Thai consonants ->The Thai spoken language is separated by linguistic scientists as belonging to a Chinese-Thai offset of the Sino-Tibetan language family. Besides standard Thai (based on the central accent) , tutored at school, utilized in radio and television broadcasts and so on, there are territorial accents in the northern, northeastern, and southerly regions.
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photo credit: Fredrik Thommesen The Thai oral communication is polytonal (like Chinese and Vietnamese), and generally monosyllabic. Nevertheless, besides a simpleton, monosyllabic component there are as well numerous 'imported' words with Sanskritic language and Pali ancestry, which are not monosyllabic and quite complex. The writing was based upon Pali, Sanskritic language, and Indian constructs, and several Mon and Khmer words acceded the language. King Ramkhamhaeng of the Sukhothai region, introduced the spelt Thai language, and inscriptions in Thai language date from the Sukthothai region (1283 A.D.)
The Siamese alphabet uses 44 consonants and 15 common vowel sound eccentrics. The script is horizontally placed, left to right, with no interposing space, to form syllables, words, and sentences. Vowel soundd are scripted above, below, before, or after the consonant they alter. So there are a few different Thai consonants used to show the sound of English consonants 's' or 't'. These deviations are both historic (related to the ancestry of the language) and functional (accustomed indicate the tone of the syllable). Thai language however doesn't use capital letters.
There's barely any grammar in Thai language. No plural forms, past, future. This is quite amazing in sight of the fact that most westerly languages use really elaborate grammar. However, in pragmatic terms it is quite easy to indicate past, future by addition of extra words. For instance, whenever you include yesterday in a condemn, you really know you're talking about the past. Clauses such as 'the', 'a', 'an' are also not applied.




































































