fbpx
Wikipedia

Tai Lue language

Tai Lue (New Tai Lü: ᦅᧄᦺᦑᦟᦹᧉ, Tai Tham: ᨣᩴᩣᨴᩱ᩠ᨿᩃᩨ᩶, kam tai lue, [kâm.tâj.lɯ̀])[a] or Xishuangbanna Dai is a Tai language of the Lu people, spoken by about 700,000 people in Southeast Asia. This includes 280,000 people in China (Yunnan), 200,000 in Burma, 134,000 in Laos, 83,000 in Thailand and 4,960 in Vietnam.[2] The language is similar to other Tai languages and is closely related to Kham Mueang or Tai Yuan, which is also known as Northern Thai language. In Yunnan, it is spoken in all of Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture, as well as Jiangcheng Hani and Yi Autonomous County in Pu'er City.

Tai Lue
ᦅᧄᦺᦑᦟᦹᧉ, ᨣᩴᩣᨴᩱᩭᩃᩧ᩶
kam tai lue
Pronunciation[kâm.tâj.lɯ̀]
Native toChina, Laos, Thailand, Myanmar, Vietnam
RegionYunnan, China
EthnicityTai Lue
Native speakers
550,000 (2000–2013)[1]
Kra–Dai
Tai Tham alphabet, Thai alphabet, New Tai Lue alphabet
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-3khb
Glottologluuu1242

In Vietnam, Tai Lue speakers are officially recognised as the Lự ethnic minority, although in China they are classified as part of the Dai people, along with speakers of the other Tai languages apart from Zhuang.

Phonology edit

Tai Lue has 21 syllable-initial consonants, 9 syllable-finals and six tones (three different tones in checked syllables, six in open syllables).

Consonants edit

Initials edit

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
plain labial
Nasal [m]
ᦖ,ᦙ
[n]
ᦐ,ᦓ
[ŋ]
ᦄ,ᦇ
Plosive tenuis [p]
ᦔ,ᦗ
[t]
ᦎ,ᦑ
[k]
ᦂ,ᦅ
[]
ᦦ,ᦨ
[ʔ]
ᦀ,ᦁ
aspirated []
ᦕ,ᦘ
[]
ᦏ,ᦒ
voiced [b]
ᦢ,ᦥ
[d]
ᦡ,ᦤ
Affricate [t͡s]
ᦈ,ᦋ
Fricative voiceless [f]
ᦚ,ᦝ
[s]
ᦉ,ᦌ
[x]
ᦃ,ᦆ
[]
ᦧ,ᦩ
[h]
ᦠ,ᦣ
voiced [v]
ᦛ,ᦞ
Approximant [l]
ᦜ,ᦟ
[j]
ᦊ,ᦍ

The initials t͡s- and s- are palatalized before front vowels (which in the language are i, e, and ɛ) and become t͡ɕ- and ɕ-, respectively. For example, /t͡síŋ/ "hard" and /si᷄p/ "ten" are pronounced as [t͡ɕiŋ˥] and [ɕip˧˥] respectively. (Some textbooks denote t͡s as c).

Finals edit

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal [m]
[n]
[ŋ]
Plosive []
[]
[]
[ʔ]
Approximant [w]

Vowels edit

Each vowel quality occurs in long-short pairs: these are distinct phonemes forming distinct words in Tai Lue.

 
Vowel chart showing monophthongs used by many Tai languages, including Tai Lue
  Front Central-Back Back
short long short long short long
Close []
◌ᦲᦰ
[i(ː)]
◌ᦲ
[ɯʔ]
◌ᦹᦰ
[ɯ(ː)]
◌ᦹ
[u(ʔ)]
◌ᦳ
[]
◌ᦴ
Mid []
ᦵ◌ᦰ
[e(ː)]
ᦵ◌
[ɤʔ]
ᦵ◌ᦲᦰ
[ɤ(ː)]
ᦵ◌ᦲ
[]
ᦷ◌ᦰ
[o(ː)]
ᦷ◌
Open [ɛʔ]
ᦶ◌ᦰ
[ɛ(ː)]
ᦶ◌
[]
◌ᦰ
[]
◌ᦱ
[ɔʔ]
◌ᦸᦰ
[ɔ(ː)]
◌ᦸ

Generally, vowels in open syllables (without codas) occur as long whereas ones in closed syllables are short (except /aː/ and /uː/).

Dipthongs edit

Additionally, Tai Lue uses several dipthongs:

New Tai Lue IPA
ᦺ◌ [aj]
◌ᦻ [aːj]
◌ᦼ [uj]
◌ᦽ [oj]
◌ᦾ [ɔj]
◌ᦿ [ɯj]
ᦵ◌ᧀ [ɤj]

Tones edit

Contrastive tones in unchecked syllables edit

The table below presents six phonemic tones in unchecked syllables, i.e. closed syllables ending in sonorant sounds such as [m], [n], [ŋ], [w], and [j] and open syllables. There are six tones for unchecked syllables, although only three are allowed in checked syllables (those ending with -p, -t or -k).

Description Contour Transcription Example Old Tai Lue New Tai Lue script Meaning
high 55 á /káː/ crow
high rising 35 a᷄ /ka᷄ː/ ᨠ᩵ᩣ ᦂᧈ to go
low rising 13 a᷅ /ka᷅ː/ ᨠ᩶ᩣ ᦂᧉ rice shoots
falling 51 â /kâː/ ᨣᩤ to be stuck
mid 33 a (not marked) /kaː/ ᨣ᩵ᩤ ᦅᧈ price
low 11 à /kàː/ ᨣ᩶ᩤ ᦅᧉ to do business

Contrastive tones in checked syllables edit

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

Tone Example New Tai Lue Phonemic gloss
high-risinɡ ᩉᩖᩢᨠ ᦜᧅᧈ /la᷄k/ post
mid ᩃᩢ᩠ᨠ ᦟᧅᧈ /lāk/ steal
high-risinɡ ᩉᩖᩣ᩠ᨠ ᦜᦱᧅᧈ /la᷄ːk/ differ from others
mid ᩃᩣ᩠ᨠ ᦟᦱᧅᧈ /lāːk/ draɡ, pull

Grammar edit

Pronouns edit

[3]

Singular Familiar Singular Deferential Plural Familiar Plural Deferential
1st person exclusive ᦕᦴᧉᦃᦱᧉ
pʰuu3xaa3
ᦃᦱᧉ
xaa3
ᦃᦱᧉᦓᦾᧉ
xaa3nɔj6
ᦎᦴ
tuu1
ᦎᦴᦃᦾᧉ
tuu1xɔj3
inclusive ᦣᧁ
haw4
2nd person ᦈᧁᧉᦙᧃ
caw3man4
ᦆᦲᧂ
xiŋ4
ᦎᦳᧃᦈᧁᧉ
tun1caw3
ᦉᦴ
suu1
ᦉᦴᦑᦱᧃᧈ
suu1taan5
3rd person ᦎᦳᧃᦑᦱᧃᧈ
tun1taan5
ᦙᧃ
man4
ᦎᦳᧃᦑᦱᧃᧈ
tun1taan5
ᦃᧁ
xaw1
ᦃᧁᦈᧁᧉ
xaw1caw3

Syntax edit

Word order is usually subject–verb–object (SVO); modifiers (e.g. adjectives) follow nouns.

Interrogatives edit

[3]

Word Meaning
ᦉᧂ (saŋ1) What
ᦌᦹ (sɯɯ4) Why
ᦂᦲᧈ (kii1) How many
ᦺᦕ (pʰaj1) Who
ᦺᦐ (naj1) Where

Vocabulary edit

As in Thai and Lao, Tai Lue has borrowed many Sanskrit and Pali words and affixes. Among the Tai languages in general, Tai Lue has limited intelligibility with Shan and Tai Nua and shares much vocabulary with, the other Southwestern Tai languages. Tai Lue has 95% lexical similarity with Northern Thai (Lanna), 86% with Central Thai, 93% with Shan, and 95% with Khun.[1]

Below, some Thai Lue words are given with standard Central Thai equivalents for comparison. Thai words are shown on the left and Tai Lue words, written in New Tai Lue script, are shown on the right.

Different words edit

Many words differ from Thai greatly:

  • ยี่สิบ → ᨪᩣ᩠ᩅ (/jîː sìp/ /sâːw/, twenty; cf. Lao: /sáːw/, Northern Thai: /sāw/)
  • พูด → ᩋᩪᩢ (/pʰûːt/ /ʔu᷅ː/, to speak; cf. Northern Thai: /ʔu᷇ː/)
  • พี่ชาย → ᩋᩢᩣ᩠ᨿ (/pʰîː t͡ɕʰaːj/ /ʔa᷅ːj/, older brother; cf. Lao: /ʔâːj/, Northern Thai: /ʔa᷇ːj/)

Similar words edit

Some words differ in tone only:

  • หนึ่ง → ᨶ᩠ᨦᩧ᩵ (/nɯŋ/, one)
  • หก → ᩉᩫ᩠ᨠ (/hók/, six)
  • เจ็ด → ᨧᩮ᩠ᨯ (/t͡ɕét/, seven)
  • สิบ → ᩈᩥ᩠ᨷ (/síp/, ten)
  • กิน → ᨠᩥ᩠ᨶ (/kín/, to eat)

Some words differ in a single sound and associated tone. In many words, the initial ร (/r/) in Thai is ฮ (/h/) in Tai Lue, as is also the case in Lao and Tai Yuan:

  • ร้อน → ᩁᩢᩬᩁ (/rɔ́n/ /hɔ̀n/, hot; cf. Lao: /hɔ̂n/, Northern Thai: /hɔ́ːn/)
  • รัก → ᩁᩢ᩠ᨠ (/rák/ /hak/, to love; cf. Lao: /hāk/, Northern Thai: /ha᷇k/)
  • รู้ → ᩁᩪᩢ (/rúː/ /hùː/, to know; cf. Lao: /hûː/, Northern Thai: /húː/)

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

  • เชียงราย → ᨩ᩠ᨿᨦᩁᩣ᩠ᨿ (/t͡ɕʰiaŋ raːj/ /t͡ɕêŋ hâːj/, Chiang Rai city and province)
  • คิด → ᨣᩧ᩠ᨯ (/kʰít/ /kɯt/, to think; cf. Northern Thai: /kɯ́t/)
  • พ่อ → ᨻᩳ᩵ (/pʰɔ̂/ /pɔ/, father; cf. Northern Thai: /pɔ̂ː/)
  • ทาง → ᨴᩤ᩠ᨦ (/tʰaːŋ/ /tâːŋ/, way; cf. Northern Thai: /tāːŋ/)

(Note that the vowels also differ greatly between Tai Lue and Thai in many words, even though they are etymologically related and share the same root.)

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

  • ประเทศ → ᨷᩕᨴᩮ᩠ᩆ (/praʔtʰêːt/ /pʰaʔtêːt/, country; cf. Northern Thai /pʰa.têːt/)

Other differences:

  • ให้ → ᩉᩨᩢ (/hâj/ /hɯ᷅/, to give, let)

Numbers edit

1 ᦓᦹᧂᧈ ᨶᩧ᩠᩵ᨦ nɯŋ
2 ᦉᦸᧂ ᩈᩬᨦ sɔ́ŋ
3 ᦉᦱᧄ ᩈᩣ᩠ᨾ sám
4 ᦉᦲᧈ ᩈᩦ᩵ si᷄ː
5 ᦠᦱᧉ ᩉᩢᩣ ha᷅ː
6 ᦷᦠᧅ ᩉᩫ᩠ᨠ hók
7 ᦵᦈᧆ ᩮᨧ᩠ᨯ t͡ɕét
8 ᦶᦔᧆᧈ ᩯᨸ᩠ᨯ pɛ᷄t
9 ᦂᧁᧉ ᩮᨠᩢᩢᩣ ka᷅w
10 ᧚᧐ ᦉᦲᧇ ᩈᩥ᩠ᨷ síp
100 ᧚᧐᧐ ᦣᦾᧉ ᩁᩢᩭ hɔ̀i
10,000 ᧚᧐᧐᧐᧐ ᦖᦹᧃᧈ ᩉ᩠ᨾᩨ᩵ᩁ mɯ᷄n
100,000 ᧚᧐᧐᧐᧐᧐ ᦶᦉᧃ ᩯᩈ᩠ᨶ sɛ́n
1,000,000 ᧚᧐᧐᧐᧐᧐᧐ ᦟᦱᧃᧉ ᩃᩢᩣ᩠ᨶ làn

Writing systems edit

Tai Lue is written in three different scripts. One is the Fak Kham script, a variety of the Thai script of Sukhothai. The second is the Tham script, which was reformed in the 1950s, but is still in use and has recently regained government support. The new script is a simplified version of the old script.

Fak Kham edit

An ancient script, also used in Kengtung, Northern Thailand and Northern Laos centuries ago.

Tham edit

The Tham script is called 老傣文 lao dai wen (Old Dai script) in Chinese. Readable by the most people in Burma, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam.

New Tai Lue edit

 
China Post logo with the New Tai Lue script in Mohan, Yunnan

New Tai Lue is a modernization of the Lanna alphabet (also known as the Tai Tham script), which is similar to the Thai alphabet, and consists of 42 initial consonant signs (21 high-tone class, 21 low-tone class), seven final consonant signs, 16 vowel signs, two tone letters and one vowel shortening letter (or syllable-final glottal stop). Vowels signs can be placed before or after the syllable initial consonant.

Similar to the Thai alphabet, the pronunciation of the tone of a syllable depends on the class the initial consonant belongs to, syllable structure and vowel length, and the tone mark.

Related varieties edit

The Bajia people (八甲人), who number 1,106 individuals in Mengkang Village (勐康村), Meng'a Town (勐阿镇), Menghai County, Yunnan, speak a language closely related to Tai Lue.[citation needed] There are 225 Bajia people living in Jingbo Township 景播乡, Menghai County (You 2013:270).[4] The Bajia are also known as the Chinese Dai 汉傣.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Chinese: 傣仂语; pinyin: Dǎilèyǔ; Burmese: လူးရှမ်း, romanizedluu Shan; Lao: ພາສາໄຕລື້; Thai: ภาษาไทลื้อ, romanizedphasa thai lue, pronounced [pʰāː.sǎː.tʰāj.lɯ́ː]; Vietnamese: tiếng Lự or tiếng Lữ; also spelled Tai Lɯ, Tai Lü, Thai Lue, Tai Le

References edit

  1. ^ a b Tai Lue at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ "Lü". Ethnologue.
  3. ^ a b Tai Lü Dictionary – Webonary
  4. ^ You, Weiqiong 尤伟琼 (2013). Yúnnán mínzú shìbié yánjiū 云南民族识别研究 [Classifying Ethnic Groups of Yunnan] (in Chinese). Beijing: Minzu chubanshe. ISBN 978-7-105-12703-0.

Further reading edit

  • Xishuangbanna Daizu Zizhizhou (2002). Dǎi Hàn cídiǎn 傣汉词典 [Dai–Chinese Dictionary] (in Chinese). Kunming shi: Yunnan minzu chubanshe. – This is a dictionary of Tai Lue in unreformed spelling.
  • Yu, Cuirong 喻翠荣; Luo, Meizhen 罗美珍 (2004). Dǎilè Hàn cídiǎn 傣仂汉词典 [Tai Lue–Chinese Dictionary] (in Chinese). Beijing shi: Minzu chubanshe. ISBN 7-105-05834-X.
  • Hanna, William J. (2012). Dai Lue-English Dictionary. Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books. ISBN 978-616-215-031-9.

External links edit

  • SeaSite: Tai Lue, under construction
  • Omniglot - Tai Lue script
  • Tai Lue dictionary online
  • Li, Juan. 2022. Grammaire descriptive du tai lü (A Descriptive Grammar of Tai Lue). Paris: Sorbonne Université (PhD Dissertation).

language, language, redirects, here, bantu, cameroon, oroko, language, language, redirects, here, long, language, guizhou, luren, language, romanization, scheme, hokkien, used, taiwan, ᦅᧄᦺᦑᦟᦹᧉ, tham, ᨿᩃ, kâm, tâj, xishuangbanna, language, people, spoken, about. Lue language redirects here For Bantu Lue of Cameroon see Oroko language Lu language redirects here For Cai Long language of Guizhou see Luren language For the romanization scheme of Hokkien used in Taiwan see Tai lo Tai Lue New Tai Lu ᦅᧄᦺᦑᦟᦹᧉ Tai Tham ᨣ ᨴ ᨿᩃ kam tai lue kam taj lɯ a or Xishuangbanna Dai is a Tai language of the Lu people spoken by about 700 000 people in Southeast Asia This includes 280 000 people in China Yunnan 200 000 in Burma 134 000 in Laos 83 000 in Thailand and 4 960 in Vietnam 2 The language is similar to other Tai languages and is closely related to Kham Mueang or Tai Yuan which is also known as Northern Thai language In Yunnan it is spoken in all of Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture as well as Jiangcheng Hani and Yi Autonomous County in Pu er City Tai Lueᦅᧄᦺᦑᦟᦹᧉ ᨣ ᨴ ᩃ kam tai luePronunciation kam taj lɯ Native toChina Laos Thailand Myanmar VietnamRegionYunnan ChinaEthnicityTai LueNative speakers550 000 2000 2013 1 Language familyKra Dai TaiSouthwestern Thai Chiang SaenTai LueWriting systemTai Tham alphabet Thai alphabet New Tai Lue alphabetOfficial statusRecognised minoritylanguage in China Laos Thailand Myanmar VietnamLanguage codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code khb class extiw title iso639 3 khb khb a Glottologluuu1242 You may need rendering support to display the uncommon Unicode characters in this article correctly In Vietnam Tai Lue speakers are officially recognised as the Lự ethnic minority although in China they are classified as part of the Dai people along with speakers of the other Tai languages apart from Zhuang Contents 1 Phonology 1 1 Consonants 1 1 1 Initials 1 1 2 Finals 1 2 Vowels 1 2 1 Dipthongs 1 3 Tones 1 3 1 Contrastive tones in unchecked syllables 1 3 2 Contrastive tones in checked syllables 2 Grammar 2 1 Pronouns 2 2 Syntax 2 3 Interrogatives 3 Vocabulary 3 1 Different words 3 2 Similar words 3 3 Numbers 4 Writing systems 4 1 Fak Kham 4 2 Tham 4 3 New Tai Lue 5 Related varieties 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksPhonology editTai Lue has 21 syllable initial consonants 9 syllable finals and six tones three different tones in checked syllables six in open syllables Consonants edit Initials edit Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal plain labial Nasal m ᦖ ᦙ n ᦐ ᦓ ŋ ᦄ ᦇ Plosive tenuis p ᦔ ᦗ t ᦎ ᦑ k ᦂ ᦅ kʷ ᦦ ᦨ ʔ ᦀ ᦁ aspirated pʰ ᦕ ᦘ tʰ ᦏ ᦒ voiced b ᦢ ᦥ d ᦡ ᦤ Affricate t s ᦈ ᦋ Fricative voiceless f ᦚ ᦝ s ᦉ ᦌ x ᦃ ᦆ xʷ ᦧ ᦩ h ᦠ ᦣ voiced v ᦛ ᦞ Approximant l ᦜ ᦟ j ᦊ ᦍ The initials t s and s are palatalized before front vowels which in the language are i e and ɛ and become t ɕ and ɕ respectively For example t siŋ hard and si p ten are pronounced as t ɕiŋ and ɕip respectively Some textbooks denote t s as c Finals edit Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal Nasal m ᧄ n ᧃ ŋ ᧂ Plosive p ᧇ t ᧆ k ᧅ ʔ ᦰ Approximant w ᧁ Vowels edit Each vowel quality occurs in long short pairs these are distinct phonemes forming distinct words in Tai Lue nbsp Vowel chart showing monophthongs used by many Tai languages including Tai Lue Front Central Back Back short long short long short long Close iʔ ᦲᦰ i ː ᦲ ɯʔ ᦹᦰ ɯ ː ᦹ u ʔ ᦳ uː ᦴ Mid eʔ ᦵ ᦰ e ː ᦵ ɤʔ ᦵ ᦲᦰ ɤ ː ᦵ ᦲ oʔ ᦷ ᦰ o ː ᦷ Open ɛʔ ᦶ ᦰ ɛ ː ᦶ aʔ ᦰ aː ᦱ ɔʔ ᦸᦰ ɔ ː ᦸ Generally vowels in open syllables without codas occur as long whereas ones in closed syllables are short except aː and uː Dipthongs edit Additionally Tai Lue uses several dipthongs New Tai Lue IPA ᦺ aj ᦻ aːj ᦼ uj ᦽ oj ᦾ ɔj ᦿ ɯj ᦵ ᧀ ɤj Tones edit Contrastive tones in unchecked syllables edit The table below presents six phonemic tones in unchecked syllables i e closed syllables ending in sonorant sounds such as m n ŋ w and j and open syllables There are six tones for unchecked syllables although only three are allowed in checked syllables those ending with p t or k Description Contour Transcription Example Old Tai Lue New Tai Lue script Meaning high 55 a kaː ᨠ ᦂ crow high rising 35 a ka ː ᨠ ᦂᧈ to go low rising 13 a ka ː ᨠ ᦂᧉ rice shoots falling 51 a kaː ᨣ ᦅ to be stuck mid 33 a not marked kaː ᨣ ᦅᧈ price low 11 a kaː ᨣ ᦅᧉ to do business Contrastive tones in checked syllables edit The table below presents two phonemic tones in checked syllables i e closed syllables ending in a glottal stop ʔ and obstruent sounds which are p t and k Tone Example New Tai Lue Phonemic gloss high risinɡ ᩉ ᨠ ᦜᧅᧈ la k post mid ᩃ ᨠ ᦟᧅᧈ lak steal high risinɡ ᩉ ᨠ ᦜᦱᧅᧈ la ːk differ from others mid ᩃ ᨠ ᦟᦱᧅᧈ laːk draɡ pullGrammar editPronouns edit 3 Singular Familiar Singular Deferential Plural Familiar Plural Deferential 1st person exclusive ᦕᦴᧉᦃᦱᧉ pʰuu3xaa3 ᦃᦱᧉ xaa3 ᦃᦱᧉᦓᦾᧉ xaa3nɔj6 ᦎᦴ tuu1 ᦎᦴᦃᦾᧉ tuu1xɔj3 inclusive ᦣᧁ haw4 2nd person ᦈᧁᧉᦙᧃ caw3man4 ᦆᦲᧂ xiŋ4 ᦎᦳᧃᦈᧁᧉ tun1caw3 ᦉᦴ suu1 ᦉᦴᦑᦱᧃᧈ suu1taan5 3rd person ᦎᦳᧃᦑᦱᧃᧈ tun1taan5 ᦙᧃ man4 ᦎᦳᧃᦑᦱᧃᧈ tun1taan5 ᦃᧁ xaw1 ᦃᧁᦈᧁᧉ xaw1caw3 Syntax edit Word order is usually subject verb object SVO modifiers e g adjectives follow nouns Interrogatives edit 3 Word Meaning ᦉᧂ saŋ1 What ᦌᦹ sɯɯ4 Why ᦂᦲᧈ kii1 How many ᦺᦕ pʰaj1 Who ᦺᦐ naj1 WhereVocabulary editAs in Thai and Lao Tai Lue has borrowed many Sanskrit and Pali words and affixes Among the Tai languages in general Tai Lue has limited intelligibility with Shan and Tai Nua and shares much vocabulary with the other Southwestern Tai languages Tai Lue has 95 lexical similarity with Northern Thai Lanna 86 with Central Thai 93 with Shan and 95 with Khun 1 Below some Thai Lue words are given with standard Central Thai equivalents for comparison Thai words are shown on the left and Tai Lue words written in New Tai Lue script are shown on the right Different words edit Many words differ from Thai greatly yisib ᨪ ᩅ jiː sip saːw twenty cf Lao saːw Northern Thai saw phud ᩋ pʰuːt ʔu ː to speak cf Northern Thai ʔu ː phichay ᩋ ᨿ pʰiː t ɕʰaːj ʔa ːj older brother cf Lao ʔaːj Northern Thai ʔa ːj Similar words edit Some words differ in tone only hnung ᨶ ᨦ nɯŋ one hk ᩉ ᨠ hok six ecd ᨧ ᨯ t ɕet seven sib ᩈ ᨷ sip ten kin ᨠ ᨶ kin to eat Some words differ in a single sound and associated tone In many words the initial r r in Thai is h h in Tai Lue as is also the case in Lao and Tai Yuan rxn ᩁ ᩁ rɔ n hɔ n hot cf Lao hɔ n Northern Thai hɔ ːn rk ᩁ ᨠ rak hak to love cf Lao hak Northern Thai ha k ru ᩁ ruː huː to know cf Lao huː Northern Thai huː Aspirated consonants in the low class consonant group xksrta ʔak sɔ n tam become unaspirated echiyngray ᨩ ᨿᨦᩁ ᨿ t ɕʰiaŋ raːj t ɕeŋ haːj Chiang Rai city and province khid ᨣ ᨯ kʰit kɯt to think cf Northern Thai kɯ t phx ᨻ pʰɔ pɔ father cf Northern Thai pɔ ː thang ᨴ ᨦ tʰaːŋ taːŋ way cf Northern Thai taːŋ Note that the vowels also differ greatly between Tai Lue and Thai in many words even though they are etymologically related and share the same root Though many aspirated consonants often become unaspirated when an unaspirated consonant is followed by r r the unaspirated consonant becomes aspirated praeths ᨷ ᨴ ᩆ praʔtʰeːt pʰaʔteːt country cf Northern Thai pʰa teːt Other differences ih ᩉ haj hɯ to give let Numbers edit 1 ᦓᦹᧂᧈ ᨶ ᨦ nɯŋ 2 ᧒ ᦉᦸᧂ ᩈ ᨦ sɔ ŋ 3 ᧓ ᦉᦱᧄ ᩈ ᨾ sam 4 ᧔ ᦉᦲᧈ ᩈ si ː 5 ᧕ ᦠᦱᧉ ᩉ ha ː 6 ᧖ ᦷᦠᧅ ᩉ ᨠ hok 7 ᧗ ᦵᦈᧆ ᨧ ᨯ t ɕet 8 ᧘ ᦶᦔᧆᧈ ᨸ ᨯ pɛ t 9 ᧙ ᦂᧁᧉ ᨠ ka w 10 ᧐ ᦉᦲᧇ ᩈ ᨷ sip 100 ᧐᧐ ᦣᦾᧉ ᩁ hɔ i 10 000 ᧐᧐᧐᧐ ᦖᦹᧃᧈ ᩉ ᨾ ᩁ mɯ n 100 000 ᧐᧐᧐᧐᧐ ᦶᦉᧃ ᩈ ᨶ sɛ n 1 000 000 ᧐᧐᧐᧐᧐᧐ ᦟᦱᧃᧉ ᩃ ᨶ lanWriting systems editTai Lue is written in three different scripts One is the Fak Kham script a variety of the Thai script of Sukhothai The second is the Tham script which was reformed in the 1950s but is still in use and has recently regained government support The new script is a simplified version of the old script Fak Kham edit An ancient script also used in Kengtung Northern Thailand and Northern Laos centuries ago Tham edit The Tham script is called 老傣文 lao dai wen Old Dai script in Chinese Readable by the most people in Burma Laos Thailand and Vietnam New Tai Lue edit nbsp China Post logo with the New Tai Lue script in Mohan Yunnan New Tai Lue is a modernization of the Lanna alphabet also known as the Tai Tham script which is similar to the Thai alphabet and consists of 42 initial consonant signs 21 high tone class 21 low tone class seven final consonant signs 16 vowel signs two tone letters and one vowel shortening letter or syllable final glottal stop Vowels signs can be placed before or after the syllable initial consonant Similar to the Thai alphabet the pronunciation of the tone of a syllable depends on the class the initial consonant belongs to syllable structure and vowel length and the tone mark Related varieties editThe Bajia people 八甲人 who number 1 106 individuals in Mengkang Village 勐康村 Meng a Town 勐阿镇 Menghai County Yunnan speak a language closely related to Tai Lue citation needed There are 225 Bajia people living in Jingbo Township 景播乡 Menghai County You 2013 270 4 The Bajia are also known as the Chinese Dai 汉傣 See also editTai Nua language Tai Dam languageNotes edit Chinese 傣仂语 pinyin Dǎileyǔ Burmese လ ရ မ romanized luu Shan Lao ພາສາໄຕລ Thai phasaithlux romanized phasa thai lue pronounced pʰaː sǎː tʰaj lɯ ː Vietnamese tiếng Lự or tiếng Lữ also spelled Tai Lɯ Tai Lu Thai Lue Tai LeReferences edit a b Tai Lue at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 subscription required Lu Ethnologue a b Tai Lu Dictionary Webonary You Weiqiong 尤伟琼 2013 Yunnan minzu shibie yanjiu 云南民族识别研究 Classifying Ethnic Groups of Yunnan in Chinese Beijing Minzu chubanshe ISBN 978 7 105 12703 0 Further reading editXishuangbanna Daizu Zizhizhou 2002 Dǎi Han cidiǎn 傣汉词典 Dai Chinese Dictionary in Chinese Kunming shi Yunnan minzu chubanshe This is a dictionary of Tai Lue in unreformed spelling Yu Cuirong 喻翠荣 Luo Meizhen 罗美珍 2004 Dǎile Han cidiǎn 傣仂汉词典 Tai Lue Chinese Dictionary in Chinese Beijing shi Minzu chubanshe ISBN 7 105 05834 X Hanna William J 2012 Dai Lue English Dictionary Chiang Mai Silkworm Books ISBN 978 616 215 031 9 External links edit nbsp Tai Lue language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator SeaSite Tai Lue under construction Omniglot Tai Lue script Tai Lue dictionary online Li Juan 2022 Grammaire descriptive du tai lu A Descriptive Grammar of Tai Lue Paris Sorbonne Universite PhD Dissertation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tai Lue language amp oldid 1220347611, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.