mid or low), vowel length (long or short), closing consonant (unvoiced/plosive or voiced/sonorant) and sometimes one of four tone marks. The tonal rules are shown in the following chart:

    tone of syllable initial consonant
    tone mark syllable composition high class mid class low class
    none long vowel or vowel plus sonorant rising mid mid
    none long vowel plus plosive low low falling
    none short vowel at end or plus plosive low low high
    mai ek (–่) any low low falling
    mai tho (–้) any falling falling high
    mai tri (–๊) any high high high
    mai chattawa (–๋) any rising rising rising

    The letters ห (high class) and sometimes อ (mid class) are used as silent letters before another consonant to produce the correct tone. In polysyllabic words, an initial high class consonant with an implicit vowel renders the following syllable also high class.

    There are a few exceptions to this system, notably the pronouns chan and khao, which are both pronounced with a high tone rather than the rising tone indicated by the script (in an informal conversation, generally when these words are recited or read in public, they are pronouced in rising tone).

    Consonants

    Thai distinguishes among three voice/aspiration patterns for plosive consonants:

    • unvoiced, unaspirated
    • unvoiced, aspirated
    • voiced, unaspirated

    Where English has only a distinction between the voiced, unaspirated /b/ and the unvoiced, aspirated /p/, Thai distinguishes a third sound which is neither voiced nor aspirated, which occurs in English only as an allophone of /p/, approximately the sound of the p in "spin." There is similarly an alveolar /t/, /tʰ/, /d/ triplet. In the velar series there is a /k/, /kʰ/ pair and in the postalveolar series the /tɕ/, /tɕʰ/ pair.

    In each cell below, the first line indicates International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), the second indicates the Thai characters in initial position (more letters appearing in the same box have identical pronunciation).

      Bilabial Labio-
    dental
    Alveolar Post-
    alveolar
    Palatal Velar Glottal
    Plosive [ p ]
    [ pʰ ]
    ผ,พ,ภ
    [ b ]
      [ t ]
    ฏ,ต
    [ tʰ ]
    ฐ,ฒ,ท,ธ
    [ d ]
    ฎ,ฑ,ด
        [ k ]
    [ kʰ ]
    ข,ฃ,ค,ฅ,ฆ
      [ ʔ ]
    *
    Nasal   [ m ]
        [ n ]
    ณ,น
          [ ŋ ]
     
    Fricative   [ f ]
    ฝ,ฟ
    [ s ]
    ซ,ศ,ษ,ส
            [ h ]
    ห,ฮ
    Affricate       [ tɕ ]
    [ tɕʰ ]
    ฉ, ช, ฌ
         
    Trill       [ r ]
           
    Approximant         [ j ]
    ญ,ย
      [ w ]
     
    Lateral
    approximant
          [ l ]
    ล,ฬ
           

    * the glottal plosive is implied after a short vowel without final, or the silent อ before a vowel.

    Vowels

    The basic vowels of the Thai language, from front to back and close to open, are given in the following table, The top entry in every cell is the symbol from the International phonetic alphabet, the second entry gives the spelling in the Thai alphabet, where a dash (–) indicates the position of the initial consonant after which the vowel is pronounced. A second dash indicates that a final consonant must follow.

      Front Central Back
    Close i
    (–ี, –ิ)
    ɯ
    (–ื, –ึ)
    u
    (–ู, –ุ)
    Close-mid e
    (เ–, เ–ะ)
    ɤ
    (เ–ิ –, เ–ิอ)
    o
    (โ–, โ–ะ)
    Open-mid ɛ
    (แ–, แ–ะ)
      ɔ
    (–อ, เ–าะ)
    Open a
    (–า, –ะ)
      ɑ
    (–ั, รร)

    The vowels each exist in long-short pairs: these are distinct phonemes forming unrelated words in Thai, but usually transliterated the same: เขา (khao) means he or she, while ขาว (khao) means white.

    The long-short pairs are as follows:

    Long Short
    Thai IPA Explanation Thai IPA Explanation
    –า a in "father" –ะ a u in "nut"
    –ี ee in "see" –ิ i y in "greedy"
    –ู ue in "blue" –ุ u oo in "look"
    เ– a in "lame" เ–ะ e e in "set"
    แ– ɛː a in "ham" แ–ะ ɛ a in "at"
    –ื ɯː u in French "dur" (long) –ึ ɯ u in French "du" (short)
    เ–อ ɤː u in "burn" (long) เ–อะ ɤ u in "burn" (short)
    โ– ow in "bowl" โ–ะ o oa in "boat"
    –อ ɔː aw in "raw" เ–าะ ɔ o in "for"

    The basic vowels can be combined into diphthongs as follows:

    Long Short
    Thai IPA Explanation Thai IPA Explanation
    –าย aːj I in "I" (stressed) ไ–, ใ–, ไ–ย ɑj I in "I"
    –าว aːw ao in "Lao" เ–า aw ow in "cow"
    เ–ีย iːa ea in "ear" (long) เ–ียะ ia ea in "ear"
    –ิว iw ew in "new" (short)
    –ัว uːa ewe in "newer" –ัวะ ua ure in "pure" (short)
    –ูย uːj ooee in "cooee!" –ุย uj uey in "bluey"
    เ–ว eːw a in "lame" + o in "poke" เ–็ว ew e in "set" + o in "poke"
    แ–ว ɛːw a in "ham" + o in "poke"
    เ–ือ ɯːa u in French "dur" + a in "father"
    เ–ย ɤːj u in "burn" + y in "yes"
    –อย ɔːj oy in "boy" (long)
    โ–ย oːj oe in "Chloe"

    Additionally, there are three triphthongs, all of which are long:

    Long
    Thai IPA Explanation
    เ–ียว iow ee + aow
    –วย uɛj oo + I in "I"
    เ–ือย ɯɛj u in French "dur" + I in "I"

    For a guide to written vowels, see the Thai alphabet page.

    Vocabulary

    Other than compound words and words of foreign origin, most words are monosyllabic. Historically, words have most often been imported from Sanskrit and Pali; Buddhist terminology was a particularly fruitful source of these. Since the beginning of the 20th century, however, the English language has been the greatest influence.

    Thailand also uses a distinctive six hour clock in addition to the 24 hour clock.

    References

    • Higbie, James and Thinsan, Snea. Thai Reference Grammar. The Structure of Spoken Thai. Bangkok: Orchid Press, 2003. ISBN 9748304965.
    • Segaller, Denis. Thai Without Tears: A Guide to Simple Thai Speaking. Bangkok: BMD Book Mags, 1999. ISBN 9748711528.
    • Smyth, David. Thai. An Essential Grammar. London: Routledge, 2002. ISBN 0415226147.

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