Great tools and explanation! What I'd really like to see is something about how the tones change when words are strung together into a sentence. For example if you have several falling tone words in a row I know you don't fully pronounce the tones on all of them but I don't know the rules for how that works.
Hallo Stuart, maybe you can help me with something. I have been unable to find anywhere in Internet the word in Shan Language (part of Tai Kadai family) for Bangkok. Is that K(r)ung Thep like in Thai and Lao or Bang-kok or derivate like in world's most languages ?. Somebody told me they have their own word, not similar to any of them, but I am not sure if it's correct. Thanks.
You can access the Language tools for free and follow along at tools.crackinglanguage.com
Wish I had this 25 years ago. Thank you for your hard work!!!
ขอขอบคุณ
Thank you so much as always Stu, you're amazing!!!!
You are awesome for this! Thank you!
Perfect! Thank you so much
Great tools and explanation! What I'd really like to see is something about how the tones change when words are strung together into a sentence. For example if you have several falling tone words in a row I know you don't fully pronounce the tones on all of them but I don't know the rules for how that works.
I'll do a clip on that... Tone Sandhi... one of my favourite topics!
@@StuartJayRaj Awesome! Looking forward to it
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Ngã means to fall in Vietnamese, not sesame
Yeah - i realised after i'd rendered - in Thai it means sesame
Hallo Stuart, maybe you can help me with something. I have been unable to find anywhere in Internet the word in Shan Language (part of Tai Kadai family) for Bangkok. Is that K(r)ung Thep like in Thai and Lao or Bang-kok or derivate like in world's most languages ?. Somebody told me they have their own word, not similar to any of them, but I am not sure if it's correct. Thanks.