Northern Thai Language

Kam Mueang (Northern Thai: ᨣᩴᩤᨾᩮᩬᩥᨦ, กำเมือง ⓘ) or Northern Thai language (Thai: ภาษาไทยถิ่นเหนือ) is the language of the Northern Thai people of Lanna, Thailand.

It is a Southwestern Tai language that is closely related to Tai Lue language. Kam Mueang has approximately six million speakers, most of whom live in the native Northern Thailand, with a smaller community of Lanna speakers in northwestern Laos.

Northern Thai
ᨣᩴᩤᨾᩮᩬᩥᨦ
กำเมือง
Northern Thai Language
Tai Tham script traditional transcription (top)
Thai alphabet currently popular
with non-standard form (bottom)
Pronunciation[kam˧.mɯaŋ˧],
Native toThailand
(Chiang Mai, Lamphun,
Lampang, Uttaradit,
Phrae, Nan, Phayao,
Chiang Rai, Mae Hong Son and Communities throughout Thailand)

Myanmar
(Tachileik, Myawaddy)
Laos
(Houayxay, Ton Pheung)
RegionNorthern Thailand
EthnicityNorthern Thai
Native speakers
6 million (2015)
Kra–Dai
Tai Tham script
Thai script
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-3nod
Glottolognort2740

Speakers of this language generally consider the name "Tai Yuan" to be pejorative[citation needed]. They refer to themselves as Khon Mueang (ᨤᩫ᩠ᨶᨾᩮᩬᩥᨦ, คนเมือง, [kʰon˧.mɯaŋ˧] – literally "people of Mueang" meaning "city dwellers"), Lanna, or Northern Thai. The language is also sometimes referred to as Phayap (พายัพ, Thai pronunciation: [pʰāː.jáp]), "Northwestern (speech)".

The term Yuan is still sometimes used for Northern Thai's distinctive Tai Tham alphabet, which is closely related to the old Tai Lue alphabet and the Lao religious alphabets. The use of the Tua Mueang, as the traditional alphabet is known, is now largely limited to Buddhist temples, where many old sermon manuscripts are still in active use. There is no active production of literature in the traditional alphabet, and when used in writing standard Thai script is invariably used. The modern spoken form is called Kam Mueang. There is a resurgence of interest in writing it in the traditional way, but the modern pronunciation differs from that prescribed in spelling rules.

Northern Thai Language
Nameboard of a Buddhist temple in Chiang Mai written with Tai Tham script: Wat Mokhamtuang (and street number 119 in Thai)

Classification

Northern Thai is classified as one of the Chiang Saen languages—others being Thai, Southern Thai and numerous smaller languages, which together with the Northwestern Tai and Lao-Phutai languages, form the Southwestern branch of Tai languages. The Tai languages are a branch of the Kra–Dai language family, which encompasses a large number of indigenous languages spoken in an arc from Hainan and Guangxi south through Laos and Northern Vietnam to the Cambodian border.

From a purely genealogical standpoint, most linguists consider Northern Thai to be more closely related to Central Thai than to Lao or Isan, but the language has been heavily influenced by both Lao and Central Thai throughout history. All Southwestern Tai languages form a coherent dialect continuum of more or less mutually intelligible varieties, with few sharp dividing lines. Nevertheless, Northern Thai has today become closer to the Central Thai language, as Standard Thai is the principal language of education and government and spoken throughout Thailand.

Kra-Dai 

Names

The Northern Thai language has various names in Northern Thai, Thai, and other Tai languages.

  • In Northern Thai, it is commonly called kam mueang (ᨣᩴᩤᨾᩮᩬᩥᨦ, /kām.mɯ̄aŋ/, literally "city language"; cf. Standard Thai: คำเมือง /kʰām.mɯ̄aŋ/), or phasa Lan Na (ᨽᩣᩈᩣᩃ᩶ᩣ᩠ᨶᨶᩣ, ภาษาล้านนา /pʰāː.sǎː.láːn.nāː/, literally "the language of Lan Na").
  • In Central Thai and Southern Thai, Northern Thai is known as phasa thin phayap (ภาษาถิ่นพายัพ /pʰāː.sǎː.tʰìn.pʰāː.jáp/, literally "the language of the northwestern region"), or phasa thai thin nuea (ภาษาไทยถิ่นเหนือ /pʰāː.sǎː.tʰāj.tʰìn.nɯ̌a/, literally "the Thai language of the northern region", or colloquially it is known as phasa nuea (ภาษาเหนือ /pʰāː.sǎː.nɯ̌a/, literally "the northern language").
  • In Lao, it is known as phasa nyuan or phasa nyon (ພາສາຍວນ or ພາສາໂຍນ respectively, /pʰáː.sǎː.ɲúan/ or /pʰáː.sǎː.ɲóːn/ respectively, literally "the Tai Yuan language").
  • In Tai Lü, it is known as kam yon (ᦅᧄᦍᦷᧃ kâm.jôn, literally "the Tai Yuan language").
  • In Shan it is known as kwam yon (ၵႂၢမ်းယူၼ်း kwáːm.jón, literally "the Tai Yuan language").

History

Tai migration

Northern Thai Language 
Map showing the general migration patterns and diversification of the Tai peoples and languages from the original Tai Urheimat of southeastern China.

The ancestors of the Northern Thai people were speakers of Southwestern Tai dialects that migrated from what is now southeastern China, specifically what is now Guangxi and northern Vietnam where the diversity of various Tai languages suggests an Urheimat. The Southwestern Tai languages began to diverge from the Northern and Central branches of the Tai languages, covered mainly by various Zhuang languages, sometime around 112 AD, but likely completed by the sixth century. Due to the influx of Han Chinese soldiers and settlers, the end of the Chinese occupation of Vietnam, the fall of Jiaozhi and turbulence associated with the decline and fall of the Tang dynasty led some of the Tai peoples speaking Southwestern Tai to flee into Southeast Asia, with the small-scale migration mainly taking place between the eighth and twelfth centuries. The Tais split and followed the major river courses, with the ancestral Northern Thai originating in the Tai migrants that followed the Mekong River.

Indianized kingdoms

Ancestors of the Northern Thai people established Ngoenyang, an early kingdom that existed between the 7th to 13th centuries, as well as smaller kingdoms like Phayao, in what is now modern-day northern Thailand. They settled in areas adjacent to the kingdom of Hariphunchai, coming into contact with Mon-speaking people whose writing system was eventually adapted for the Northern Thai language as the Tai Tham script. In the 13th century, King Mangrai consolidated control of these territories, establishing the kingdom of Lan Na. In the 15th century, King Tilokkarat ushered in a golden age for Northern Thai literature, with a profusion of palm leaf manuscripts written in Tai Tham, using vernacular Northern Thai and interspersed with Pali and Buddhist Indic vocabulary.

Thai subordination

In 1775, Kawila of Lampang revolted with Siamese assistance, and captured the city, ending 200 years of Burmese rule. Kawila was installed as the prince of Lampang and Phraya Chaban as the prince of Chiang Mai, both as vassals of Siam. In 1899, Siam annexed the Northern Thai principalities, effectively dissolving their status as sovereign tributary states.

The Compulsory Education Act of 1921 banned schools and temples from using languages other than Central Thai (standard Thai), in an effort to bring remote regions under Siamese control. Northern Thai was relegated from the public sphere, with influential religious leaders like Khruba Srivichai jailed for using Northern Thai in sermons. In the 1940s, authorities promulgated Thai cultural mandates that reinforced the importance of learning and using Central Thai as the prestige language.

These economic and educational pressures have increased the use of standard Thai to the detriment of other regional languages like Northern Thai. Today, Northern Thai is typically code-switched with standard Thai, especially in more developed and urbanized areas of Northern Thailand, whereas exclusive use of Northern Thai remains prevalent in more remote areas.

Dialects

Thanajirawat (2018) classifies Tai Yuan into five major dialect groups based on tonal split and merger patterns. (See also Proto-Tai language#Tones)

  1. most Tai Yuan varieties in Thailand, Laos and Myanmar
  2. Bokeo Province, Laos (A12-34 and BCD123-4 (B4=DL4=DS4))
  3. Mae Chaem District, Chiang Mai Province and Laplae District, Uttaradit Province, Thailand (A12-34 and BCD123-4 (A34=B123=DL123))
  4. Tha Pla District, Uttaradit Province and Xayaburi Province, Laos (A12-34, BDL1234, and CDS123-4)
  5. Ratchaburi Province, Thailand (A12-34 and BCD123-4 (A34=B123=DL123, B4=C4=DL4))

Phonology

Consonants

Initial consonants

Northern Thai consonant inventory is similar to that of Lao (Isan); both languages have the /ɲ/ sound and lack /tɕʰ/.

Labial Dental/
Alveolar
(Alveolo-)
Palatal
Velar Glottal
Nasal /m/
ᩉ᩠ᨾ
/n/
ᩉ᩠ᨶ
/ɲ/
ᨿ ᩉ᩠ᨿ
/ŋ/
ᩉ᩠ᨦ
Plosive/
Affricate
tenuis /p/
/t/
//
/k/
/ʔ/
aspirate //

ᨷᩕ ᨸᩕ ᨻᩕ
//

ᨲᩕ ᨴᩕ
(/tɕʰ/) //

ᨠᩕ ᨣᩕ ᨡᩕ
voiced /b/
/d/
Fricative /f/

 
/s/

(/x/) /h/

ᩉᩕ
Approximant /w/

ᩉ᩠ᩅ
/l/
ᩉᩖ
ᩉ᩠ᩃ
/j/

 
Rhotic/Liquid (/r/)

Initial consonant clusters

There are two relatively common consonant clusters:

There are also several other, less frequent clusters recorded, though apparently in the process of being lost:

  • /ŋw/ ᨦ᩠ᩅ ᩉ᩠ᨦ᩠ᩅ
  • /tɕw/ ᨧ᩠ᩅ ᨩ᩠ᩅ
  • /sw/ ᩈ᩠ᩅ ᨪ᩠ᩅ
  • /tw/ ᨲ᩠ᩅ ᨴ᩠ᩅ
  • /tʰw/ ᨳ᩠ᩅ
  • /nw/ ᨶ᩠ᩅ
  • /ɲw/ ᨿ᩠ᩅ ᩉ᩠ᨿ᩠ᩅ
  • /jw/ ᩀ᩠ᩅ
  • /lw/ ᩃ᩠ᩅ ᩁ᩠ᩅ ᩉᩖ᩠ᩅ ᩉ᩠ᩃ᩠ᩅ
  • /ʔw/ ᩋ᩠ᩅ

Final consonants

All plosive sounds are unreleased. Hence, final /p/, /t/, and /k/ sounds are pronounced as [p̚], [t̚], and [k̚] respectively.

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal /m/ /n/ ᨬ ᨱ ᨶ ᩁ ᩃ ᩊ /ŋ/
Plosive /p/ ᨷ ᨸ ᨻ ᨼ ᨽ /t/ ᨧ ᨩ ᨪ ᨭ ᨮ ᨯ ᨰ ᨲ ᨳ ᨴ ᨵ ᩆ ᩇ ᩈ /k/ ᨠ ᨡ ᨣ ᨥ /ʔ/
Approximant /w/ /j/ ᨿ

Vowels

The basic vowels of the Northern Thai language are similar to those of Standard Thai. They, 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
short long short long short long
Close /i/
 -ิ 
//
 -ี 
/ɯ/
 -ึ 
/ɯː/
 -ื- 
/u/
 -ุ 
//
 -ู 
Mid /e/
เ-ะ
//
เ-
/ɤ/
เ-อะ
/ɤː/
เ-อ
/o/
โ-ะ
//
โ-
Open /ɛ/
แ-ะ
/ɛː/
แ-
/a/
-ะ, -ั-
//
-า
/ɔ/
เ-าะ
/ɔː/
-อ

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

The long-short pairs are as follows:

Long Short
Thai IPA Example Thai IPA Example
–า /aː/ ᨺᩣ᩠ᨶ ฝาน /fǎːn/ 'to slice' –ะ /a/ ᨺᩢ᩠ᨶ ฝัน /fǎn/ 'to dream'
–ี  /iː/ ᨲᩦ ตี๋ /tǐː/ 'to cut' –ิ  /i/ ᨲᩥ ติ๋ /tǐʔ/ 'to criticize'
–ู  /uː/ ᩈᩪᨯ สูด /sùːt/ 'to inhale' –ุ  /u/ ᩈᩩᨯ สุ๋ด /sǔt/ 'rearmost'
เ– /eː/ ᩋᩮ᩠ᨶ เอน /ʔēːn/ 'to recline' เ–ะ /e/ ᩋᩮᩢ᩠ᨶ เอ็น /ʔēn/ 'tendon, ligament'
แ– /ɛː/ ᨠᩯ᩵ แก่ /kɛ̀ː/ 'to be old' แ–ะ /ɛ/ ᨠᩯᩡ แก๋ะ /kɛ̌ʔ/ 'sheep'
–ื-  /ɯː/ ᨤᩨ᩠ᨶ ฅืน (คืน) /kʰɯ̄ːn/ 'to return' –ึ  /ɯ/ ᨡᩧ᩠᩶ᨶ ขึ้น /kʰɯ᷇n/ 'to go up'
เ–อ /ɤː/ ᨾᩮᩥ᩠ᨶ เมิน /mɤː̄n/ 'to delay; long time' เ–อะ /ɤ/ ᨦᩮᩥ᩠ᨶ เงิน /ŋɤ̄n/ 'silver'
โ– /oː/ ᨧᩰᩫ᩠ᩁ โจ๋ร (โจ๋น) /tɕǒːn/ 'thief' โ–ะ /o/ ᨧᩫ᩠ᨶ จ๋น /tɕǒn/ 'to be poor'
–อ /ɔː/ ᩃᩬᨦ ลอง /lɔ̄ːŋ/ 'to try' เ–าะ /ɔ/ ᨪᩰᩬᩡ เซาะ /sɔ́ʔ/ 'to search'

The basic vowels can be combined into diphthongs. For purposes of determining tone, those marked with an asterisk are sometimes classified as long:

Long Short
Thai script IPA Thai script IPA
–าย /aːj/ ไ–*, ใ–*, ไ–ย, -ัย /aj/
–าว /aːw/ เ–า* /aw/
เ–ีย /ia/ เ–ียะ /iaʔ/
–ิว /iw/
–ัว /ua/ –ัวะ /uaʔ/
–ูย /uːj/ –ุย /uj/
เ–ว /eːw/ เ–็ว /ew/
แ–ว /ɛːw/
เ–ือ /ɯa/ เ–ือะ /ɯaʔ/
เ–ย /ɤːj/
–อย /ɔːj/
โ–ย /oːj/

Additionally, there are three triphthongs, For purposes of determining tone, those marked with an asterisk are sometimes classified as long:

Thai script IPA
เ–ียว* /iaw/
–วย* /uaj/
เ–ือย* /ɯaj/

Allophones

The following section largely concerns the Nan dialect of Northern Thai.

Phoneme Allophone Context Example

(Tai Tham script)

Example

(Thai script)

IPA Gloss
/b/ [b] onset ᨷ᩵ᩤ บ่า /bàː/ shoulder
/d/ [d] onset ᨯᩬ᩠ᨿ, ᨯᩭ ดอย /dɔ̄ːj/ mountain
/p/ [p] onset ᨸ᩵ᩣ ป่า /pàː/ forest
[p̚] coda ᩋᩣ᩠ᨷ อาบ /ʔàːp/ bath
[pm̩] coda, emphasised ᨷᩴ᩵ᩉᩖᩢᨷ บ่หลับ /bɔ̀ lǎp/ don't sleep!
/t/ [t] onset ᨲᩣ ตา /tǎː/ eye
[t̚] coda ᨸᩮᩥ᩠ᨯ เปิด /pɤ̀ːt/ open
[tn̩] coda, emphasised ᨷᩴ᩵ᨹᩮᩢ᩠ᨯ บ่เผ็ด /bɔ̀ pʰět/ not spicy!
/k/ [k] onset ᨠᩣ กา /kǎː/ crow
[k̚] coda ᨸᩦ᩠ᨠ ปีก /pìːk/ wing
[kŋ̩] coda, emphasised ᨷᩴ᩵ᩈᩩᨠ บ่สุก /bɔ̀ sǔk/ not ripe!
/x/ [x] before non-front vowels ᨡᩯ᩠ᨠ แขก /xɛ̀ːk/ guest
[ç] before front vowels ᨤᩥ᩠ᨦ ฅิง /xīŋ/ you (familiar)
/s/ [s] onset ᨪᩣ᩠ᩅ ซาว /sāːw/ twenty
[ɕ] under emphasis ᩈᩣᨴᩩ สาทุ /sǎː.túʔ/ surely
/h/ [h] non-intervocalic ᩉ᩶ᩣ ห้า /ha᷇ː/ five
[ɦ] intervocalic ᨹᩲᨾᩣᩉᩣ ใผมาหา /pʰǎj māː hǎː/ who come find (Who is here to see you?)
/nɯ̂ŋ/ [m̩] after bilabial stop ᨤᩨ᩠ᨷᨶᩧ᩠᩵ᨦ ฅืบนึ่ง /xɯ̂ːp nɯ̂ŋ/ span one (one more span)
[n̩] after alveolar stop ᨳᩯ᩠ᨾᨡ᩠ᩅᨯᨶᩧ᩠᩵ᨦ แถมขวดนึ่ง /tʰɛ̌ːm xùat nɯ̂ŋ/ more bottle one (one more bottle)
[ŋ̩] after velar stop ᨳᩯ᩠ᨾᨯᩬᨠᨶᩧ᩠᩵ᨦ แถมดอกนึ่ง /tʰɛ̌ːm dɔ̀ːk nɯ̂ŋ/ more flower one (one more flower)

Tones

The six phonemic tones in Northern Thai pronounced with the syllable '/law/':

There are six phonemic tones in the Chiang Mai dialect of Northern Thai: low-rising, low-falling, high-level with glottal closure, mid-level, high-falling, and high-rising. or low-rising, mid-low, high-falling, mid-high, falling, and high rising-falling


Contrastive tones in smooth syllables

The table below presents six phonemic tones in the Chiang Mai and Nan dialects in smooth syllables, i.e. closed syllables ending in sonorant sounds such as [m], [n], [ŋ], [w], and [j] and open syllables. Sources have not agreed on the phonetic realization of the six tones in the Chiang Mai dialect. The table presents information based on two sources, one from Gedney (1999) and the other one from the Lanna dictionary (2007) which is a Northern Thai-Thai dictionary. Although published in 1999, Gedney's information about the Chiang Mai dialect is based on data he collected from one speaker in Chiang Mai in 1964 (p. 725). As tones may change within one's lifetime (e.g., Bangkok Thai tones have changed over the past 100 years), the information about the six tones from Gedney (1999) should be considered with caution.

The six tones in the Chiang Mai and Nan dialects
Chiang Mai
(the Lanna dictionary, 2007, p. ต)
Chiang Mai
(Gedney, 1999, p. 725)
Standard Thai tone Equated to Example based on the Chiang Mai tones described in the Lanna Dictionary (2007)
Name Tone letters Name Tone letters Tone letters Phonemic Phonetic Northern Thai script Thai script Gloss
low-rising (A1-2) 24 or ˨˦ low-rising (A1-2) 14 or ˩˦ 23 or ˨˧ rising /lǎw/ [läu̯˨˦] ᩉᩮᩖᩢᩣ เหลา sharpen
low-falling (B1-3) 21 or ˨˩ mid-low (B1-3) 22 or ˨˨ 22 or ˨˨ low /làw/ [läu̯˨˨] ᩉᩮᩖᩢ᩵ᩣ เหล่า forest; group
high-level with glottal closure (which falls slightly at the end) (C1-3) 44ʔ or ˦˦ʔ high-falling, glottalized (C1-3) 53ʔ or ˥˧ʔ 44ʔ or ˦˦ʔ (none) /la᷇w/ [läu̯˦˦ʔ] ᩉᩮᩖᩢ᩶ᩣ เหล้า liquor, alcoholic drink
mid-level (A3-4) 33 or ˧˧ mid-high (A3-4) (which sometimes rises at the end) 44 or ˦˦ 35 or ˧˥ mid /lāw/ [l̪äu̯˧˧] ᩃᩮᩢᩣ เลา beautiful, pretty; reed
high-falling (B4) 42 or ˦˨ falling (B4) 41 or ˦˩ 31 or ˧˩ falling /lâw/ [läu̯˦˨] ᩃᩮᩢ᩵ᩣ เล่า tell (a story)
high-rising (C4) 45 or ˦˥ high rising-falling, glottalized (C4) 454ʔ or ˦˥˦ʔ 41ʔ or ˦˩ʔ high /l̪áw/ [läu̯˦˥] ᩃᩮᩢ᩶ᩣ เล้า coop, pen (for chickens or pigs)

The Gedney boxes for the tones are shown below the descriptions.

Contrastive tones in checked syllables

The table below presents four phonemic tones in checked syllables, i.e. closed syllables ending in a glottal stop [ʔ] and obstruent sounds such as [p], [t], and [k].

Tone Standard Thai Tone
Equated to
Example
(Northern Thai script)
Example
(Thai script)
Phonemic Phonetic gloss
low-rising (D1-3S) rising ᩉᩖᩢᨠ หลั๋ก /lǎk/ [läk̚˨˦] post
high-rising (D4S) high ᩃᩢ᩠ᨠ ลัก /la᷇k/ [läk̚˦˥] steal
low-falling (D1-3L) low ᩉᩖᩣ᩠ᨠ หลาก /làːk/ [läːk̚˨˩] differ from others
high-falling (D4L) falling ᩃᩣ᩠ᨠ ลาก /lâːk/ [läːk̚˦˨] drag

Grammar

The grammar of Northern Thai is similar to those of other Tai languages. The word order is subject–verb–object, although the subject is often omitted. Just as Standard Thai, Northern Thai pronouns are selected according to the gender and relative status of speaker and audience.

Adjectives and adverbs

There is no morphological distinction between adverbs and adjectives. Many words can be used in either function. They succeed the word which they modify, which may be a noun, verb, or another adjective or adverb.

Because adjectives can be used as complete predicates, many words used to indicate tense in verbs (see Verbs:Aspect below) may be used to describe adjectives.

Verbs

Verbs do not inflect. They do not change with person, tense, voice, mood, or number; nor are there any participles.

The passive voice is indicated by the insertion of ᨯᩰ᩠ᨶ / โดน (don, [dōːn]) before the verb. For example:

To convey the opposite sense, a sense of having an opportunity arrive, ᨯᩱ᩶ / ได้ (dai, [da᷇j], can) is used. For example:

Negation is indicated by placing บ่ (bor,[bɔ̀ː] or [bàʔ] not) before the verb.

Aspect is conveyed by aspect markers before or after the verb.

Aspect markers are not required.

Words that indicate obligation include at cha (ᩣ᩠ᨧᨧᩢ / อาจจะ), na cha (ᩉ᩠ᨶ᩶ᩣᨧᩢ / น่าจะ), khuan cha (ᨤ᩠ᩅᩁᨧᩢ / ควรจะ)[dubious ], and tong (ᨲ᩶ᩬᨦ / ต้อง).

Actions that wherein one is busily engaged can be indicated by มัวก่า (mua ka, [mūa̯.kàː]).

Words that express one's desire to do something can by indicated by khai (ใค่) and kan (กั๊น).

Phor tha wa (ᨹᩬᩴ᩵ᨵ᩵ᩤᩅ᩵ / ผ่อท่าว่า, [pʰɔ̀ː.tʰâː.wâː]) is used to give the impression or sensation of being something or having a particular quality.

Final particles

Northern Thai has a number of final particles, which have different functions.

Interrogative particles

Some of the most common interrogative particles are kor (ᨣᩴ᩵ / ก่อ, [kɔ̀ː]) and ka (ᨣᩤ / กา, /kāː/)

Imperative particles

Some imperative particles are ᩃᩯ᩵ (แล่), ᨧᩥ᩠᩵ᨾ (จิ่ม), and ᨴᩮᩬᩥᩡ (เตอะ).

lae (ᩃᩯ᩵ / แล่, [lɛ̂ː])

chim (ᨧᩥ᩠᩵ᨾ / จิ่ม, [t͡ɕìm])

hia (ᩉᩮ᩠ᨿ / เหีย, /hǐa/)

toe (ᨴᩮᩬᩥᩡ / เต๊อะ, /tɤ᷇ʔ/)

Polite particles

Polite particles include ᨣᩕᩢ᩠ᨷ (คับ) and ᨧᩮᩢ᩶ᩣ (เจ้า).

Nouns

Nouns are uninflected and have no gender; there are no articles.

Nouns are neither singular nor plural. Some specific nouns are reduplicated to form collectives: ᩃᩡᩋᩬ᩵ᩁ / ละอ่อน (la-orn, [la.ʔɔ̀ːn], child) is often repeated as ᩃᩡᩋᩬ᩵ᩁᪧ ละอ่อน ๆ (la-orn la-orn, [la.ʔɔ̀ːn la.ʔɔ̀ːn],) to refer to a group of children.

The word ᩉ᩠ᨾᩪ᩵ / หมู่(mu, [mùː]) may be used as a prefix of a noun or pronoun as a collective to pluralize or emphasise the following word. (ᩉ᩠ᨾᩪ᩵ᨹᩫ᩠ᨾ / หมู่ผม, mu phom, [mùː pʰǒm], we (exclusive), masculine; ᩉ᩠ᨾᩪ᩵ᩁᩮᩢᩣ / หมู่เฮา mu hao, [mùː hāw], emphasised we; ᩉ᩠ᨾᩪ᩵ᩉ᩠ᨾᩣ / หมู่หมา mu ma, [mùː mǎː], (the) dogs).

Plurals are expressed by adding classifiers, used as measure words (ลักษณนาม), in the form of noun-number-classifier ( ᨣᩕᩪᩉ᩶ᩣᨤᩫ᩠ᨶ / คูห้าคน, "teacher five person" for "five teachers").

Pronouns

Pronouns may be omitted once they have already been established in the first sentence, unless the pronoun in the following sentences is different from the first sentence. The pronoun "you" may also be omitted if the speaker is speaking directly to a second person. Moreover, names may replace pronouns, and they can even replace the first person singular pronoun.

Person Tai Tham script Thai script Transliteration Phonemic (IPA) Phonetic (IPA) Meaning
first ᨣᩪ กู kūu /kūː/ [kuː˧] I/me (impolite/vulgar)
ᩁᩣ ฮา hāa /hāː/ [häː˧] I/me (familiar; informal)
ᨡ᩶ᩣ ข้า kha᷇a /kʰa᷇ː/ [kʰäː˥˧] I/me (formal; used by male). Literally "servant, slave".
ᨹᩪ᩶ᨡ᩶ᩣ ผู้ข้า pʰu᷇u kha᷇a /pʰu᷇ː kʰa᷇ː/ [pʰuː˥˧.kʰäː˥˧] I/me (formal)
ᨡ᩶ᩣᨶᩬ᩠᩶ᨿ, ᨡ᩶ᩣᨶ᩶ᩭ ข้าน้อย kha᷇a nóoi /kʰa᷇ː.nɔ́ːj/ [kʰäː˥˧.nɔːi̯˦˥] I/me (formal; used by male; archaic)
ᨡ᩶ᩣᨧᩮᩢ᩶ᩣ ข้าเจ้า kha᷇a cha᷇o /kʰa᷇ː tɕa᷇w/ [kʰäː˥˧.t͡ɕäu̯˥˧] I/me (formal; used by female; historically also used by male)
ᨡ᩶ᩣᨻᩕᨧᩮᩢ᩶ᩣ ข้าผะเจ้า kha᷇a pʰà cha᷇o /kʰa᷇ː pʰa.tɕa᷇w/ [kʰäː˥˧.pʰä˨.t͡ɕäu̯˥˧] I/me (very formal)
ᩁᩮᩢᩣ เฮา hāo /hāw/ [häu̯˧] we/us
ᨲᩪ ตู๋ tǔu /tǔː/ [t̪uː˨˦] we/us (exclusive)
second ᨾᩧ᩠ᨦ มึง mūenɡ /mɯ̄ŋ/ [mɨŋ˧] you (impolite/vulgar)
ᨤᩥ᩠ᨦ ฅิง khīng /kʰīŋ/ [kʰiŋ˧] you (informal, singular)
ᨲᩫ᩠ᩅ ตั๋ว tǔa /tǔa/ [t̪uə̯˨˦] you (familiar, singular)
ᨧᩮᩢ᩶ᩣ เจ้า cha᷇o /tɕa᷇w/ [t͡ɕäu̯˥˧] you (formal, singular). Literally "master, lord"
ᩈᩪ สู sǔu /sǔː/ [suː˨˦] you (informal, plural or formal, singular)
ᩈᩪᨡᩮᩢᩣ สูเขา sǔu khǎo /sǔː kʰǎw/ [suː˨˦.kʰäu̯˨˦] you (informal, plural)
ᩈᩪᨧᩮᩢ᩶ᩣ สูเจ้า sǔu cha᷇o /sǔː tɕa᷇w/ [suː˨˦.t͡ɕäu̯˥˧] you (formal, plural)
third ᨾᩢ᩠ᨶ มัน mān /mān/ [män˧] it, he/she (offensive if used to refer to a person)
ᨡᩮᩢᩣ เขา khǎo /kʰǎw/ [kʰäu̯˨˦] they/them
ᨻᩮᩥ᩠᩵ᨶ เปิ้น pôen /pɤ̂n/ [pən˥˩] he/she (general), others
ᨴ᩵ᩤ᩠ᨶ ต้าน tâan /tâːn/ [t̪äːn˥˩] he/she (formal), you (formal), others
reflexive ᨲᩫ᩠ᩅᨠᩮᩢ᩵ᩣ ตั๋วเก่า tǔa kàw /tǔa kàw/ [t̪uə̯˨˦.käu̯˨˩] oneself

Vocabulary

Northern Thai shares much vocabulary with Standard Thai, especially scientific terms, which draw many prefixes and suffixes from Sanskrit and Pali, and it also has its own distinctive words. Just like Thai and Lao, Northern Thai has borrowed many loanwords from Khmer, Sanskrit, and Pali.

word gloss origin
[kʰɔ̌ːŋ kǐn]
ᨡᩬᨦᨠᩥ᩠ᨶ
ของกิ๋น
food native Tai word
[ʔāː hǎːn]
ᩋᩣᩉᩣ᩠ᩁ
อาหาร
food Pali and/or Sanskrit
[kàm nɤ̀ːt]
ᨠ᩵ᩣᩴᨶᩮᩥ᩠ᨭ
ก่ำเนิด (กำเนิด)[dubious ]
birth Khmer

Writing system

Northern Thai Language 
Northern Thai in its own alphabet, the Tai Tham alphabet

Currently, different scripts are used to write Northern Thai. Northern Thai is traditionally written with the Tai Tham script, which in Northern Thai is called tua mueang (ᨲᩫ᩠ᩅᨾᩮᩬᩥᨦ ตั๋วเมือง /tǔa.mɯ̄aŋ/) or tua tham (ᨲᩫ᩠ᩅᨵᩢᨾ᩠ᨾ᩺ ตั๋วธัมม์ /tǔa.tʰām/). However, native speakers are presently illiterate in the traditional script; therefore, they instead use the Thai script to write the language. In Laos, the Lao script is commonly used to write Northern Thai.

Northern Thai Language 
A sign written in Northern Thai, Thai, and English

Some problems arise when the Thai script is used to write Northern Thai. In particular, Standard Thai script cannot transcribe all Northern Thai tones. The two falling tones in Northern Thai correspond to a single falling tone in Thai. Specifically, Northern Thai has two types of falling tones: high-mid falling tone (˥˧) and high-falling tone (˥˩). However, Thai lacks the distinction between the two falling tones, not having a high-falling tone (˥˧). When using Thai script to write Northern Thai tones, the distinction of the two falling tones is lost because Thai script can only indicate a low falling tone (˥˩). As an example, the tonal distinction between /ka᷇ː/ (ก้า (ᨠᩖ᩶ᩣ กล้า) "to be brave") and /kâː/ (ก้า (ᨣ᩵ᩤ ค่า) "value") is lost when written in Thai since as only /kâː/ (ก้า) is permitted. Consequently, the meaning of ก้า is ambiguous as it can mean both "to be brave" and "value". Similarly, /pa᷇ːj/ (ป้าย (ᨸ᩶ᩣ᩠ᨿ ป้าย) "sign") and /pâːj/ (ป้าย (ᨻ᩵ᩣ᩠ᨿ พ่าย) "to lose") have the same problem and only /pâːj/ (ป้าย) is permitted. As a result, the spelling ป้าย is ambiguous because it can mean both "sign" or "to lose". Such tonal mergence ambiguity is avoided when the language is written with the Northern Thai script.

Northern Thai and Standard Thai

The tables below present the differences between Northern Thai and Standard Thai.

Different sounds

Unlike Northern Thai, Standard Thai lacks alveolo-palatal nasal sound (/ɲ/). Thus, the alveolo-palatal nasal sound (/ɲ/) and the palatal approximant sound (/j/) in Northern Thai both correspond to the palatal approximant sound in Standard Thai:

Standard Thai Northern Thai gloss note
[jâːk]
ยาก
[ɲâːk]
ᨿᩣ᩠ᨠ
difficult cf. Lao: ຍາກ [ɲâːk]
[jūŋ]
ยุง
[ɲūŋ]
ᨿᩩᨦ
mosquito cf. Lao: ຍຸງ [ɲúŋ]
[jāːw]
ยาว
[ɲāːw]
ᨿᩣ᩠ᩅ
long cf. Lao: ຍາວ [ɲáːw]
[jāː]
ยา
[jāː]
ᩀᩣ
medicine cf. Lao: ຢາ [jàː]
[jàːk]
อยาก
[jàːk]
ᩀᩣ᩠ᨠ
desire cf. Lao: ຢາກ [jȁːk]
[jàːŋ]
อย่าง
[jàːŋ]
ᩀ᩵ᩣ᩠ᨦ
manner, way cf. Lao: ຢ່າງ [jāːŋ]

Unlike Northern Thai, Standard Thai lacks a high-mid-falling tone ([˥˧]). The high-mid falling tone ([˥˧]) and high-falling tone ([˥˩]) in Northern Thai both correspond to the high-falling tone in Standard Thai ([˥˩]).

Standard Thai Northern Thai gloss
[bâːn]
บ้าน
[ba᷇ːn]
ᨷ᩶ᩤ᩠ᨶ
village, home
[hâː]
ห้า
[ha᷇ː]
ᩉ᩶ᩣ
five
[t͡ɕâw]
เจ้า
[t͡ɕa᷇w]
ᨧᩮᩢ᩶ᩣ
master, lord, you
[lâw]
เหล้า
[la᷇w]
ᩉᩖᩮᩢ᩶ᩣ
alcohol
[lâw]
เล่า
[lâw]
ᩃᩮᩢ᩵ᩣ
tell (a story)

Different words

Many words differ from Standard Thai greatly:

Standard Thai Northern Thai gloss note
[jîː.sìp]
ยี่สิบ
[sāːw]
ᨪᩣ᩠ᩅ
ซาว
twenty cf. Lao: ຊາວ [sáːw] "twenty"
and Shan: သၢဝ်း [sáːw] "twenty"
[pʰûːt]
พูด
[ʔu᷇ː]
ᩋᩪ᩶
อู้
speak
[pʰîː.t͡ɕʰāːj]
พี่ชาย
[ʔa᷇ːj]
ᩋ᩶ᩣ᩠ᨿ
อ้าย
older brother cf. Lao: ອ້າຍ [ʔâːj] "older brother"
and Shan: ဢၢႆႈ [ʔāːj] "eldest brother, first born son"
[tʰáːj.tʰɔ̄ːj]
ท้ายทอย
[ŋɔ̂n]
ᨦᩬ᩵ᩁ
ง่อน
nape cf. Lao: ງ່ອນ [ŋɔ̄n] "nape"
[t͡ɕa.mùːk]
จมูก
[dāŋ]
ᨯᩢ᩠ᨦ
ดัง
nose cf. Lao: ດັງ [dàŋ] "nose",
Standard Thai: ดั้ง [dâŋ] "nasal bridge".
[tʰām]
ทำ
[ɲa᷇ʔ]
ᨿᩡ/ᨿᩮ᩠ᨿᩡ
ยะ/เยียะ
do
[dūː]
ดู
[pʰɔ̀ː]
ᨹᩬᩴ᩵
ผ่อ
look cf. Lao: ຜໍ່ [pʰɔ̀ː] "to see, to look"
and Tai Lü: ᦕᦸᧈ [pʰɔ̀ː] "to see, to look"
[tʰîaw]
เที่ยว
[ʔɛ̀w]
ᩋᩯ᩠ᩅ᩵
แอ่ว
visit, travel cf. Tai Lü: ᦶᦀᧁᧈ [ʔɛ᷄w] "to visit, to travel"
[nɯ́a]
เนื้อ
[t͡ɕín]
ᨩᩥ᩠᩶ᨶ
จิ๊น
meat cf. Lao: ຊີ້ນ [sîːn] "meat"
[mâj]
ไม่
[bɔ̀ː]
ᨷᩴ᩵
บ่อ
no cf. Lao: ບໍ່ [bɔ̄ː] "no, not"
[t͡ɕʰɔ̂ːp]
ชอบ
[ma᷇k]
ᨾᩢ᩠ᨠ
มัก
like cf. Lao: ມັກ [māk] "to like"
[mâːk]
มาก
[na᷇k]
ᨶᩢ᩠ᨠ
นัก
much, many
[dɤ̄ːn]
เดิน
[tīaw]
ᨴ᩠ᨿᩅ
เตียว
walk cf. Tai Lü: ᦵᦑᧁ [têw] "to walk"
[wîŋ]
วิ่ง
[lôn]
ᩃᩫ᩠᩵ᨶ
ล่น
run
[hǔa.rɔ́ʔ]
หัวเราะ
[kʰâj.hǔa]

ᨣᩕᩲ᩵ᩉ᩠ᩅᩫ
ใค่หัว

laugh cf. Tai Lü: ᦺᦆᧈᦷᦠ [xāj.hó] "to laugh"
[sa.nùk]
สนุก
[mûan]

ᨾ᩠ᩅ᩵ᩁ
ม่วน

funny, amusing cf. Lao: ມ່ວນ [mūan] "fun, amusing, pleasant",
Tai Lü: ᦷᦙᦓᧈ [mōn] "fun, amusing, pleasant",
and Shan: မူၼ်ႈ [mōn] "fun, amusing, pleasant"
[kōː.hòk]
โกหก
[t͡ɕúʔ]

ᨧᩩ
จุ๋

lie cf. Tai Lü: ᦈᦳ [t͡su᷄ʔ] "to lie, to deceive"
[ʔa.rāj]
อะไร
[ʔa.ɲǎŋ]
ᩋᩉ᩠ᨿᩢᨦ
อะหยัง
what cf. Lao: ອີ່ຫຍັງ [ʔī.ɲǎŋ] "what"
[dèk]
เด็ก
[la.ʔɔ̀n]
ᩃᩋᩬ᩵ᩁ
ละอ่อน
child cf. Tai Lü: ᦟᦳᧅᦀᦸᧃᧈ [lūk.ʔɔ᷄n] "child, young offspring"
[pʰráʔ]
พระ
[tu᷇.t͡ɕa᷇w]
ᨴᩩᨧᩮᩢ᩶ᩣ
ตุ๊เจ้า
Buddhist monk cf. Tai Lü: ᦑᦳᦈᧁᧉ [tūʔ.tsa᷅w] "Buddhist monk"

Similar words

There is not a straightforward correspondence between the tones of Northern and Standard Thai. It also depends on the initial consonant, as can be seen from the merged Gedney tone boxes for Standard Thai and the accent of Chiang Mai:

Ancestral tone: A (smooth, no tone mark) B (mai ek) DL (checked, long vowel) DS (dead, short vowel) C (mai tho)
Initial Consonant Std Thai CM NT gloss Std Thai CM NT gloss Std Thai CM NT gloss Std Thai CM NT gloss Std Thai CM NT gloss
1. High rising low-rising ear low mid-low four low low to hit low low-rising to dig falling high-falling old
/hǔː/
หู
/hǔː/
ᩉᩪ
หู
/sìː/
สี่
/sìː/
ᩈᩦ᩵
สี่
/tʰùːk/
ถูก
/tʰùːk/
ᨳᩪᨠ
ถูก
/kʰùt/
ขุด
/kʰǔt/
ᨡᩩᨯ
ขุ๋ด
/tʰâw/
เฒ่า
/tʰa᷇w/
ᨳᩮᩢ᩶ᩣ
เฒ่า
2. CM High but Std Mid (= Std Thai ก ต ป) mid low-rising eye low mid-low turtle low low mouth low low-rising to fall falling high-falling aunt
/tāː/
ตา
/tǎː/
ᨲᩣ
ต๋า
/tàw/
เต่า
/tàw/
ᨲᩮᩢ᩵ᩣ
เต่า
/pàːk/
ปาก
/pàːk/
ᨯᩬᨠ
ปาก
/tòk/
ตก
/tǒk/
ᨲᩫ᩠ᨠ
ต๋ก
/pâː/
ป้า
/pa᷇ː/
ᨸ᩶ᩣ
ป้า
3. Mid for Both (= Std Thai ด บ อ อย) mid mid-high good low mid-low to scold low low flower low low-rising to bend falling high-falling mad
/dīː/
ดี
/dīː/
ᨯᩦ
ดี
/dàː/
ด่า
/dà:/
ᨯ᩵ᩣ
ด่า
/dɔ̀ːk/
ดอก
/dɔ̀ːk/
ᨯᩬᨠ
ดอก
/dàt/
ดัด
/dǎt/
ᨯᩢ᩠ᨯ
ดั่ด
/bâː/
บ้า
/ba᷇ː/
ᨷ᩶ᩤ
บ้า
4. Low mid mid-high fly falling falling mother falling falling knife high high-falling bird high high rising-falling horse
/bīn/
บิน
/bīn/
ᨷᩥ᩠ᨶ
บิน
/mɛ̂ː/
แม่
/mɛ̂ː/
ᨾᩯ᩵
แม่
/mîːt/
มีด
/mîːt/
ᨾᩦ᩠ᨯ
มีด
/nók/
นก
/no᷇k/
ᨶᩫ᩠ᨠ
นก
/máː/
ม้า
/máː/
ᨾ᩶ᩣ
ม้า

Note that the commonalities between columns are features of the Chiang Mai accent. On the other hand, the relationships between rows are typical of Northern Thai, being found for at least for Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Phayao, Nan and Prae, and extending at least to Tak and the old 6-tone accent of Tai Khuen, except that the checked syllables of Chiang Rai are more complicated.

The primary function of a tone box is etymological. However, it also serves as a summary of the rules for tone indication when the writing system is essentially etymological in that regard, as is the case with the major Tai-language writing systems using the Thai, Lanna, New Tai Lue, Lao and Tai Dam scripts.

Some words differ only as a result of the regular tone correspondences:

Standard Thai Northern Thai gloss
[hòk]
หก
[hǒk]
ᩉᩫ᩠ᨠ
ห๋ก
six
[t͡ɕèt]
เจ็ด
[t͡ɕět]
ᨧᩮᩢ᩠ᨯ
เจ๋ด
seven
[sìp]
สิบ
[sǐp]
ᩈᩥ᩠ᨷ
สิ๋บ
ten
[pēn]
เป็น
[pěn]
ᨸᩮ᩠ᨶ
เป๋น
be (copula)
[kīn]
กิน
[kǐn]
ᨠᩥ᩠ᨶ
กิ๋น
eat

Other tone differences are unpredictable, such as:

Standard Thai Northern Thai gloss
[nɯ̀ŋ]
หนึ่ง
[nɯ̂ŋ]
ᨶᩧ᩠᩵ᨦ
นึ่ง
one

Some words differ in a single sound and associated tone. In many words, the initial ร (/r/) in Standard Thai corresponds to ฮ (/h/) in Northern Thai:

Standard Thai Northern Thai gloss note
[rɔ́ːn]
ร้อน
[hɔ́ːn]
ᩁᩬ᩶ᩁ
ฮ้อน
hot cf. Lao: ຮ້ອນ [hɔ̂ːn] "to be hot" and Shan: ႁွၼ်ႉ [hɔ̰n] "to be hot"
[rák]
รัก
[ha᷇k]
ᩁᩢ᩠ᨠ
ฮัก
love cf. Lao: ຮັກ [hāk] "to love" and Shan: ႁၵ်ႉ [ha̰k] "to love"
[rúː]
รู้
[húː]
ᩁᩪ᩶
ฮู้
know cf. Lao: ຮູ້ [hûː] "know" and Shan: ႁူ [hṵ] "know"

Aspiration of initial consonants

Some aspirated consonants in the low-class consonant group (อักษรต่ำ /ʔàk.sɔ̌ːn.tàm/) in Standard Thai correspond to unaspirated sounds in Northern Thai. These sounds include ค, ช, ท, and พ (/kʰ/, /tɕʰ/, /tʰ/, and /pʰ/ respectively), but sounds such as ฅ, คร, ฆ, ฒ, พร, ภ (/kʰ/, /kʰr/, /kʰ/, /tʰ/, /pʰr/, and /pʰ/ respectively) remain aspirated. Such aspirated consonants that are unaspirated in Northern Thai correspond to unaspirated voiced sounds in Proto-Tai which are *ɡ, *ɟ, *d, and *b (ค, ช, ท, and พ respectively).:

Standard Thai Northern Thai gloss note
[t͡ɕʰiaŋ rāːj]
เชียงราย
[t͡ɕiaŋ hāːj]
ᨩ᩠ᨿᨦᩁᩣ᩠ᨿ
เจียงฮาย
Chiang Rai city and province cf. Tai Lü: ᦵᦈᧂᦣᦻ [tsêŋ hâːj] "Chiang Rai"
[kʰít]
คิด
[kɯ́t]
ᨣᩧ᩠ᨯ
กึ๊ด
think cf. Tai Lü: ᦅᦹᧆ [kɯ̄t] "to think"
[t͡ɕʰɔ́ːn]
ช้อน
[t͡ɕɔ́ːn]
ᨩᩬ᩶ᩁ
จ๊อน
spoon cf. Tai Lü: ᦋᦸᧃᧉ [tsɔ̀n] "spoon"
[t͡ɕʰáj]
ใช้
[t͡ɕáj]
ᨩᩲ᩶
ใจ๊
use cf. Shan: ၸႂ်ႉ [tsa̰ɰ] "to use", Tai Lü: ᦺᦋᧉ [tsàj] "to use"
[pʰɔ̂ː]
พ่อ
[pɔ̂ː]
ᨻᩬᩴ᩵
ป้อ
father cf. Shan: ပေႃႈ [pɔ̄] "father", Tai Lü: ᦗᦸᧈ [pɔ̄] "father"
[tʰāːŋ]
ทาง
[tāːŋ]
ᨴᩤ᩠ᨦ
ตาง
way cf. Shan: တၢင်း [táːŋ] "way", Tai Lü: ᦑᦱᧂ [tâːŋ] "way"

But not:

Standard Thai Northern Thai gloss note
[kʰôːt sa.nāː]
โฆษณา
[kʰôːt sa.nāː]
ᨥᩰᩇᨱᩣ
โฆษณา
commercial, advertisement cf. Tai Lü: ᦷᦆᦉᦓᦱ [xôː.sa.nâː] "advertisement"
[pʰāː sǎː]
ภาษา
[pʰāː.sǎː]
ᨽᩣᩈᩣ
ภาษา
language cf. Tai Lü: ᦘᦱᦉᦱ [pʰâː.sáː] "nationality"
[wát.tʰa.náʔ.tʰām]
วัฒนธรรม
[wa᷇t.tʰa.na᷇ʔ.tʰām]
ᩅᨯ᩠ᨰᨶᨵᨾ᩠ᨾ᩺
วัฒนธัมม์
culture cf. Tai Lü: ᦞᧆᦒᦓᦱᦒᧄ [wāt.tʰa.na.tʰâm] "culture"
[tʰām]
ธรรม
[tʰām]
ᨵᨾ᩠ᨾ᩺
ธัมม์
Dharma cf. Tai Lü: ᦒᧄ [tʰâm] "Dharma"

Though a number of aspirated consonants in Standard Thai often correspond to unaspirated sounds in Northern Thai, when an unaspirated consonant is followed by ร (/r/) the unaspirated consonant becomes aspirated:

Standard Thai Northern Thai gloss note
[pra.tʰêːt]
ประเทศ
[pʰa.têːt]
ᨷᩕᨴᩮ᩠ᩆ
ผะเต้ด
country cf. Tai Lü: ᦕᦵᦑᧆ [pʰa.te᷄ːt] "country"
[kràːp]
กราบ
[kʰàːp]
ᨠᩕᩣ᩠ᨷ
ขาบ
kowtow, prostrate cf. Tai Lü: ᦃᦱᧇ [xa᷄ːp] "to prostrate oneself"
[prāː sàːt]
ปราสาท
[pʰǎː sàːt]
ᨷᩕᩤᩈᩣ᩠ᨴ
ผาสาท
palace cf. Tai Lü: ᦕᦱᦉᦱᧆ [pʰáː sa᷄ːt] "palace"

Notes

References

Further reading

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Tags:

Northern Thai Language ClassificationNorthern Thai Language NamesNorthern Thai Language HistoryNorthern Thai Language DialectsNorthern Thai Language PhonologyNorthern Thai Language GrammarNorthern Thai Language VocabularyNorthern Thai Language Writing systemNorthern Thai Language Northern Thai and Standard ThaiNorthern Thai Language Further readingNorthern Thai LanguageFile:Nod-kammueang.oggLannaLaosNorthern Thai peopleNorthern ThailandSouthwestern Tai languagesTai Lue languageThai languageThailand

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