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What's the use of learning Thai?

Small languages, talents are still in short supply! I think learning Thai is a very profitable language! This is an introduction to Thai that I found on the Internet. I find it wordy, but it should be useful to you. It used to be called Siam, the official language of Thailand. It belongs to the Zhuang-Dai branch of the Zhuang-Dong language family of Sino-Tibetan language family, with a population of about 50 million. It has four dialect areas, including central, northern, northeastern and southern areas. Bangkok dialect is the standard language of Thai. Thai has 2 1 vowels, of which 18 are single vowels and 3 are compound vowels. Vowels can be divided into different lengths to distinguish meanings; There are 2 1 consonants, in which p, t, k, m, n, w and j can be used as suffixes; There are five tones: Thai is an isolated language. The basic vocabulary is mostly monosyllabic words. Compound words and reduplicated words are widely used in word formation. Thai has absorbed a large number of Sanskrit, Pali and a considerable number of Mongolian, Khmer, Chinese, Malay and English words. Thai words have no morphological changes. Word order and function words are the main means to express grammatical meaning. The basic word order is: subject-predicate-object. The attribute appears after the head word. Adverbials are before and after the head word. When numerals, quantifiers and nouns are combined, nouns usually come first, numerals in the middle and quantifiers in the back. Thai belongs to the phonological type. /kloc-The inscription of Langanheng in the 0/3rd century is the earliest and most complete Thai document found so far. According to the inscription, in 1283, Emperor Langanheng of Sukhothai Dynasty created Thai characters. Thai is actually transformed from Mongolian and Khmer, and later transformed into modern Thai through the reform of past dynasties. Modern Thai has 42 consonants and 32 vowels and symbols. Vowels can appear before and after consonants, and can also appear above and below consonants. There are four tone symbols, which are marked on the upper right of consonants. The first sound is unmarked. Thai is written from left to right, generally without punctuation. References:

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