fbpx
Wikipedia

Tai Tham script

Tai Tham script (Tham meaning "scripture") is an abugida writing system used mainly for a group of Southwestern Tai languages i.e., Northern Thai, Tai Lü, Khün and Lao; as well as the liturgical languages of Buddhism i.e., Pali and Sanskrit. It is historically known as Tua Tham (ᨲ᩠ᩅᩫᨵᨾ᩠ᨾ᩼ or ᨲ᩠ᩅᩫᨵᩢᨾ᩠ᨾ᩼). In Thailand and Myanmar, the script is often referred to as Lanna script (Thai: อักษรธรรมล้านนา RTGSAkson Tham Lan Na; Burmese: လန်နအက္ခရာ RTGS: Lanna Akara) in relation to the historical kingdom of Lan Na situating in the Northern region of modern day Thailand and a part of Shan state in Myanmar.[4] Local people in Northern Thailand also call the script as Tua Mueang (ᨲ᩠ᩅᩫᨾᩮᩥᩬᨦ, Northern Thai pronunciation: [tǔa̯.mɯ̄a̯ŋ] listen) in parallel to Kam Mueang, a local name for Northern Thai language.[4] In Laos and Isan region of Thailand, a variation of Tai Tham script, often dubbed Lao Tham, is also known by the locals as To Tham Lao (Northeastern Thai: โตธรรมลาว /toː˩.tʰam˧˥.laːw˧/, cf. Lao: ໂຕທຳ/ໂຕທັມ BGN/PCGN to tham) or Yuan script.[5] Tai Tham script is traditionally written on a dried palm leaf as a palm-leaf manuscript.[4]

Tai Tham
ᨲ᩠ᩅᩫᨵᩢᨾ᩠ᨾ᩼, Tua Tham
Script type
Time period
c. 1300–present
DirectionLeft-to-right 
LanguagesNorthern Thai, Tai Lü, Khün, Isan and Lao
Related scripts
Parent systems
Child systems
New Tai Lue, Tham Lao
ISO 15924
ISO 15924Lana (351), ​Tai Tham (Lanna)
Unicode
Unicode alias
Tai Tham
U+1A20–U+1AAF
[a] The Semitic origin of the Brahmic scripts is not universally agreed upon.
 This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. For the distinction between [ ], / / and  , see IPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters.

The Northern Thai language is a close relative of (standard) Thai. It is spoken by nearly 6 million people in Northern Thailand and several thousand in Laos of whom few are literate in Lanna script. The script is still read by older monks. Northern Thai has six linguistic tones and Thai only five, making transcription into the Thai alphabet problematic. There is some resurgent interest in the script among younger people, but an added complication is that the modern spoken form, called Kam Muang, differs in pronunciation from the older form.[6]

There are 670,000 speakers of Tai Lü, some of those born before 1950 are literate in Tham, also known as Old Tai Lue.[citation needed] The script has also continued to be taught in the monasteries. The New Tai Lue script is derived from Tham. There are 120,000 speakers of Khün for which Lanna is the only script.

History edit

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

The Tai Tham script shows a strong similarity to the Mon script used by the Mon kingdom of Haripunjaya around the 13th century CE, in the present-day Lamphun Province of Northern Thailand. The oldest known document containing the Tai Tham script is dated to 1376 CE and was found in Sukhothai. The document is a bilingual inscription on a gold folio, containing one line of Pali written in the Tai Tham script, while the vernacular is written in the Siamese language, using the Sukhothai script. The Tai Tham script was adapted to write vernacular languages not later than the 15th century CE, most probably in Chiang Mai, in the Lan Na Kingdom.[7] The script spread from Lan Na to surrounding areas such as modern day Laos, Isan, Shan State and Sipsong Panna. Numerous local variants developed, such as the Lue variant (Sipsong Panna), the Khuen variant (Shan State) and the Tham Lao variant (Laos and Isan). The variants differ only slightly in appearance, and the system of writing has remained the same.[8] As the name suggests, the use of the Tham (Dharma) script in Lao was restricted to religious literature, either used to transcribe Pali, or religious treatises written in Lao intended solely for the clergy. Religious instructional materials and prayer books dedicated to the laity were written in Tai Noi instead. As a result, only a few people outside the temples were literate in the script. In Isan, evidence of the script includes two stone inscriptions, such as the one housed at Wat Tham Suwannakhuha in Nong Bua Lamphu, dated to 1564, and another from Wat Mahaphon in Maha Sarakham from the same period.[9]

 
A palm-leaf manuscript written in Tai Tham script. Collection of the Museum of Ethnology, Minzu University of China.

Most of the script is recorded on palm-leaf manuscripts, many of which were destroyed during the 'Thaification' purges of the 1930s; contemporaneously this period of Thai nationalisation also ended its use as the primary written language in Northern Thailand.[10] Although no longer in use in Isan, the alphabet is enjoying a resurgence in Northern Thailand, and is still used as the primary written script for the Tai Lü and Tai Khün languages spoken in the 'Golden Triangle' where Thailand, Laos, Burma and southern China meet. Its use is rather limited to the long-term monks in Laos and most materials published today are in the modern Lao script.[10]

Characteristics edit

Although both the ancient forms of the Mon and Khmer script are different, they are both abugidas that descend from the Brahmic scripts introduced via contacts with South Indian traders, soldiers, merchants and Brahmans. As a Mon-derived script, Tai Tham has many similarities with the writing systems for Burmese, Shan, Rakhine and modern Mon and rounder letter forms compared to the angled letters of Khmer.[10] Letters can be stacked, sometimes with special subscript forms, similar to 'ຼ' which was used in Tai Noi and also in modern Lao as the subscript version of 'ຣ' /r/ or 'ລ' /l/ as in Lao: ຫຼວງພຼະບາງ/ຫລວງພຣະບາງ. Letters also are more circular or rounded than the typically angled style of Khmer.[9]

Consonants edit

There are 43 Tai Tham consonants. They are divided into three groups: categorized consonants (ᨻ᩠ᨿᩢᨬ᩠ᨩᨶᨶᩲᩅᩢᨣ᩠ᨣ᩼, payanjana nai wak), non-categorized consonants (ᨻ᩠ᨿᩢᨬ᩠ᨩᨶᩋᩅᩢᨣ᩠ᨣ᩼, payanjana awak), and additional consonants (ᨻ᩠ᨿᩢᨬ᩠ᨩᨶᨲᩮᩬᩥ᩵ᨾ, payanjana tueam). Categorized consonants and non-categorized consonants are those derived from Old Mon script used for Pali and Sanskrit languages. Similar to Devanagari, Pallava script, and Burmese script, categorized consonants are divided into 5 subgroups called wak (ᩅᩢᨣ᩠ᨣ᩼) i.e., wak ka (), wak ja (), wak rata (), wak ta (), and wak pa (). The additional consonants are the consonants invented to write Tai sounds that are originally not found in Pali. In a dictionary, letter and are often put in the consonant list following the letter and respectively. However, they are a syllabary (also a vowel) and not a consonant letter.

Consonant chart edit

There are 25 categorized consonants, 10 non-categorized consonants, and 8 additional consonants. Similar to Khmer, Tai Tham also has a subjoined form called haang (ᩉᩣ᩠ᨦ), tua joeng (ᨲ᩠ᩅᩫᨩᩮᩥ᩠ᨦ), or tua hoy (ᨲ᩠ᩅᩫᩉᩬ᩠ᨿ᩶). In the Unicode input method, sakot sign (U1A60) (◌᩠) is used to trigger the subjoined forms.[5][11] The additional consonants are shown in yellow. These consonants have the characteristics of lacking the subjoined form. Similar to Thai script and Lao script, consonants in Tai Tham can be classified into high, mid, and low classes regarding to the tone rules.

Letter Subjoined
form
Name Transliteration IPA Tone
Class
Translit. IPA Initial Final Initial Final
1. Wak Ka
  ◌᩠ᨠ ka [kǎ] k k [k] [k̚] high
  ◌᩠ᨡ xa, kha [xǎ], [kʰǎ] x, kh k [x], [kʰ] [k̚] high
[a]   xa, kha [xǎ], [kʰǎ] x, kh [x], [kʰ] [k̚] high
  ◌᩠ᨣ ka [ka᷇] k k [k] [k̚] low
[a]   xa, kha [xa᷇], [kʰǎ] x, kh [x], [kʰ] [k̚] low
  ◌᩠ᨥ xa, kha [xa᷇], [kʰa᷇] x, kh k [x], [kʰ] [k̚] low
  ◌᩠ᨦ nga [ŋa᷇] ng ng [ŋ] [ŋ] low
2. Wak Ja
  ◌᩠ᨧ ja, ca [t͡ɕǎ] j, c t [t͡ɕ] [t̚] high
  ◌᩠ᨨ sa, cha [sǎ], [t͡ɕʰǎ] s, ch [s], [t͡ɕʰ] high
  ◌᩠ᨩ ja, ca [t͡ɕa᷇] j, c t [t͡ɕ] [t̚] low
[a]   sa [sa᷇] s t [s] [t̚] low
 ,   ◌᩠ᨫ sa, cha [sa᷇], [t͡ɕʰa᷄] s, ch t [s], [t͡ɕʰa᷄] [t̚] low
  ◌᩠ᨬ nya [ɲa᷇] ny, y n [ɲ], [j][b] [n] low
3. Wak Rata
  ◌᩠ᨭ rata [lǎ.tǎ] t t [t] [t̚] high
 ,   ◌᩠ᨮ , ◌ᩛ ratha [lǎ.tʰǎ] th t [tʰ] [t̚] high
  ◌᩠ᨯ da [dǎ] d, th[c] t [d], [tʰ][c] [t̚] mid
  ◌᩠ᨰ ratha [lǎ.tʰa᷇] th t [tʰ] [t̚] low
  ◌᩠ᨱ rana [lǎ.na᷇] n n [n] [n] low
4. Wak Ta
  ◌᩠ᨲ ta [tǎ] t t [t] [t̚] high
  ◌᩠ᨳ tha [tʰǎ] th t [tʰ] [t̚] high
  ◌᩠ᨴ ta [ta᷇] t t [t] [t̚] low
  ◌᩠ᨵ tha [tʰa᷇] th t [tʰ] [t̚] low
  ◌᩠ᨶ na [na᷇] n n [n] [n] low
5. Wak Pa
  ◌᩠ᨷ , ◌ᩝ ba [bǎ] b p [b][d] [p̚] mid
◌᩠ᨷ pa[e] [pǎ] p p [p][e][12][13] [p̚] high[13][12]
[a][f]    – pa [pǎ] p p [p] [p̚] high
  ◌᩠ᨹ pha [pʰǎ] ph  – [pʰ]  – high
[a]    – fa [fǎ] f  – [f]  – high
  ◌᩠ᨻ , ◌ᩛ pa [pa᷇] p p [p] [p̚] low
[a]    – fa [fa᷇] f p [f] [p̚] low
  ◌᩠ᨽ pha [pʰa᷇] ph p [pʰ] [p̚] low
  ◌᩠ᨾ , ◌ᩜ ma [ma᷇] m m [m] [m] low
6. Awak
ᨿ   ◌᩠ᨿ nya [ɲa᷇] ny, y  – [ɲ], [j][b]  – low
[a]    – ya [jǎ] y  – [j]  – mid
  ◌᩠ᩁ , ra, la [la᷇] r,[g] l, h n [r],[c] [l],[c] [h] [n] low
  ◌᩠ᩃ , ◌ᩖ la [la᷇] l n [l] [n] low
  ◌᩠ᩅ wa [wa᷇] w [w] low
  ◌᩠ᩆ sa [sǎ] s t [s] [t̚] high
  ◌᩠ᩇ sa [sǎ] s t [s] [t̚] high
  ◌᩠ᩈ , ◌ᩞ sa [sǎ] s t [s] [t̚] high
  ◌᩠ᩉ ha [hǎ] h  – [h]  – high
  ◌᩠ᩊ la [la᷇] l n [l] [n] low
 ,   ◌ᩬ a [ʔǎ]  –  – [ʔ]  – mid
[a]    – ha [ha᷇] h  – [h]  – low
Notes
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Added consonant invented for Tai sound, as an extension to the original chategorized Pali 'vagga' consonants. These consonants have the characteristics of lacking the subjoined form.
  2. ^ a b In Tai Lue language
  3. ^ a b c d Influence from Thai, Pali, and Sanskrit languages.
  4. ^ When used to write Tai words.
  5. ^ a b When used to write Pali-Sanskrit derived words.
  6. ^ Used only for Tai words, not for Pali.
  7. ^ Often transliterated as 'r' to preserve the semantics for Thai and Pali-Sanskrit words.

Consonant combinations and ligatures edit

Consonant digraph with Ha edit

Certain consonants in the low-class group lack their high-class counterpart. These consonants are sometimes called the single low-class consonants. Their high-class counterparts are created by the combination with letter high Ha () as a digraph, called Ha Nam (ᩉ ᨶᩣᩴ).[14]

Letter Name Transliteration IPA Tone

Class

Translit. IPA Initial Final Initial Final
ᩉ᩠ᨦ nga [ŋǎ] ng  – [ŋ]  – high
ᩉ᩠ᨶ na [nǎ] n  – [n]  – high
ᩉ᩠ᨾ ma [mǎ] m  – [m]  – high
ᩉ᩠ᨿ nya [ɲǎ] ny  – [ɲ], [j][a]  – high
ᩉᩕ ra, la, ha [rǎ], [lǎ], [hǎ] r,[b] l, h  – [r],[c] [l],[c] [h]  – high
ᩉᩖ, ᩉ᩠ᩃ la [lǎ] l  – [l]  – high
ᩉ᩠ᩅ wa [wǎ] w  – [w]  – high
Notes
  1. ^ In Tai Lue language
  2. ^ Often transliterated as 'r' to preserve the semantics for Thai and Pali-Sanskrit words.
  3. ^ a b Influence from Thai, Pali, and Sanskrit languages.

Special letters edit

Letter Name Phonetic value

(IPA)

Comments
Tham Translit. IPA
 ,  [a] ᩃᩯᩡ, ᩃᩯ lae [lɛ̄ː] [lɛʔ], [lɛ̄ː] Ligature of letter (la) and superscript vowel sign (e).
ᨶᩣ   ᨶᩣ naa [nāː] [nāː] Ligature of letter (na) and vowel sign (a).
ᨬ᩠ᨬ   ᨬᨬ nya nya [ɲa᷇ʔ ɲa᷇ʔ] [n.ɲ] Ligature of letter (rana) and (nya), used in lieu of double .
  ᩈ ᩈᩬᨦᩉᩬ᩶ᨦ sa song hong [sǎː sɔ̌ːŋ hɔ᷇ːŋ] [t̚.s] Ligature of double (high sa).
  ᩁᩁᩰᩫ᩠ᨦ rarong, rahong [la.hōːŋ] [r], [l], [ʰ] Subjoined form of letter (ra) for a consonant cluster such as ᨷᩕ (pra) ᨻᩕ (pra) as opposed to the subjoined form -᩠ᩁ used as a final consonant. Traditionally considered as a special letter.
Notes
  1. ^ Khuen/Lue style.

Vowels edit

Vowel characters come in two forms: as stand-alone letters for writing initial vowels or as diacritics that can be attached to all sides of the consonant letters. However, Lanna excels in terms of the number of diacritics used. Some vowel sounds can be written with a combination of as many as four diacritics: one on each side of the consonant.[15][16]

Dependent vowels edit

Short vowels[a]
(with consonant )
Long vowels
(with consonant )
IPA No final
consonant
With final
consonant ()[b]
IPA No final
consonant
With final
consonant ()[b]
Simple vowels
/a/ , ᨠᩡ ᨠᩢ᩠ᨦ /aː/ ᨠᩣ[c] ᨠᩣ᩠ᨦ
/i/ ᨠᩥ ᨠᩥ᩠ᨦ /iː/ ᨠᩦ ᨠᩦ᩠ᨦ
/ɯ/ ᨠᩧ ᨠᩧ᩠ᨦ /ɯː/ ᨠᩨ ᨠᩨ᩠ᨦ
/u/ ᨠᩩ ᨠᩩᨦ, ᨠᩩᨦ᩼ /uː/ ᨠᩪ ᨠᩪᨦ, ᨠᩪᨦ᩼
/e/ ᨠᩮᩡ, ᨠᩮᩬᩡ ᨠᩮᩢ᩠ᨦ, ᨠᩮᩬᨦᩡ /eː/ ᨠᩮ ᨠᩮ᩠ᨦ
/ɛ/ ᨠᩯᩡ, ᨠᩯᩬᩡ ᨠᩯᩢ᩠ᨦ, ᨠᩯᩬᨦᩡ /ɛː/ ᨠᩯ ᨠᩯ᩠ᨦ
/o/ ᨠᩰᩡ ᨠᩫ᩠ᨦ /oː/ ᨠᩰ, ᨠᩮᩣ[c][d] ᨠᩰᩫ᩠ᨦ, ᨠᩰ᩠ᨦ
/ɔ/ ᨠᩰᩬᩡ ᨠᩬᩢᨦ, ᨠᩬᨦᩡ /ɔː/ ᨠᩬᩴ, ᨠᩳ[e] ᨠᩬᨦ, ᨠᩬᨦ᩼
/ɤ/ ᨠᩮᩬᩥᩡ ᨠᩮᩥᩢ᩠ᨦ, ᨠᩮᩥ᩠ᨦᩡ /ɤː/ ᨠᩮᩬᩥ ᨠᩮᩥ᩠ᨦ
Diphthongs
/iaʔ/ ᨠ᩠ᨿᩮᩡ ᨠ᩠ᨿᩢᨦ, ᨠ᩠ᨿᨦᩡ /ia/ ᨠ᩠ᨿᩮ ᨠ᩠ᨿᨦ
/ɯaʔ/ ᨠᩮᩬᩥᩋᩡ ᨠᩮᩬᩥᩢᨦ, ᨠᩮᩬᩥᨦᩡ /ɯa/ ᨠᩮᩬᩥᩋ ᨠᩮᩬᩥᨦ
ᨠᩮᩬᩨᩋᩡ ᨠᩮᩬᩨᩢᨦ, ᨠᩮᩬᩨᨦᩡ ᨠᩮᩬᩨᩋ ᨠᩮᩬᩨᨦ
/uaʔ/ ᨠ᩠ᩅᩫᩡ ᨠ᩠ᩅᩢᨦ, ᨠ᩠ᩅᨦᩡ /ua/ ᨠ᩠ᩅᩫ ᨠ᩠ᩅᨦ, ᨠ᩠ᩅᨦ᩼
Phonetic diphthongs[f]
/aw/ ᨠᩮᩢᩣ,[c] ᨠᩳ,[g] ᨠᩪᩦ[h]
/aj/ ᨠᩱ, ᨠᩲ, ᨠᩱ᩠ᨿ, ᨠᩱᨿ᩠ᨿ, ᨠᩮᨿ᩠ᨿ,[17] ᨠᩢ᩠ᨿ[13] -
/ɔːj/ ᨠᩭ,[e] ᨠᩬ᩠ᨿ -
Extra vowels
/aŋ/ ᨠᩴ,[d] ᨠᩘ[d]
/am/ ᨠᩣᩴ[c]
/lɯ/ /lɯː/ ,[i] [j][13] -
Notes
  1. ^ Short vowels are followed by a glottal stop /ʔ/ if they are followed by another consonant.
  2. ^ a b Hypothetical spelling for demonstrating the consonant and vowel positions.
  3. ^ a b c d Symbol ◌ᩤ may be used instead for narrow consonants such as ᨣ ᨧ ᨵ ᨰ ᨴ ᨷ ᩅ to increase legibility.
  4. ^ a b c Only used for Pali words.
  5. ^ a b Used in Khuen and Lue spelling conventions.
  6. ^ Only shows the diphthongs with special diacritic symbols.
  7. ^ Used in Lanna spelling convention, called Mai Kao Ho Nueng (ᨾᩱ᩶ᨠᩮᩢᩣᩉᩬᩴ᩵ᩉ᩠ᨶᩧ᩶ᨦ)
  8. ^ Called Mai Kao Ju Ji (ᨾᩱ᩶ᨠᩮᩢᩣᨧᩪ᩶ᨧᩦ᩶)
  9. ^ Equivalent to Thai script ฤๅ.
  10. ^ Equivalent to Thai script ฦๅ.

Independent vowels edit

Independent vowels are mainly reserved for writing Pali words, except for ᩐᩣ /ʔau/ which is used as a special vowel sign and not for Pali words.[18]

Tai Tham                  
ᩋᩣ ᩐᩣ
IPA /ʔáʔ/ /ʔāː/ /ʔíʔ/ /ʔīː/ /ʔúʔ/ /ʔūː/ /ʔēː/ /ʔōː/ /ʔaw/

Tone marks edit

Tone marks Name Comments
Tham Transliteration IPA
  ᨾᩱ᩶ᩀᩢ᩠ᨠ,[13] ᨾᩱ᩶ᩀᩰᩬᩡ[13] mai yak,

mai yo

/máj.jǎk/,

/máj.jɔ́ʔ/

  ᨾᩱ᩶ᨡᩬᩴᨩ᩶ᩣ᩠ᨦ,[13] ᨾᩱ᩶ᨪᩢ᩠ᨯ[19] mai kho jang,

mai sat

/máj.kʰɔ̌ː.t͡ɕáːŋ/,

/máj.sát/

  ᨾᩱ᩶ᨠᩳᩉ᩠ᨶᩮᩬᩥᩋ[20] mai ko nuea /máj.kɔ̌.nɯa̯/ Invented for Khuen language, shape like vowel sign -ᩳ (mai ko).[19]
  ᨾᩱ᩶ᩈᩬᨦᩉ᩠ᨶᩮᩬᩥᩋ[20] mai song nuea /máj.sɔ̌ːŋ.nɯa̯/ Invented for Khuen language, shape like (Hora digit 2).[19]
  ᨾᩱ᩶ᩈᩣ᩠ᨾᩉ᩠ᨶᩮᩬᩥᩋ[20] mai sam nuea /máj.sǎːm.nɯa̯/ Invented for Khuen language, shape like (Hora digit 3).[19]
  - - Borrowed from Thai script "Mai Chattawa" into Khuen language.
Interchangeable with mai song nuea.[19]
  - - Borrowed from Thai script "Mai Tho" into Khuen language.
Interchangeable with mai sam nuea.[19]

Tone mark conjugation edit

There are six phonemic tones in the Chiang Mai dialect of Northern Thai: low-rising, low-falling, high-level with glottal stop, mid-level, high-falling, and high-rising. Tones in Chiang Mai dialect are very close to the standard Thai five tones systems and the equivalence can be drawn between the two. Lanna–Thai dictionaries often equate Chiang Mai tones with standard Thai tones, shown in a table below.

Northern Thai–Standard Thai tone equivalence
Chiang Mai Tone[21] Thai Tone Equivalence[21]
Name Tone letters Name Tone letters
mid-level 33 or ˧˧ สามัญ saman mid-level 33 or ˧˧
low-falling 21 or ˨˩ เอก ek low-falling 21 or ˨˩
high-falling 42 or ˦˨ โท tho high-falling 41 or ˦˩
high-level, glottalized 44ʔ or ˦˦ʔ โทพิเศษ[a] special tho[a]
high-rising 45 or ˦˥ ตรี tree high-rising 45 or ˦˥
low-rising 24 or ˨˦ จัตวา chattawa low-rising 24 or ˨˥
  1. ^ a b Name frequently given by grammar books.

Tone mark conjugation system of Tai Tham highly correlates with the system used by Thai script. Despite the difference in tone quality between Northern Thai, Tai Khuen, Thai, and Lao; equivalent words in each language are, in large part, marked with the same (or equivalent) tone mark. For example, the word ᨣ᩶ᩤ (Northern Thai pronunciation: [kaː˦˥]; Khuen: [kaː˦˩]) which is equivalent to Thai ค้า (Thai pronunciation: [kʰaː˦˥]), and Lao ຄ້າ (Lao pronunciation: [kʰaː˥˨]) all has the same meaning "to trade" and is expressed with the same or equivalent tone mark mai tho/mai kho jang but is pronounced with different tones differed by the languages.

Tone mark conjugation in Tai Tham follows the same model used for Thai script. Consonants are divided into 3 classes: high, mid, low; with some degree of variation form Thai script due to the phonological differences between Northern Thai and standard Thai. Consonants in each class are combined with these tone marks to give a different tonal pattern.

Only two tone marks mai yo (᩵) and mai kho jang (᩶) are mainly used. Low class and High class consonants only have one tone per one tone mark. Hence, to achieve the 6 tones while using only 2 tone marks (and one case of no tone mark), they are conjugated as a couple of the same sound.[22]

High class–Low class consonants couple for tone conjugation
IPA High class Low class
[k]
[kʰ] ᨡ, ᨢ ᨤ, ᨥ
[ŋ] ᩉ᩠ᨦ
[t͡ɕ]
[s] ᨨ, ᩆ, ᩇ, ᩈ ᨪ, ᨫ
[ɲ] ᩉ᩠ᨿ ᨬ, ᨿ
[t] ᨭ, ᨲ
[tʰ] ᨮ, ᨳ ᨰ, ᨵ
[n] ᩉ᩠ᨶ ᨱ, ᨶ
[p] [a]
[pʰ]
[f]
[m] ᩉ᩠ᨾ
[r] ᩉᩕ
[l] ᩉᩖ, ᩉ᩠ᩃ, ᩉᩕ ᩃ, ᩊ, ᩁ
[h] ᩉ, ᩉᩕ ᩌ, ᩁ
[w] ᩉ᩠ᩅ
Notes
  1. ^ Pali derived words.

Mid class consonants ([ʔ], [b], [d], and [j]) do not have a couple for tone conjugation. Hence, different tones can be expressed with the same tone mark. Readers have to rely on the context in order to know the correct tone pronunciation. Therefore, to solve this ambiguity, three new tone marks: mai ko nuea (᩷), mai song nuea (᩸), and mai sam nuea (᩹) were invented for the mid class consonants in Khuen language. However, these three new tone marks aren't used in Lanna spelling convention and even in Khuen, they are rarely used. The use of these new three tone marks is also not standardized and may also differ between the dialects of Khuen language.[19]

Moreover, similar to standard Thai, the tonal pattern for each consonant class also differs by vowel length and final consonant sounds, which can be divided into the "checked" and "unchecked" syllables. Checked syllables are a group of syllables with the obstruent coda sounds [p̚], [t̚], [k̚], and [ʔ] (short vowel with no final consonant actually ends with the glottal stop, but often omitted). The unchecked syllables are a group of syllables with the sonorant coda sound [m], [n], [ŋ], [j], and [w].

Hence, by combining the consonant classes and the system of checked–unchecked syllables, the full tone conjugation table can be constructed as shown below. Color codes are assigned in the table to each tone mark: cyan – no tone mark; yellow – mai yo (equi. Thai mai ek); pink – mai kho jang (equi. Thai mai tho). Low class and high class rows are paired together to show the system of the consonant couples.

final
consonant
sound
Vowel
length
Consonant
class
Chiang Mai Tone
mid-level low-falling high-falling high-level,
glottalized
high-rising low-rising
Thai Tone Equivalence
สามัญ
(saman)
เอก
(ek)
โท
(tho)
โทพิเศษ
(special tho)[a]
ตรี
(tree)
จัตวา
(chattawa)
mid low falling - high rising
m, n, ŋ, j, w

coda

(unchecked syllables)

(sonorant)

long
&
short
Low ᨴᩣ
/taː˧˧/
"to smear"
ᨴ᩵ᩣ
/taː˦˨/
"port"
ᨴ᩶ᩣ
/taː˦˥/
"to challenge"
High ᨲ᩵ᩣ᩠ᨦ
/taːŋ˨˩/
"to carry"
ᨲ᩶ᩣ᩠ᨶ
/taːn˦˦ʔ/
"to oppose"
ᨲᩣ
/taː˨˦/
"eye"
Mid ᩋᩩ᩠ᨿ
/ʔuj˧˧/
"soft hair"
ᩋᩩ᩠᩵ᨿ
/ʔuj˨˩/
"to scatter"
ᩋᩩ᩠᩶ᨿᩌᩩ᩠᩵ᨿ[b][23]
/ʔuj˦˨.huj˦˨/
"greenish"
ᩋᩩ᩠᩶ᨿ[23]
/ʔuj˦˦ʔ/
"thigh"
ᩋᩩ᩠᩶ᨿ[b][24]
/ʔuj˦˥/
"grand parents"
ᩋᩩ᩠ᨿ[b][25]
/ʔuj˨˦/
"breast"
ʔ, p̚, t̚, k̚

coda[c]

(checked syllables)

(obstruent)

long Low ᨴᩣ᩠ᨠ
/taːk̚˦˨/
"slug"
ᨶᩰ᩠᩶ᨴ[b][d][26]

/noːt̚˦˥/

"note"

High ᨲᩣ᩠ᨠ
/taːk̚˨˩/
"to dry"
Mid ᨯᩣ᩠ᨷ
/daːp̚˨˩/
"sword"
ᩋᩪ᩶ᨯ[b][27]
/ʔuːt̚˦˨/
"to swell"
ᩋ᩶ᩬᨷ[b][28]
/ʔɔːp̚˦˥/
"bottle neck"
short Low ᨴᩢ᩠ᨠ
/tak̚˦˥/
"to greet"
High ᨲᩢ᩠ᨷ
/tap̚˨˦/
"liver"
Mid ᩋᩩ᩶ᨠ[b][29]
/ʔuk̚˦˥/
"to ferment"
ᨯᩢ᩠ᨷ
/dap̚˨˦/
"to distinguish (fire)"
Notes
  1. ^ Not exist in standard Thai, but often approximated as the special falling tone (โทพิเศษ) in many grammar books and the academic circle in Thailand.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Secondary form for mid class consonants. This form is less frequently found, and not listed in some grammar book. However, there are dictionary records of words in this form, especially the word start with /ʔ/.
  3. ^ Some linguists consider this class as separated tones group.
  4. ^ Mostly the borrow words from Thai and English.

Numerals edit

Lanna has two sets of numerals. The first set, Lek Nai Tham, is reserved for liturgical purposes. The other set, Lek Hora, is used in everyday life.[30]

Arabic numerals 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Hora digits
Tham digits
Thai numerals
Lao numerals
Burmese numerals
Khmer numerals

Relation with other scripts edit

Tai Tham is very similar in shape to Burmese script since both are derived from Old Mon script. New Tai Lue is a descendant of Tai Tham with its shape simplified and many consonants removed. Thai script looks distinctive from Tai Tham but covers all equivalent consonants including 8 additional consonants, as Thai is the closest sister language to the Northern Thai, Khuen, and Lue languages. A variation of Thai script (Sukhothai script) called Fakkham script was also used in Lan Na to write Northern Thai, Khuen, and Lue during the 14th century, influencing the development of the modern Tai Tham script.[31][4]

Tai Tham Burmese New Tai Lue Khmer Thai Lao
Unicode Lanna style
1. Wak Ka
  က
 
   –  –  –  –
 
   –  –  –
   –  

(modern: ຄ)

 
2. Wak Ja
 
   –  

(modern: ສ)

 
   –  –  –
   –  

(modern: ຊ)

   –  

(modern: ຍ)

3. Wak Rata
   –  

(modern: ຕ)

   –  

(modern: ຖ)

  ฑ, ฎ, ด  

(modern: ທ, ດ)

   –  

(modern: ທ)

   –  

(modern: ນ)

4. Wak Ta
 
 
 
   

(modern: ທ)

 
5. Wak Pa
 
   –  –
 
   –  –
 
   –  –
   

(modern: ພ)

 
6. Awak
ᨿ  
   –  – อย
 

(modern: ລ)

 
 
 

(modern: သ)

 –

(modern: ស)

 

(modern: ສ)

 

(modern: သ)

 –

(modern: ស)

 

(modern: ສ)

 
 
   –  

(modern: ລ)

 
   –  –  –
7. Special    –  –
   –  –

Sanskrit and Pali edit

The Tai Tham script (like all Indic scripts) uses a number of modifications to write Pali and related languages (in particular, Sanskrit). When writing Pali, only 33 consonants and 12 vowels are used.

Pali consonants in Tai Tham script edit

Plosive Nasal Approximant Fricative
voiceless voiced
unaspirated aspirated unaspirated aspirated central lateral
Velar  
[ka]
 
[kha]
 
[ga]
 
[gha]
 
[ṅa]
Palatal  
[ca]
 
[cha]
 
[ja]
 
[jha]
 
[ña]
 
[ya]
Retroflex  
[ṭa]
 
[ṭha]
 
[ḍa]
 
[ḍha]
 
[ṇa]
 
[ra]
 

[ḷa]

Dental  
[ta]
 
[tha]
 
[da]
 
[dha]
 
[na]
 
[la]
 
[sa]
Labial  
[pa]
 
[pha]
 
[ba]
 
[bha]
 
[ma]
 
[va]
Glottal  
[ha]

Sanskrit consonants in Tai Tham script edit

Plosive Nasal Approximant Frictive
voiceless voiced voiced voiced voiceless
unaspirated aspirated unaspirated aspirated unaspirated unaspirated aspirated
Guttural  
[ka]
 
[kha]
 
[ga]
 
[gha]
 
[ṅa]
 
[ha]
Palatal  
[ca]
 
[cha]
 
[ja]
 
[jha]
 
[ña]
 
[ya]
 
[śa]
Retroflex  
[ṭa]
 
[ṭha]
 
[ḍa]
 
[ḍha]
 
[ṇa]
 
[ra]
 
[ṣa]
Dental  
[ta]
 
[tha]
 
[da]
 
[dha]
 
[na]
 
[la]
 
[sa]
Labial  
[pa]
 
[pha]
 
[ba]
 
[bha]
 
[ma]
 
[va]

Unicode block edit

Tai Tham script was added to the Unicode Standard in October, 2009 with the release of version 5.2.

The Unicode block for Tai Tham is U+1A20–U+1AAF:

Tai Tham[1][2]
Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF)
  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F
U+1A2x
U+1A3x ᨿ
U+1A4x
U+1A5x  ᩖ  ᩘ  ᩙ  ᩚ  ᩛ  ᩜ  ᩝ  ᩞ
U+1A6x   ᩠   ᩢ  ᩥ  ᩦ  ᩧ  ᩨ  ᩩ  ᩪ  ᩫ  ᩬ
U+1A7x  ᩳ  ᩴ  ᩵  ᩶  ᩷  ᩸  ᩹  ᩺  ᩻  ᩼  ᩿
U+1A8x
U+1A9x
U+1AAx
Notes
1.^ As of Unicode version 15.1
2.^ Grey areas indicate non-assigned code points

Fonts edit

 
Lanna Alif vs Lanna Unicode UI

Supports for Tai Tham Unicode font in Microsoft Windows and Microsoft office are still limited[32] causing the widespread use of non-Unicode fonts. Fonts published by the Royal Society of Thailand and Chiang Mai University are also non-Unicode due to this problem and to maximize the ability to transcribe and display the ancient Tai Tham text, which frequently contains various special ligatures and symbols not supported by Unicode.[33][34] Non-Unicode fonts often use a combination of Thai script and Latin Unicode ranges to resolves the incompatibility problem of Unicode Tai Tham in Microsoft office. However, these fonts may encounter a display problem when used on web browsers as the text can be encoded as an unintelligible Thai text instead. In recent years, many Tai Tham Unicode fonts have been developed for web display and communications via smart phones. Google's Noto Sans Tai Tham becomes the default font for Tai Tham on Mac OS and iOS.[35] However, the current version of this font still fails to display Tai Tham text correctly. The table below gives a list of publicly available Tai Tham fonts.

Font name Supports Script style Font family Publisher
(with page link)
Unicode[a] Non-Unicode[b]
A Tai Tham KH New V3 Yes No Khün Sans-serif Arloka Tai Tham Unicode group
A Tai Tham LN Yes No Lanna Serif Arloka
Chiangsaen Alif Yes No Lanna Sans-serif
CR Insom Lanna Yes Yes Lanna Serif Worawut Thanawatanawanich
Hariphunchai Yes No Lanna Serif TragerStudio, Richard Wordingham
Kotthabun Yes No Lao Tham Serif Theppitak Karoonboonyanan Tai Tham Unicode group
Lanna Alif Yes No Lanna Sans-serif
Lamphun Yes No Lanna Serif Richard Wordingham
LN Mon Saen No Yes Khün Serif Chiang Mai University (page link), Pichai Saengboon
LN Tilok No Yes Lanna Serif Chiang Mai University (page link), Pichai Saengboon
LN Wat Inda No Yes Khün Serif Chiang Mai University (page link), Pichai Saengboon
Noto Sans Tai Tham Yes No Khün Sans-serif Google Fonts
Pali-Kotthabun Pali only Yes Lao Tham Serif Worawut Thanawatanawanich, Theppitak Karoonboonyanan
Pali-Tilok Pali only Yes Lanna Serif Worawut Thanawatanawanich, Pichai Saengboon
Payap Lanna Yes No Lanna Serif SIL International
RST-ISAN No Yes Lao Tham Serif Royal Society of Thailand (page link)
RST-LANNA No Yes Lanna Serif Royal Society of Thailand (page link)
Tai Tham BXL Yes No Lue Serif Tai Tham Unicode group
Tai Tham Kammattana Yes No Khün Serif Tai Tham Unicode group
Tai Tham Kasem Yes No Lanna Serif Tai Tham Unicode group
Tai Tham Kruba Promma Yes No Lanna Serif Tai Tham Unicode group
Tai Tham Nang Kham Yes No Khün Serif Tai Tham Unicode group
Tai Tham Sripanyawut Yes No Lanna Serif Tai Tham Unicode group
Tai Tham Thatdaokham Yes No Lue Serif Tai Tham Unicode group
VS Tham Lanxang Yes Yes Lao Tham Serif Worawut Thanawatanawanich
Note
  1. ^ Not supported by Microsoft Office.
  2. ^ Using Thai Unicode block, suitable for Microsoft Office.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Diringer, David (1948). Alphabet a key to the history of mankind. p. 411.
  2. ^ Hartmann, John F. (1986). "The spread of South Indic scripts in Southeast Asia". Crossroads: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 3 (1): 6–20. JSTOR 40860228.
  3. ^ Penth, Hans (1986). "On the History of Thai scripts" (PDF). Siam Society Newsletter. Vol. 2, no. 3.
  4. ^ a b c d Prongthura, Naiyana (1982). Dhamma script of Northern Thailand (อักษรธรรมลานนา) (Thesis) (in Thai). Bangkok: Silapakorn University.
  5. ^ a b Everson, Michael, Hosken, Martin, & Constable, Peter. (2007). Revised proposal for encoding the Lanna script in the BMP of the UCS.
  6. ^ Natnapang Burutphakdee (October 2004). [Attitudes of Northern Thai Youth towards Kammuang and the Lanna Script] (PDF) (M.A. Thesis). Presented at 4th National Symposium on Graduate Research, Chiang Mai, Thailand, August 10–11, 2004. Asst. Prof. Dr. Kirk R. Person, adviser. Chiang Mai: Payap University. P. 7, digital image 30. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-05-05. Retrieved June 8, 2013. The reason why they called this language 'Kammuang' is because they used this language in the towns where they lived together, which were surrounded by mountainous areas where there were many hill tribe people.
  7. ^ Hundius, Harald; Wharton, David (2010). "The Digital Library of Lao Manuscripts". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. ^ Iijima, Akiko (2009-03-31). "Preliminary Notes on "the Cultural Region of Tham Script Manuscripts"". Senri Ethnological Studies. 74. doi:10.15021/00002574. S2CID 160928923.
  9. ^ a b ธวัช ปุณโณทก (Punnothek, T.) อักษรโบราณอีสาน: อักขรวิทยาอักษรตัวธรรมและไทยน้อย. กรุงเทพฯ: สยามเพรส แมเนจเม้นท์, ๒๕๔๐, ๕๔
  10. ^ a b c McDaniel, J. (2005). Notes on the lao influence on northern thai buddhist literature. The literary heritage of Laos: Preservation, dissemination, and research perspectives. Vientiane, Laos: Lao National Archives.
  11. ^ Chew, P., Saengboon, P., & Wordingham, R. (2015). "Tai Tham: A Hybrid Script that Challenges Current Encoding Models". Presented at the Internationalization and Unicode Conference (IUC 39).
  12. ^ a b The Lanna Dictionary (in Thai). Chiang Mai: Chiang Mai Rajabhat University. 2007. pp. 305–314. ISBN 9789747793567.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Rungruangsri, Udom (2004). พจนานุกรมล้านนา-ไทย ฉบับแม่ฟ้าหลวง (in Thai) (Revised ed.). Chiang Mai: Chiang Mai University. ISBN 9789746851756.
  14. ^ Watcharasastr, Boonkid (2005). แบบเรียนภาษาเมืองล้านนา ᨷᩯ᩠ᨷᩁ᩠ᨿᩁᨽᩣᩇᩣᨾᩮᩬᩨᨦᩃ᩶ᩣ᩠ᨶᨶᩣ (in Thai). Chiang Mai: Thara Thong Publishing. p. 20. ISBN 9748547205. {{cite book}}: templatestyles stripmarker in |title= at position 25 (help)
  15. ^ Everson, Michael; Hosken, Martin; Constable, Peter (March 21, 2007). "Lanna Unicode: A Proposal" (PDF). Retrieved May 4, 2015.
  16. ^ Burutphakdee, Natnapang (October 2004). (PDF). SIL International. pp. 32–61. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 5, 2015.
  17. ^ Watcharasastr, Boonkid (2005). แบบเรียนภาษาเมืองล้านนา ᨷᩯ᩠ᨷᩁ᩠ᨿᩁᨽᩣᩇᩣᨾᩮᩬᩨᨦᩃ᩶ᩣ᩠ᨶᨶᩣ (in Thai). Chiang Mai: Thara Thong Publishing. p. 178. ISBN 9748547205. {{cite book}}: templatestyles stripmarker in |title= at position 25 (help)
  18. ^ Watcharasastr, Boonkid (2005). แบบเรียนภาษาเมืองล้านนา ᨷᩯ᩠ᨷᩁ᩠ᨿᩁᨽᩣᩇᩣᨾᩮᩬᩨᨦᩃ᩶ᩣ᩠ᨶᨶᩣ (in Thai). Chiang Mai: Thara Thong Publishing. p. 24. ISBN 9748547205.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g Owen, R. Wyn (2017). "A description and linguistic analysis of the Tai Khuen writing system". Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society. 10 (1): 140–164. hdl:10524/52403.
  20. ^ a b c Buddhism Summer Curriculum Level 1 Book 2 (ᩉᩖᩢᨠᩈᩪᨲ᩠ᨲ᩼ᨻᩕᨻᩩᨴ᩠ᨵᩈᩣᩈᨶᩣᨽᩣ᩠ᨣᩁᩬ᩶ᩁ ᨩᩢ᩠᩶ᨶ ᪑ ᩃᩮ᩠᩵ᨾ ᪒). Vol. 2. Bangkok: Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University Press. 2010. Retrieved 3 August 2022. {{cite book}}: templatestyles stripmarker in |title= at position 44 (help)
  21. ^ a b The Lanna Dictionary. Chiang Mai: Chiang Mai Rajabhat University. 2007. pp. ต. ISBN 9789747793567.
  22. ^ Watcharasastr, Boonkid (2005). แบบเรียนภาษาเมืองล้านนา ᨷᩯ᩠ᨷᩁ᩠ᨿᩁᨽᩣᩇᩣᨾᩮᩬᩨᨦᩃ᩶ᩣ᩠ᨶᨶᩣ (in Thai). Chiang Mai: Thara Thong Publishing. ISBN 9748547205. {{cite book}}: templatestyles stripmarker in |title= at position 25 (help)
  23. ^ a b Sunthornsing, Charee. "พจนานุกรมภาษาล้านนา-ไทย ฉบับมรดกล้านนา". มรดกล้านนา. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  24. ^ The Lanna Dictionary. Chiang Mai: Chiang Mai Rajabhat University. 2007. p. 625. ISBN 9789747793567.
  25. ^ Sunthornsing, Charee. "พจนานุกรมภาษาล้านนา-ไทย ฉบับมรดกล้านนา". มรดกล้านนา. Retrieved 27 December 2022.
  26. ^ "รายงานสัมมนา แนวทางการเขียนศัพท์วิชาการด้วยอักษรธรรมล้านนา" [Seminar report: guidelines for writing technical terms using Lanna script.] (PDF). The Center for the Promotion of Arts and Culture, Chiang Mai University. 17 January 2004. p. 44. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  27. ^ The Lanna Dictionary. Chiang Mai: Chiang Mai Rajabhat University. 2007. p. 628. ISBN 9789747793567.
  28. ^ The Lanna Dictionary. Chiang Mai: Chiang Mai Rajabhat University. 2007. p. 612. ISBN 9789747793567.
  29. ^ The Lanna Dictionary. Chiang Mai: Chiang Mai Rajabhat University. 2007. p. 624. ISBN 9789747793567.
  30. ^ Omniglot. Lanna alphabet (Tua Mueang). Retrieved 28 April 2019
  31. ^ Vimonkasam, Kannika (1981). Fakkham script found in Northern Thai inscriptions (อักษรฝักขามที่พบในศิลาจารึกภาคเหนือ) (Thesis) (in Thai). Bangkok: Silapakorn University.
  32. ^ "Creating and supporting OpenType fonts for the Universal Shaping Engine". Microsoft technical documentation. 16 June 2022. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  33. ^ "Lanna Fonts (ฟอนต์ล้านนา)". The Center for the Promotion of Arts and Culture, Chiang Mai University. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  34. ^ "Six fonts for ancient scripts (ชุดแบบอักษรหรือฟอนต์อักษรโบราณ ๖ ชุด)". The Royal Society of Thailand. Retrieved 5 August 2022.
  35. ^ "System Fonts". Apple Developer. Retrieved 5 August 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Khamjan, Mala(มาลา คำจันทร์). Kham Mueang Dictionary(พจนานุกรมคำเมือง). Chiang Mai: bookworm, 2008. ISBN 978-974-8418-55-1.
  • "Lanna script". Complete information from traditional sources. Sky Knowledge. Retrieved 2018-07-15.
  • Owen, R. Wyn. 2017. A description and linguistic analysis of the Tai Khuen writing system. Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society 10.1, 140–164.
  • Trager, Ed. (2014). Hariphunchai Tai Tham Font Project.
  • Wordingham, Richard. Lamphun glyphs (A page with specimen of the font Lamphun). Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  • Alan Wood's Tai Tham test page

External links edit

  • ISO/IEC 10646:2003/Amd.5:2008 Universal Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (UCS) – Amendment 5: AMENDMENT 5: Tai Tham, Tai Viet, Avestan, Egyptian Hieroglyphs, CJK Unified Ideographs Extension C, and other characters

tham, script, unicode, block, tham, unicode, block, tham, meaning, scripture, abugida, writing, system, used, mainly, group, southwestern, languages, northern, thai, khün, well, liturgical, languages, buddhism, pali, sanskrit, historically, known, tham, ᨵᨾ, th. For the Unicode block see Tai Tham Unicode block Tai Tham script Tham meaning scripture is an abugida writing system used mainly for a group of Southwestern Tai languages i e Northern Thai Tai Lu Khun and Lao as well as the liturgical languages of Buddhism i e Pali and Sanskrit It is historically known as Tua Tham ᨲ ᩅ ᨵᨾ ᨾ or ᨲ ᩅ ᨵ ᨾ ᨾ In Thailand and Myanmar the script is often referred to as Lanna script Thai xksrthrrmlanna RTGS Akson Tham Lan Na Burmese လန နအက ခရ RTGS Lanna Akara in relation to the historical kingdom of Lan Na situating in the Northern region of modern day Thailand and a part of Shan state in Myanmar 4 Local people in Northern Thailand also call the script as Tua Mueang ᨲ ᩅ ᨾ ᨦ Northern Thai pronunciation tǔa mɯ a ŋ listen in parallel to Kam Mueang a local name for Northern Thai language 4 In Laos and Isan region of Thailand a variation of Tai Tham script often dubbed Lao Tham is also known by the locals as To Tham Lao Northeastern Thai otthrrmlaw toː tʰam laːw cf Lao ໂຕທຳ ໂຕທ ມ BGN PCGN to tham or Yuan script 5 Tai Tham script is traditionally written on a dried palm leaf as a palm leaf manuscript 4 Tai Thamᨲ ᩅ ᨵ ᨾ ᨾ Tua ThamScript typeAbugidaTime periodc 1300 presentDirectionLeft to right LanguagesNorthern Thai Tai Lu Khun Isan and LaoRelated scriptsParent systemsProto Sinaitic alphabet a Phoenician alphabet a Aramaic alphabet a BrahmiTamil BrahmiPallava alphabet 1 Old Mon script 1 2 3 Tai ThamChild systemsNew Tai Lue Tham LaoISO 15924ISO 15924Lana 351 Tai Tham Lanna UnicodeUnicode aliasTai ThamUnicode rangeU 1A20 U 1AAF a The Semitic origin of the Brahmic scripts is not universally agreed upon This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters The Northern Thai language is a close relative of standard Thai It is spoken by nearly 6 million people in Northern Thailand and several thousand in Laos of whom few are literate in Lanna script The script is still read by older monks Northern Thai has six linguistic tones and Thai only five making transcription into the Thai alphabet problematic There is some resurgent interest in the script among younger people but an added complication is that the modern spoken form called Kam Muang differs in pronunciation from the older form 6 There are 670 000 speakers of Tai Lu some of those born before 1950 are literate in Tham also known as Old Tai Lue citation needed The script has also continued to be taught in the monasteries The New Tai Lue script is derived from Tham There are 120 000 speakers of Khun for which Lanna is the only script This article contains Lanna text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Tai Tham script Contents 1 History 2 Characteristics 3 Consonants 3 1 Consonant chart 3 2 Consonant combinations and ligatures 3 2 1 Consonant digraph with Ha 3 2 2 Special letters 4 Vowels 4 1 Dependent vowels 4 2 Independent vowels 5 Tone marks 5 1 Tone mark conjugation 6 Numerals 7 Relation with other scripts 8 Sanskrit and Pali 8 1 Pali consonants in Tai Tham script 8 2 Sanskrit consonants in Tai Tham script 9 Unicode block 10 Fonts 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp Nameboard of a Buddhist temple in Chiang Mai written with Lanna Wat Mokhamtuang and street number 119 in Thai nbsp Northern Thai inscription in Tai Tham script in Chiang Mai The Tai Tham script shows a strong similarity to the Mon script used by the Mon kingdom of Haripunjaya around the 13th century CE in the present day Lamphun Province of Northern Thailand The oldest known document containing the Tai Tham script is dated to 1376 CE and was found in Sukhothai The document is a bilingual inscription on a gold folio containing one line of Pali written in the Tai Tham script while the vernacular is written in the Siamese language using the Sukhothai script The Tai Tham script was adapted to write vernacular languages not later than the 15th century CE most probably in Chiang Mai in the Lan Na Kingdom 7 The script spread from Lan Na to surrounding areas such as modern day Laos Isan Shan State and Sipsong Panna Numerous local variants developed such as the Lue variant Sipsong Panna the Khuen variant Shan State and the Tham Lao variant Laos and Isan The variants differ only slightly in appearance and the system of writing has remained the same 8 As the name suggests the use of the Tham Dharma script in Lao was restricted to religious literature either used to transcribe Pali or religious treatises written in Lao intended solely for the clergy Religious instructional materials and prayer books dedicated to the laity were written in Tai Noi instead As a result only a few people outside the temples were literate in the script In Isan evidence of the script includes two stone inscriptions such as the one housed at Wat Tham Suwannakhuha in Nong Bua Lamphu dated to 1564 and another from Wat Mahaphon in Maha Sarakham from the same period 9 nbsp A palm leaf manuscript written in Tai Tham script Collection of the Museum of Ethnology Minzu University of China Most of the script is recorded on palm leaf manuscripts many of which were destroyed during the Thaification purges of the 1930s contemporaneously this period of Thai nationalisation also ended its use as the primary written language in Northern Thailand 10 Although no longer in use in Isan the alphabet is enjoying a resurgence in Northern Thailand and is still used as the primary written script for the Tai Lu and Tai Khun languages spoken in the Golden Triangle where Thailand Laos Burma and southern China meet Its use is rather limited to the long term monks in Laos and most materials published today are in the modern Lao script 10 Characteristics editAlthough both the ancient forms of the Mon and Khmer script are different they are both abugidas that descend from the Brahmic scripts introduced via contacts with South Indian traders soldiers merchants and Brahmans As a Mon derived script Tai Tham has many similarities with the writing systems for Burmese Shan Rakhine and modern Mon and rounder letter forms compared to the angled letters of Khmer 10 Letters can be stacked sometimes with special subscript forms similar to which was used in Tai Noi and also in modern Lao as the subscript version of ຣ r or ລ l as in Lao ຫ ວງພ ະບາງ ຫລວງພຣະບາງ Letters also are more circular or rounded than the typically angled style of Khmer 9 Consonants editThere are 43 Tai Tham consonants They are divided into three groups categorized consonants ᨻ ᨿ ᨬ ᨩᨶᨶ ᩅ ᨣ ᨣ payanjana nai wak non categorized consonants ᨻ ᨿ ᨬ ᨩᨶᩋᩅ ᨣ ᨣ payanjana awak and additional consonants ᨻ ᨿ ᨬ ᨩᨶᨲ ᨾ payanjana tueam Categorized consonants and non categorized consonants are those derived from Old Mon script used for Pali and Sanskrit languages Similar to Devanagari Pallava script and Burmese script categorized consonants are divided into 5 subgroups called wak ᩅ ᨣ ᨣ i e wak ka ᨠ wak ja ᨧ wak rata ᨭ wak ta ᨲ and wak pa ᨷ The additional consonants are the consonants invented to write Tai sounds that are originally not found in Pali In a dictionary letter ᩂ and ᩄ are often put in the consonant list following the letter ᩁ and ᩃ respectively However they are a syllabary also a vowel and not a consonant letter Consonant chart edit There are 25 categorized consonants 10 non categorized consonants and 8 additional consonants Similar to Khmer Tai Tham also has a subjoined form called haang ᩉ ᨦ tua joeng ᨲ ᩅ ᨩ ᨦ or tua hoy ᨲ ᩅ ᩉ ᨿ In the Unicode input method sakot sign U1A60 is used to trigger the subjoined forms 5 11 The additional consonants are shown in yellow These consonants have the characteristics of lacking the subjoined form Similar to Thai script and Lao script consonants in Tai Tham can be classified into high mid and low classes regarding to the tone rules Letter Subjoinedform Name Transliteration IPA ToneClass Translit IPA Initial Final Initial Final 1 Wak Ka ᨠ nbsp ᨠ ka kǎ k k k k high ᨡ nbsp ᨡ xa kha xǎ kʰǎ x kh k x kʰ k high ᨢ a nbsp xa kha xǎ kʰǎ x kh x kʰ k high ᨣ nbsp ᨣ ka ka k k k k low ᨤ a nbsp xa kha xa kʰǎ x kh x kʰ k low ᨥ nbsp ᨥ xa kha xa kʰa x kh k x kʰ k low ᨦ nbsp ᨦ nga ŋa ng ng ŋ ŋ low 2 Wak Ja ᨧ nbsp ᨧ ja ca t ɕǎ j c t t ɕ t high ᨨ nbsp ᨨ sa cha sǎ t ɕʰǎ s ch s t ɕʰ high ᨩ nbsp ᨩ ja ca t ɕa j c t t ɕ t low ᨪ a nbsp sa sa s t s t low ᨫ nbsp nbsp ᨫ sa cha sa t ɕʰa s ch t s t ɕʰa t low ᨬ nbsp ᨬ nya ɲa ny y n ɲ j b n low 3 Wak Rata ᨭ nbsp ᨭ rata lǎ tǎ t t t t high ᨮ nbsp nbsp ᨮ ratha lǎ tʰǎ th t tʰ t high ᨯ nbsp ᨯ da dǎ d th c t d tʰ c t mid ᨰ nbsp ᨰ ratha lǎ tʰa th t tʰ t low ᨱ nbsp ᨱ rana lǎ na n n n n low 4 Wak Ta ᨲ nbsp ᨲ ta tǎ t t t t high ᨳ nbsp ᨳ tha tʰǎ th t tʰ t high ᨴ nbsp ᨴ ta ta t t t t low ᨵ nbsp ᨵ tha tʰa th t tʰ t low ᨶ nbsp ᨶ na na n n n n low 5 Wak Pa ᨷ nbsp ᨷ ba bǎ b p b d p mid ᨷ pa e pǎ p p p e 12 13 p high 13 12 ᨸ a f nbsp pa pǎ p p p p high ᨹ nbsp ᨹ pha pʰǎ ph pʰ high ᨺ a nbsp fa fǎ f f high ᨻ nbsp ᨻ pa pa p p p p low ᨼ a nbsp fa fa f p f p low ᨽ nbsp ᨽ pha pʰa ph p pʰ p low ᨾ nbsp ᨾ ma ma m m m m low 6 Awak ᨿ nbsp ᨿ nya ɲa ny y ɲ j b low ᩀ a nbsp ya jǎ y j mid ᩁ nbsp ᩁ ra la la r g l h n r c l c h n low ᩃ nbsp ᩃ la la l n l n low ᩅ nbsp ᩅ wa wa w w low ᩆ nbsp ᩆ sa sǎ s t s t high ᩇ nbsp ᩇ sa sǎ s t s t high ᩈ nbsp ᩈ sa sǎ s t s t high ᩉ nbsp ᩉ ha hǎ h h high ᩊ nbsp ᩊ la la l n l n low ᩋ nbsp nbsp a ʔǎ ʔ mid ᩌ a nbsp ha ha h h low Notes a b c d e f g h Added consonant invented for Tai sound as an extension to the original chategorized Pali vagga consonants These consonants have the characteristics of lacking the subjoined form a b In Tai Lue language a b c d Influence from Thai Pali and Sanskrit languages When used to write Tai words a b When used to write Pali Sanskrit derived words Used only for Tai words not for Pali Often transliterated as r to preserve the semantics for Thai and Pali Sanskrit words Consonant combinations and ligatures edit Consonant digraph with Ha edit Certain consonants in the low class group lack their high class counterpart These consonants are sometimes called the single low class consonants Their high class counterparts are created by the combination with letter high Ha ᩉ as a digraph called Ha Nam ᩉ ᨶ 14 Letter Name Transliteration IPA Tone Class Translit IPA Initial Final Initial Final ᩉ ᨦ nga ŋǎ ng ŋ high ᩉ ᨶ na nǎ n n high ᩉ ᨾ ma mǎ m m high ᩉ ᨿ nya ɲǎ ny ɲ j a high ᩉ ra la ha rǎ lǎ hǎ r b l h r c l c h high ᩉ ᩉ ᩃ la lǎ l l high ᩉ ᩅ wa wǎ w w high Notes In Tai Lue language Often transliterated as r to preserve the semantics for Thai and Pali Sanskrit words a b Influence from Thai Pali and Sanskrit languages Special letters edit Letter Name Phonetic value IPA Comments Tham Translit IPA ᩓ nbsp nbsp a ᩃ ᩃ lae lɛ ː lɛʔ lɛ ː Ligature of letter ᩃ la and superscript vowel sign e ᨶ nbsp ᨶ naa naː naː Ligature of letter ᨶ na and vowel sign a ᨬ ᨬ nbsp ᨬᨬ nya nya ɲa ʔ ɲa ʔ n ɲ Ligature of letter ᨱ rana and ᨬ nya used in lieu of double ᨬ ᩔ nbsp ᩈ ᩈ ᨦᩉ ᨦ sa song hong sǎː sɔ ːŋ hɔ ːŋ t s Ligature of double ᩈ high sa nbsp ᩁᩁ ᨦ rarong rahong la hōːŋ r l ʰ Subjoined form of letter ᩁ ra for a consonant cluster such as ᨷ pra ᨻ pra as opposed to the subjoined form ᩁ used as a final consonant Traditionally considered as a special letter Notes Khuen Lue style Vowels editVowel characters come in two forms as stand alone letters for writing initial vowels or as diacritics that can be attached to all sides of the consonant letters However Lanna excels in terms of the number of diacritics used Some vowel sounds can be written with a combination of as many as four diacritics one on each side of the consonant 15 16 Dependent vowels edit Short vowels a with consonant ᨠ Long vowels with consonant ᨠ IPA No final consonant With final consonant ᨦ b IPA No final consonant With final consonant ᨦ b Simple vowels a ᨠ ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ aː ᨠ c ᨠ ᨦ i ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ iː ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ ɯ ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ ɯː ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ u ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᨦ uː ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᨦ e ᨠ ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᨦ eː ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ ɛ ᨠ ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᨦ ɛː ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ o ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ oː ᨠ ᨠ c d ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᨦ ɔ ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᨦ ɔː ᨠ ᨠ e ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᨦ ɤ ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᨦ ɤː ᨠ ᨠ ᨦ Diphthongs iaʔ ᨠ ᨿ ᨠ ᨿ ᨦ ᨠ ᨿᨦ ia ᨠ ᨿ ᨠ ᨿᨦ ɯaʔ ᨠ ᩋ ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᨦ ɯa ᨠ ᩋ ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᩋ ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᨦ ᨠ ᩋ ᨠ ᨦ uaʔ ᨠ ᩅ ᨠ ᩅ ᨦ ᨠ ᩅᨦ ua ᨠ ᩅ ᨠ ᩅᨦ ᨠ ᩅᨦ Phonetic diphthongs f aw ᨠ c ᨠ g ᨠ h aj ᨠ ᨠ ᨠ ᨿ ᨠ ᨿ ᨿ ᨠ ᨿ ᨿ 17 ᨠ ᨿ 13 ɔːj ᨠ e ᨠ ᨿ Extra vowels aŋ ᨠ d ᨠ d am ᨠ c lɯ ᩂ lɯː ᩂ i ᩄ j 13 Notes Short vowels are followed by a glottal stop ʔ if they are followed by another consonant a b Hypothetical spelling for demonstrating the consonant and vowel positions a b c d Symbol may be used instead for narrow consonants such as ᨣ ᨧ ᨵ ᨰ ᨴ ᨷ ᩅ to increase legibility a b c Only used for Pali words a b Used in Khuen and Lue spelling conventions Only shows the diphthongs with special diacritic symbols Used in Lanna spelling convention called Mai Kao Ho Nueng ᨾ ᨠ ᩉ ᩉ ᨶ ᨦ Called Mai Kao Ju Ji ᨾ ᨠ ᨧ ᨧ Equivalent to Thai script vi Equivalent to Thai script li Independent vowels edit Independent vowels are mainly reserved for writing Pali words except for ᩐ ʔau which is used as a special vowel sign and not for Pali words 18 Tai Tham nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp ᩋ ᩋ ᩍ ᩎ ᩏ ᩐ ᩑ ᩒ ᩐ IPA ʔaʔ ʔaː ʔiʔ ʔiː ʔuʔ ʔuː ʔeː ʔōː ʔaw Tone marks editFurther information Northern Thai language Tones Tone marks Name Comments Tham Transliteration IPA nbsp ᨾ ᩀ ᨠ 13 ᨾ ᩀ 13 mai yak mai yo maj jǎk maj jɔ ʔ nbsp ᨾ ᨡ ᨩ ᨦ 13 ᨾ ᨪ ᨯ 19 mai kho jang mai sat maj kʰɔ ː t ɕaːŋ maj sat nbsp ᨾ ᨠ ᩉ ᨶ ᩋ 20 mai ko nuea maj kɔ nɯa Invented for Khuen language shape like vowel sign mai ko 19 nbsp ᨾ ᩈ ᨦᩉ ᨶ ᩋ 20 mai song nuea maj sɔ ːŋ nɯa Invented for Khuen language shape like ᪂ Hora digit 2 19 nbsp ᨾ ᩈ ᨾᩉ ᨶ ᩋ 20 mai sam nuea maj sǎːm nɯa Invented for Khuen language shape like ᪃ Hora digit 3 19 nbsp Borrowed from Thai script Mai Chattawa into Khuen language Interchangeable with mai song nuea 19 nbsp Borrowed from Thai script Mai Tho into Khuen language Interchangeable with mai sam nuea 19 Tone mark conjugation edit There are six phonemic tones in the Chiang Mai dialect of Northern Thai low rising low falling high level with glottal stop mid level high falling and high rising Tones in Chiang Mai dialect are very close to the standard Thai five tones systems and the equivalence can be drawn between the two Lanna Thai dictionaries often equate Chiang Mai tones with standard Thai tones shown in a table below Northern Thai Standard Thai tone equivalence Chiang Mai Tone 21 Thai Tone Equivalence 21 Name Tone letters Name Tone letters mid level 33 or samy saman mid level 33 or low falling 21 or exk ek low falling 21 or high falling 42 or oth tho high falling 41 or high level glottalized 44ʔ or ʔ othphiess a special tho a high rising 45 or tri tree high rising 45 or low rising 24 or ctwa chattawa low rising 24 or a b Name frequently given by grammar books Tone mark conjugation system of Tai Tham highly correlates with the system used by Thai script Despite the difference in tone quality between Northern Thai Tai Khuen Thai and Lao equivalent words in each language are in large part marked with the same or equivalent tone mark For example the word ᨣ Northern Thai pronunciation kaː Khuen kaː which is equivalent to Thai kha Thai pronunciation kʰaː and Lao ຄ າ Lao pronunciation kʰaː all has the same meaning to trade and is expressed with the same or equivalent tone mark mai tho mai kho jang but is pronounced with different tones differed by the languages Tone mark conjugation in Tai Tham follows the same model used for Thai script Consonants are divided into 3 classes high mid low with some degree of variation form Thai script due to the phonological differences between Northern Thai and standard Thai Consonants in each class are combined with these tone marks to give a different tonal pattern Only two tone marks mai yo and mai kho jang are mainly used Low class and High class consonants only have one tone per one tone mark Hence to achieve the 6 tones while using only 2 tone marks and one case of no tone mark they are conjugated as a couple of the same sound 22 High class Low class consonants couple for tone conjugation IPA High class Low class k ᨠ ᨣ kʰ ᨡ ᨢ ᨤ ᨥ ŋ ᩉ ᨦ ᨦ t ɕ ᨧ ᨩ s ᨨ ᩆ ᩇ ᩈ ᨪ ᨫ ɲ ᩉ ᨿ ᨬ ᨿ t ᨭ ᨲ ᨴ tʰ ᨮ ᨳ ᨰ ᨵ n ᩉ ᨶ ᨱ ᨶ p ᨷ a ᨸ ᨻ pʰ ᨹ ᨽ f ᨺ ᨼ m ᩉ ᨾ ᨾ r ᩉ ᩁ l ᩉ ᩉ ᩃ ᩉ ᩃ ᩊ ᩁ h ᩉ ᩉ ᩌ ᩁ w ᩉ ᩅ ᩅ Notes Pali derived words Mid class consonants ʔ b d and j do not have a couple for tone conjugation Hence different tones can be expressed with the same tone mark Readers have to rely on the context in order to know the correct tone pronunciation Therefore to solve this ambiguity three new tone marks mai ko nuea mai song nuea and mai sam nuea were invented for the mid class consonants in Khuen language However these three new tone marks aren t used in Lanna spelling convention and even in Khuen they are rarely used The use of these new three tone marks is also not standardized and may also differ between the dialects of Khuen language 19 Moreover similar to standard Thai the tonal pattern for each consonant class also differs by vowel length and final consonant sounds which can be divided into the checked and unchecked syllables Checked syllables are a group of syllables with the obstruent coda sounds p t k and ʔ short vowel with no final consonant actually ends with the glottal stop but often omitted The unchecked syllables are a group of syllables with the sonorant coda sound m n ŋ j and w Hence by combining the consonant classes and the system of checked unchecked syllables the full tone conjugation table can be constructed as shown below Color codes are assigned in the table to each tone mark cyan no tone mark yellow mai yo equi Thai mai ek pink mai kho jang equi Thai mai tho Low class and high class rows are paired together to show the system of the consonant couples final consonant sound Vowel length Consonant class Chiang Mai Tone mid level low falling high falling high level glottalized high rising low rising Thai Tone Equivalence samy saman exk ek oth tho othphiess special tho a tri tree ctwa chattawa mid low falling high rising m n ŋ j w coda unchecked syllables sonorant long amp short Low ᨴ taː to smear ᨴ taː port ᨴ taː to challenge High ᨲ ᨦ taːŋ to carry ᨲ ᨶ taːn ʔ to oppose ᨲ taː eye Mid ᩋ ᨿ ʔuj soft hair ᩋ ᨿ ʔuj to scatter ᩋ ᨿᩌ ᨿ b 23 ʔuj huj greenish ᩋ ᨿ 23 ʔuj ʔ thigh ᩋ ᨿ b 24 ʔuj grand parents ᩋ ᨿ b 25 ʔuj breast ʔ p t k coda c checked syllables obstruent long Low ᨴ ᨠ taːk slug ᨶ ᨴ b d 26 noːt note High ᨲ ᨠ taːk to dry Mid ᨯ ᨷ daːp sword ᩋ ᨯ b 27 ʔuːt to swell ᩋ ᨷ b 28 ʔɔːp bottle neck short Low ᨴ ᨠ tak to greet High ᨲ ᨷ tap liver Mid ᩋ ᨠ b 29 ʔuk to ferment ᨯ ᨷ dap to distinguish fire Notes Not exist in standard Thai but often approximated as the special falling tone othphiess in many grammar books and the academic circle in Thailand a b c d e f g Secondary form for mid class consonants This form is less frequently found and not listed in some grammar book However there are dictionary records of words in this form especially the word start with ᩋ ʔ Some linguists consider this class as separated tones group Mostly the borrow words from Thai and English Numerals editLanna has two sets of numerals The first set Lek Nai Tham is reserved for liturgical purposes The other set Lek Hora is used in everyday life 30 Arabic numerals 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Hora digits ᪀ ᪁ ᪂ ᪃ ᪄ ᪅ ᪆ ᪇ ᪈ ᪉ Tham digits ᪐ ᪑ ᪒ ᪓ ᪔ ᪕ ᪖ ᪗ ᪘ ᪙ Thai numerals 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Lao numerals ໐ ໑ ໒ ໓ ໔ ໕ ໖ ໗ ໘ ໙ Burmese numerals 0 ၁ ၂ ၃ ၄ ၅ ၆ ၇ ၈ ၉ Khmer numerals ០ ១ ២ ៣ ៤ ៥ ៦ ៧ ៨ ៩Relation with other scripts editTai Tham is very similar in shape to Burmese script since both are derived from Old Mon script New Tai Lue is a descendant of Tai Tham with its shape simplified and many consonants removed Thai script looks distinctive from Tai Tham but covers all equivalent consonants including 8 additional consonants as Thai is the closest sister language to the Northern Thai Khuen and Lue languages A variation of Thai script Sukhothai script called Fakkham script was also used in Lan Na to write Northern Thai Khuen and Lue during the 14th century influencing the development of the modern Tai Tham script 31 4 Tai Tham Burmese New Tai Lue Khmer Thai Lao Unicode Lanna style 1 Wak Ka ᨠ nbsp က ᦂ ក k ກ ᨡ nbsp ခ ᦃ ខ kh ຂ ᨢ nbsp kh ᨣ nbsp ဂ ᦅ គ kh ຄ ᨤ nbsp ᦆ Kh ᨥ nbsp ဃ ឃ kh nbsp modern ຄ ᨦ nbsp င ᦇ ង ng ງ 2 Wak Ja ᨧ nbsp စ ᦈ ច c ຈ ᨨ nbsp ဆ ឆ ch nbsp modern ສ ᨩ nbsp ဇ ᦋ ជ ch ຊ ᨪ nbsp ᦌ s ᨫ nbsp ဈ ឈ ch nbsp modern ຊ ᨬ nbsp ည ញ y nbsp modern ຍ 3 Wak Rata ᨭ nbsp ဋ ដ t nbsp modern ຕ ᨮ nbsp ဌ ឋ th nbsp modern ຖ ᨯ nbsp ဍ ᦡ ឌ th d d nbsp modern ທ ດ ᨰ nbsp ဎ ឍ th nbsp modern ທ ᨱ nbsp ဏ ណ n nbsp modern ນ 4 Wak Ta ᨲ nbsp တ ᦎ ត t ຕ ᨳ nbsp ထ ᦏ ថ th ຖ ᨴ nbsp ဒ ᦑ ទ th ທ ᨵ nbsp ဓ ᦒ ធ th nbsp modern ທ ᨶ nbsp န ᦓ ន n ນ 5 Wak Pa ᨷ nbsp ပ ᦢ ប b ບ ᨸ nbsp ᦔ p ປ ᨹ nbsp ဖ ᦕ ផ ph ຜ ᨺ nbsp ᦚ f ຝ ᨻ nbsp ဗ ᦗ ព ph ພ ᨼ nbsp ᦝ f ຟ ᨽ nbsp ဘ ᦘ ភ ph nbsp modern ພ ᨾ nbsp မ ᦙ ម m ມ 6 Awak ᨿ nbsp ယ ᦍ យ y ຍ ᩀ nbsp ᦊ xy ຢ ᩁ nbsp ရ ᦣ រ r ຣ modern ລ ᩃ nbsp လ ᦟ ល l ລ ᩅ nbsp ဝ ᦞ វ w ວ ᩆ nbsp ၐ modern သ ឝ modern ស s nbsp modern ສ ᩇ nbsp ၑ modern သ ឞ modern ស s nbsp modern ສ ᩈ nbsp သ ᦉ ស s ສ ᩉ nbsp ဟ ᦠ ហ h ຫ ᩊ nbsp ဠ ឡ l nbsp modern ລ ᩋ nbsp အ ᦀ អ x ອ ᩌ nbsp h ຮ 7 Special ᩂ nbsp ၒ ឫ v ᩄ nbsp ၔ ឭ l Sanskrit and Pali editThe Tai Tham script like all Indic scripts uses a number of modifications to write Pali and related languages in particular Sanskrit When writing Pali only 33 consonants and 12 vowels are used Pali consonants in Tai Tham script edit Plosive Nasal Approximant Fricative voiceless voiced unaspirated aspirated unaspirated aspirated central lateral Velar nbsp ka nbsp kha nbsp ga nbsp gha nbsp ṅa Palatal nbsp ca nbsp cha nbsp ja nbsp jha nbsp na nbsp ya Retroflex nbsp ṭa nbsp ṭha nbsp ḍa nbsp ḍha nbsp ṇa nbsp ra nbsp ḷa Dental nbsp ta nbsp tha nbsp da nbsp dha nbsp na nbsp la nbsp sa Labial nbsp pa nbsp pha nbsp ba nbsp bha nbsp ma nbsp va Glottal nbsp ha Sanskrit consonants in Tai Tham script edit Plosive Nasal Approximant Frictive voiceless voiced voiced voiced voiceless unaspirated aspirated unaspirated aspirated unaspirated unaspirated aspirated Guttural nbsp ka nbsp kha nbsp ga nbsp gha nbsp ṅa nbsp ha Palatal nbsp ca nbsp cha nbsp ja nbsp jha nbsp na nbsp ya nbsp sa Retroflex nbsp ṭa nbsp ṭha nbsp ḍa nbsp ḍha nbsp ṇa nbsp ra nbsp ṣa Dental nbsp ta nbsp tha nbsp da nbsp dha nbsp na nbsp la nbsp sa Labial nbsp pa nbsp pha nbsp ba nbsp bha nbsp ma nbsp va Unicode block editTai Tham script was added to the Unicode Standard in October 2009 with the release of version 5 2 Main article Tai Tham Unicode block The Unicode block for Tai Tham is U 1A20 U 1AAF Tai Tham 1 2 Official Unicode Consortium code chart PDF 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F U 1A2x ᨠ ᨡ ᨢ ᨣ ᨤ ᨥ ᨦ ᨧ ᨨ ᨩ ᨪ ᨫ ᨬ ᨭ ᨮ ᨯ U 1A3x ᨰ ᨱ ᨲ ᨳ ᨴ ᨵ ᨶ ᨷ ᨸ ᨹ ᨺ ᨻ ᨼ ᨽ ᨾ ᨿ U 1A4x ᩀ ᩁ ᩂ ᩃ ᩄ ᩅ ᩆ ᩇ ᩈ ᩉ ᩊ ᩋ ᩌ ᩍ ᩎ ᩏ U 1A5x ᩐ ᩑ ᩒ ᩓ ᩔ U 1A6x U 1A7x U 1A8x ᪀ ᪁ ᪂ ᪃ ᪄ ᪅ ᪆ ᪇ ᪈ ᪉ U 1A9x ᪐ ᪑ ᪒ ᪓ ᪔ ᪕ ᪖ ᪗ ᪘ ᪙ U 1AAx ᪧ Notes 1 As of Unicode version 15 1 2 Grey areas indicate non assigned code pointsFonts edit nbsp Lanna Alif vs Lanna Unicode UI Supports for Tai Tham Unicode font in Microsoft Windows and Microsoft office are still limited 32 causing the widespread use of non Unicode fonts Fonts published by the Royal Society of Thailand and Chiang Mai University are also non Unicode due to this problem and to maximize the ability to transcribe and display the ancient Tai Tham text which frequently contains various special ligatures and symbols not supported by Unicode 33 34 Non Unicode fonts often use a combination of Thai script and Latin Unicode ranges to resolves the incompatibility problem of Unicode Tai Tham in Microsoft office However these fonts may encounter a display problem when used on web browsers as the text can be encoded as an unintelligible Thai text instead In recent years many Tai Tham Unicode fonts have been developed for web display and communications via smart phones Google s Noto Sans Tai Tham becomes the default font for Tai Tham on Mac OS and iOS 35 However the current version of this font still fails to display Tai Tham text correctly The table below gives a list of publicly available Tai Tham fonts Font name Supports Script style Font family Publisher with page link Unicode a Non Unicode b A Tai Tham KH New V3 Yes No Khun Sans serif Arloka Tai Tham Unicode group A Tai Tham LN Yes No Lanna Serif Arloka Chiangsaen Alif Yes No Lanna Sans serif Alif Silapachai CR Insom Lanna Yes Yes Lanna Serif Worawut Thanawatanawanich Hariphunchai Yes No Lanna Serif TragerStudio Richard Wordingham Kotthabun Yes No Lao Tham Serif Theppitak Karoonboonyanan Tai Tham Unicode group Lanna Alif Yes No Lanna Sans serif Alif Silapachai Lamphun Yes No Lanna Serif Richard Wordingham LN Mon Saen No Yes Khun Serif Chiang Mai University page link Pichai Saengboon LN Tilok No Yes Lanna Serif Chiang Mai University page link Pichai Saengboon LN Wat Inda No Yes Khun Serif Chiang Mai University page link Pichai Saengboon Noto Sans Tai Tham Yes No Khun Sans serif Google Fonts Pali Kotthabun Pali only Yes Lao Tham Serif Worawut Thanawatanawanich Theppitak Karoonboonyanan Pali Tilok Pali only Yes Lanna Serif Worawut Thanawatanawanich Pichai Saengboon Payap Lanna Yes No Lanna Serif SIL International RST ISAN No Yes Lao Tham Serif Royal Society of Thailand page link RST LANNA No Yes Lanna Serif Royal Society of Thailand page link Tai Tham BXL Yes No Lue Serif Tai Tham Unicode group Tai Tham Kammattana Yes No Khun Serif Tai Tham Unicode group Tai Tham Kasem Yes No Lanna Serif Tai Tham Unicode group Tai Tham Kruba Promma Yes No Lanna Serif Tai Tham Unicode group Tai Tham Nang Kham Yes No Khun Serif Tai Tham Unicode group Tai Tham Sripanyawut Yes No Lanna Serif Tai Tham Unicode group Tai Tham Thatdaokham Yes No Lue Serif Tai Tham Unicode group VS Tham Lanxang Yes Yes Lao Tham Serif Worawut Thanawatanawanich Note Not supported by Microsoft Office Using Thai Unicode block suitable for Microsoft Office References edit a b Diringer David 1948 Alphabet a key to the history of mankind p 411 Hartmann John F 1986 The spread of South Indic scripts in Southeast Asia Crossroads An Interdisciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 3 1 6 20 JSTOR 40860228 Penth Hans 1986 On the History of Thai scripts PDF Siam Society Newsletter Vol 2 no 3 a b c d Prongthura Naiyana 1982 Dhamma script of Northern Thailand xksrthrrmlanna Thesis in Thai Bangkok Silapakorn University a b Everson Michael Hosken Martin amp Constable Peter 2007 Revised proposal for encoding the Lanna script in the BMP of the UCS Natnapang Burutphakdee October 2004 Khon Muang Neu Kap Phasa Muang Attitudes of Northern Thai Youth towards Kammuang and the Lanna Script PDF M A Thesis Presented at 4th National Symposium on Graduate Research Chiang Mai Thailand August 10 11 2004 Asst Prof Dr Kirk R Person adviser Chiang Mai Payap University P 7 digital image 30 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 05 05 Retrieved June 8 2013 The reason why they called this language Kammuang is because they used this language in the towns where they lived together which were surrounded by mountainous areas where there were many hill tribe people Hundius Harald Wharton David 2010 The Digital Library of Lao Manuscripts a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Iijima Akiko 2009 03 31 Preliminary Notes on the Cultural Region of Tham Script Manuscripts Senri Ethnological Studies 74 doi 10 15021 00002574 S2CID 160928923 a b thwch punonthk Punnothek T xksrobranxisan xkkhrwithyaxksrtwthrrmaelaithynxy krungethph syamephrs aemencemnth 2540 54 a b c McDaniel J 2005 Notes on the lao influence on northern thai buddhist literature The literary heritage of Laos Preservation dissemination and research perspectives Vientiane Laos Lao National Archives Chew P Saengboon P amp Wordingham R 2015 Tai Tham A Hybrid Script that Challenges Current Encoding Models Presented at the Internationalization and Unicode Conference IUC 39 a b The Lanna Dictionary in Thai Chiang Mai Chiang Mai Rajabhat University 2007 pp 305 314 ISBN 9789747793567 a b c d e f g Rungruangsri Udom 2004 phcnanukrmlanna ithy chbbaemfahlwng in Thai Revised ed Chiang Mai Chiang Mai University ISBN 9789746851756 Watcharasastr Boonkid 2005 aebberiynphasaemuxnglanna ᨷ ᨷᩁ ᨿᩁᨽ ᩇ ᨾ ᨦᩃ ᨶᨶ in Thai Chiang Mai Thara Thong Publishing p 20 ISBN 9748547205 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a templatestyles stripmarker in title at position 25 help Everson Michael Hosken Martin Constable Peter March 21 2007 Lanna Unicode A Proposal PDF Retrieved May 4 2015 Burutphakdee Natnapang October 2004 Khon Muang Neu Kap Phasa Muang Attitudes of Northern Thai Youth towards Kammuang and the Lanna Script PDF SIL International pp 32 61 Archived from the original PDF on May 5 2015 Watcharasastr Boonkid 2005 aebberiynphasaemuxnglanna ᨷ ᨷᩁ ᨿᩁᨽ ᩇ ᨾ ᨦᩃ ᨶᨶ in Thai Chiang Mai Thara Thong Publishing p 178 ISBN 9748547205 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a templatestyles stripmarker in title at position 25 help Watcharasastr Boonkid 2005 aebberiynphasaemuxnglanna ᨷ ᨷᩁ ᨿᩁᨽ ᩇ ᨾ ᨦᩃ ᨶᨶ in Thai Chiang Mai Thara Thong Publishing p 24 ISBN 9748547205 a b c d e f g Owen R Wyn 2017 A description and linguistic analysis of the Tai Khuen writing system Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society 10 1 140 164 hdl 10524 52403 a b c Buddhism Summer Curriculum Level 1 Book 2 ᩉ ᨠᩈ ᨲ ᨲ ᨻ ᨻ ᨴ ᨵᩈ ᩈᨶ ᨽ ᨣᩁ ᩁ ᨩ ᨶ ᪑ ᩃ ᨾ ᪒ Vol 2 Bangkok Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University Press 2010 Retrieved 3 August 2022 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a templatestyles stripmarker in title at position 44 help a b The Lanna Dictionary Chiang Mai Chiang Mai Rajabhat University 2007 pp t ISBN 9789747793567 Watcharasastr Boonkid 2005 aebberiynphasaemuxnglanna ᨷ ᨷᩁ ᨿᩁᨽ ᩇ ᨾ ᨦᩃ ᨶᨶ in Thai Chiang Mai Thara Thong Publishing ISBN 9748547205 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a templatestyles stripmarker in title at position 25 help a b Sunthornsing Charee phcnanukrmphasalanna ithy chbbmrdklanna mrdklanna Retrieved 27 December 2022 The Lanna Dictionary Chiang Mai Chiang Mai Rajabhat University 2007 p 625 ISBN 9789747793567 Sunthornsing Charee phcnanukrmphasalanna ithy chbbmrdklanna mrdklanna Retrieved 27 December 2022 rayngansmmna aenwthangkarekhiynsphthwichakardwyxksrthrrmlanna Seminar report guidelines for writing technical terms using Lanna script PDF The Center for the Promotion of Arts and Culture Chiang Mai University 17 January 2004 p 44 Retrieved 6 August 2022 The Lanna Dictionary Chiang Mai Chiang Mai Rajabhat University 2007 p 628 ISBN 9789747793567 The Lanna Dictionary Chiang Mai Chiang Mai Rajabhat University 2007 p 612 ISBN 9789747793567 The Lanna Dictionary Chiang Mai Chiang Mai Rajabhat University 2007 p 624 ISBN 9789747793567 Omniglot Lanna alphabet Tua Mueang Retrieved 28 April 2019 Vimonkasam Kannika 1981 Fakkham script found in Northern Thai inscriptions xksrfkkhamthiphbinsilacarukphakhehnux Thesis in Thai Bangkok Silapakorn University Creating and supporting OpenType fonts for the Universal Shaping Engine Microsoft technical documentation 16 June 2022 Retrieved 5 August 2022 Lanna Fonts fxntlanna The Center for the Promotion of Arts and Culture Chiang Mai University Retrieved 5 August 2022 Six fonts for ancient scripts chudaebbxksrhruxfxntxksrobran 6 chud The Royal Society of Thailand Retrieved 5 August 2022 System Fonts Apple Developer Retrieved 5 August 2022 Further reading editKhamjan Mala mala khacnthr Kham Mueang Dictionary phcnanukrmkhaemuxng Chiang Mai bookworm 2008 ISBN 978 974 8418 55 1 Lanna script Complete information from traditional sources Sky Knowledge Retrieved 2018 07 15 Owen R Wyn 2017 A description and linguistic analysis of the Tai Khuen writing system Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society 10 1 140 164 Trager Ed 2014 Hariphunchai Tai Tham Font Project Wordingham Richard Lamphun glyphs A page with specimen of the font Lamphun Retrieved 15 May 2019 Alan Wood s Tai Tham test pageExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tai Tham script ISO IEC 10646 2003 Amd 5 2008 Universal Multiple Octet Coded Character Set UCS Amendment 5 AMENDMENT 5 Tai Tham Tai Viet Avestan Egyptian Hieroglyphs CJK Unified Ideographs Extension C and other characters Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tai Tham script amp oldid 1221539410, 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.