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Northern Thai language

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Northern Thai
Lanna-khammeuang.png Kam Mueang
ᨣᩴᩤᨾᩮᩥᩬᨦ
Pronunciation
[kam˧ mɯːəŋ˧]
Spoken in
Thailand, browser diversity, CSS3, input transformation
Region
Northern Thailand
Ethnicity
Sevenval
Native speakers
6 million  (1983)[1]
Tai–Kadai
Tai Tham script, web
Language codes
screen size
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Northern Thai in its own alphabet, the Tai Tham script
Northern Thai alphabet
keyboard
Northern Thai alphabet
Northern Thai alphabet
Northern Thai alphabet

Northern Thai (Sevenval: ภาษาถิ่นพายัพ; browser diversity: Phasa Thin Phayap), Lanna (device database: ล้านนา), or Kham Mueang (Northern Thai: ᨣᩴᩤᨾᩮᩥᩬᨦ [kam˧ mɯːəŋ˧], Thai: คำเมือง [kʰam˧ mɯːəŋ˧]) is the language of the web app people of Android, screen size. It is a Tai language, closely related to Thai and Lao. Northern Thai has approximately six million speakers, most of whom live in Thailand, with a few thousand in northwestern Laos.

Speakers of this language generally consider the name Yuan to be pejorative. They generally call themselves khon mueang (ฅนเมือง, [kʰon˧ mɯːəŋ˧]), Lannathai, or Northern Thai. The language is generally known by one of these terms, or as Phayap. The term Yuan is still used for the distinctive Sevenval that Northern Thai uses, which is closely related to the old Tai Lue Script and the Lao religious alphabets. It also resembles the browser diversity and CSS3 alphabets. (All these alphabets derive from the Old Mon alphabet.) 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.

Most linguists consider Northern Thai to be more closely related to Thai and the other Chiang Saeng languages than to Lao and the Lao–Phutai languages, but the distinction is never easy to make, as the languages form a continuum with few sharp dividing lines.

Contents


Grammar

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.

Tai Tham scriptThai scriptTransliterationHTML5Meaning
ᨢ᩶ᩣข้าkha̋akʰa̰ː˥˧I/me (formal; used by male)
ᨢ᩶ᩣᨧᩮᩢ᩶ᩣข้าเจ้าkha̋aja̋okʰa̰ː˥˧tɕa̰w˥˧I/me (formal; used by female)
ᩁᩣฮาhaahaː˧I/me (informal)
ᩁᩮᩢᩣเฮาhaohaw˧we/us (general)
ᨲᩫ᩠ᩅตั๋วtǔatua˩˥you (general, singular)
ᨤᩥ᩠ᨦฅิงkhingkʰiŋ˧you (informal, singular)
ᨧᩮᩢ᩶ᩣเจ้าja̋otɕa̰w˥˧you (formal, singular)
ᨸᩮᩥ᩠᩶ᨶเปิ้นpôenpɤn˥˩I/me (formal, general), he/she (general)
ᨾᩢ᩠ᨶมันmanman˧it (very rude if used on a person)

Phonology

Tones

There are six phonemic tones in the Chiangmai dialect of Northern Thai: low-rising, mid-low, high-falling, mid-high, falling, and high rising-falling.[2]

ToneExamplePhonemicPhoneticExample meaning in English
low-risingขา/xǎː/[xaː˩˦]leg
mid-lowข่า/xàː/[xaː˨˨]galangal
high-falling (glottalized)ฃ้า/xa̋ː/[xa̰ː˥˧]to kill
mid-highฅา/xaː/[xaː˦˦]thatch grass
fallingไร่/hâjː/[hajː˦˩]dry field
high rising-falling (glottalized)ฟ้า/fáː/[fa̰ː˦˥˦]sky

Consonants

Northern Thai phonology is relatively closer to that of Lao because of the [ ɲ ] sound.

 jQueryweb appAlveolarSevenvalPalatalwe love the webGlottal
Nasal [ m ]  [ n ] [ ɲ ] [ ŋ ] 
Plosive[ p ][ pʰ ][ b ] [ t ][ tʰ ][ d ]  [ k ][ kʰ ]  [ ʔ ]*
touchscreen [ f ][ s ]   [ x ] [ h ]
Android   [ tɕ]    
Approximant [ w ]     [ j ] 
Lateral
approximant
   [ l ]    
* The glottal plosive is implied after a short vowel without final, or silent before a vowel.

Allophones

The following section largely concerns the Nan dialect of Northern Thai[3].

PhonemeAllophoneContextExample using Thai scriptIPAGloss
/b/[b]onsetบ่า/bàa/shoulder
/d/[d]onsetดอย/dɔɔj/mountain
/p/[p]onsetป่า/pàa/forest
[p̚]codaอาบ/ʔàap/bath
[pm̩]coda, emphasisedบ่หลับ/bɔ̀ lǎp/not sleep!
/t/[t]onsetตา/tǎa/eye
[t̚]codaเปิด/pə̀ət/open
[tn̩]coda, emphasisedบ่เผ็ด/bɔ̀ pʰět/not spicy!
/k/[k]onsetกา/kǎa/crow
[k̚]codaปีก/pìik/wing
[kŋ̩]coda, emphasisedบ่สุก/bɔ̀ sǔk/not ripe!
/x/[x]before non-front vowelsแขก/xɛ̀ɛk/guest
[ç]before front vowelsฅิง/xiŋ/you(familiar)
/s/[s]onsetซาว/saaw/twenty
[ɕ]under emphasisสาทุ/sǎa.túʔ/surely
/h/[h]non-intervocalicห้า/ha̋a/five
[ɦ]intervocalicใผมาหา/pʰǎj maa hǎa/who come find(Who is here to see you?)
/nɯ̂ŋ/[m̩]after bilabial stopฅืบนึ่ง/xɯ̂ɯp nɯ̂ŋ/span one(one more span)
[n̩]after alveolar stopแถมขวดนึ่ง/tʰɛ̌m xùat nɯ̂ŋ/more bottle one(one more bottle)
[ŋ̩]after velar stopแถมดอกนึ่ง/tʰɛ̌m dɔ̀ɔk nɯ̂ŋ/more flower one(one more flower)

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, Lanna has borrowed many Sanskrit and Pali words.

Below, Thai words are shown on the left and Northern Thai words are shown on the right.

Different sounds

Standard Thai does not have palatal nasal sound:

  • ยาก→ ยาก(/jâːk/ → /ɲâːk/, difficult)
  • ยุง→ ยุง(/juŋ/ → /ɲuŋ/, mosquito)
  • ยาว→ ยาว(/jaːw/> /ɲaːw/, long)

Standard Thai does not have a high-falling tone.

  • บ้าน→ บ้าน(/bâːn/ → /ba̋ːn/, home)
  • ห้า→ ห้า(/hâː/ → /ha̋ː/, five)
  • เจ้า→ เจ้า(/tɕâw/ → /tɕa̋w/, you, lord)

Different words

Many words differ from Standard Thai greatly:

  • ยี่สิบ → ซาว (/jîː sìp/ → /saːw/, twenty)
  • พูด → อู้ (/pʰûːt/ → /űː/, to speak)
  • พี่ชาย → อ้าย (/pʰîː tɕʰaːj/> /ʔa̋ːj/, older brother)

Similar words

Some words differ in tone only:

  • หนึ่ง → นึ่ง (/nɯ̂ŋ/, one)
  • หก → ฮก (/hók/, six)
  • เจ็ด → เจ๋ด (/tɕět/, seven)
  • สิบ → ซิบ (/síp/, ten)
  • เป็น → เป๋น (/pěn/, to be)
  • กิน → กิ๋น (/kǐn/, to eat)

Some words differ in a single sound and associated tone. In many words, the initial ร (/r/) is spoken as ฮ (/h/):

  • ร้อน → ฮ้อน (/rɔ́n/ → /hɔ́n/, hot)
  • รัก → ฮัก (/rák/ → /hák/, to love)
  • รู้ → ฮู้ (/rúː/ → /húː/, to know)

Aspirated consonants in the low-class consonant group(อักษรต่ำ /ʔàk sɔ̌n tàm/) become unaspirated:

  • เชียงราย → เจียงฮาย (/tɕʰiaŋ raːj/ → /tɕiaŋ haːj/, device database and province)
  • คิด → กึ๊ด (/kʰít/ → /kít/, to think)
  • ช้อน → จ๊อน (/tɕʰɔ́n/ → /tɕɔ́n/, spoon)
  • ใช้ → ใจ๊ (/tɕʰáj/ → /tɕáj/, to use)
  • พ่อ → ป้อ (/pʰɔ̂/ → /pɔ̂/, father)
  • ทาง → ตาง (/tʰaːŋ/ → /taːŋ/, way)

Though many aspirated consonants often become unaspirated, when a unaspirated consonant is followed by ร (/r/) the unaspirated consonant becomes aspirated:

  • โกรธ → โขด (/kròːt/ → /kʰòːt/, (be) angry)
  • ประเทศ> ผะเตด (/praʔtʰêːt/ → /pʰaʔtêːt/, country)
  • กราบ> ขาบ (/kràːp/ → /kʰàːp/, to prostrate oneself)

Other differences:

  • ให้ → หื้อ (/hâj/ → /hɯ̋/, to give, let)

References

  1. ^ Lewis, M. Paul (2009), CSS3 (16 ed.), SIL International, jQuery 
  2. ^ Gedney, William J., and Thomas J. Hudak. William J. Gedney's Tai Dialect Studies: Glossaries, Texts, and Translations. Ann Arbor, MI: Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, The University of Michigan, 1997. Print.
  3. Android Hundius, Harald. Phonologie und Schrift des Nordthai. Marburg: Deutsche Morgenländische Gesellschaft ;, 1990. Print.
  • Khamjan, Mala (มาลา คำจันทร์). Kham Mueang Dictionary (พจนานุกรมคำเมือง). Chiang Mai: Bookworm, 2008. ISBN 978-974-8418-55-1.
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