maybe a good website...
choose your language http://www.goethe-verlag.com/book2/index.htm
or english -thai or other...http://www.goethe-verlag.com/book2/EN/index.htm
![Wink ;)](./images/smilies/icon_wink.gif)
ຂອບໃຈຫລາຍໆToday, 29 July, is "wan phaa saa thai haeng chaat" (วันภาษาไทยแห่งชาติ). Thailand National Language Day.
That must explain the photo......although I'm not sure I'd spell it the same way.Shado wrote:Today, 29 July, is "wan phaa saa thai haeng chaat" (วันภาษาไทยแห่งชาติ). Thailand National Language Day.
Shado wrote:มี ไก่ชน
mee gai chon khai = have fighting chicken (cock) to sell................(I think)
I have been in Savannakhet for a few days and had great difficulty in distinguishing the 'n' letter from one of the 't' letters, and I am not sure what the 'm' letter looks like. This may be a case of the font they were using.parrot wrote:I was sitting at a stop light near Lotus this morning......read a Villa Market sign that was mostly in Laotian. Once you get the hang of Thai, Laotian is not too difficult...especially when you have hints about what you're reading (Villa advert).
But the good part is that Lao has only 27 consonants. I think the number of vowels is about the same as Thai though. There are still some Thai consonants that I have to really stop and think about as they are so seldom used. Hopefully, that will get better with time.Some of the Lao characters are easy, but others, like the ones mentioned, were very difficult for me.
Here's a sample.parrot wrote:To the first person who can correctly write in Thai "My name is ...... I live in Udon", I will bequeath my Thai Reference Grammar book (hardly used), and my 7 volume set of หักอ่าน ภาษาไทย แบบใหม่ that you can use to reinforce tone rules (you have to learn the tones first!).
I'm making this offer to anyone who's serious about learning Thai........if you can't write the sentence above, please leave the books for someone who can.
PM me if you're interested.