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Hello, how do you say it in Thai?

"Hello" in Thai varies according to the gender of the speaker. If it's a boy, just say "?" . If it's a girl, just say "?" . If you are a very good friend, you can say "?" No need to add honorifics. Say "?" At the same time, they will put their hands together and perform a ceremony. This is a traditional greeting in Thailand.

Thai, hello (boys say)? Hello (girl says)? Hello (unisex)? ; Thank you? ; Goodbye? . In Thai conversation, men often add honorific suffixes at the end of sentences, pronounced as khrá p; Women often add a honorific suffix at the end of sentences, pronounced kha.

Thai (), also known as Dai language, is the language of Dai and Thai people and belongs to East Asia/Sino-Tibetan language family. About 68 million people around the world use Thai.

Thai is mainly used by Dai and Thai people in Thailand, Laos, Myanmar, northwestern Vietnam, northwestern Cambodia, southwestern China and northeastern India. Thai is an analytical isolated language, and its basic vocabulary is mostly monosyllabic words. Different tones can distinguish vocabulary and grammar. Synthesis and overlapping are widely used in word formation.

Like many other languages in the world, Thai is a complex and diverse mixture. Many words in Thai come from ancient Chinese, ancient Sanskrit, Cuban, ancient Mongolian (Khmer), ancient Burmese, modern English and so on.

In modern Thai, it is conservatively estimated that more than 15% comes from ancient Chinese. Although Thai and Chinese have a lot in common in pronunciation (words have tones), Thai contains a large number of Sanskrit and Pali words, most of which are polysyllabic, and vowels have long and short sounds, as well as tongue rolling, tongue skipping, linking and ending caused by syllable simplification.

Therefore, to make Thai clear, we should pay attention to three points: first, the tone (different from Chinese tone, there is a tone that standard Chinese does not have), second, the long and short tone, and finally, we should pay special attention to the ending of consonants that Chinese does not have.

There are three kinds of Thai today: secular language, royal language and monk language. In spoken and written Thai, the basic word order, like Chinese, is a "subject-predicate-object" structure, but the biggest difference from Chinese is that modifiers follow modifiers, that is, in short, Thai adjectives follow nouns and adverbs follow verbs, such as "These socks are beautiful" in Chinese, and the word order of Thai becomes "beautiful socks and pairs of socks".

Thai signs on some modern commercial posters in Thailand, especially on films and TV series related to traditional life and history.

LOGO will refer to the shape of the spire or eaves in Thai architecture, which is very ethnic.

References:

Baidu encyclopedia-Thai