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Phu Thai

 
Wikipedia: Phu Thai
Phu Thai
Phu Thai
Spoken in Thailand, Laos and Vietnam
Total speakers 519,400 (2000)
Language family Kradai
  • Tai
    • Southwestern
      • Lao-Phutai
        • Phu Thai
Language codes
ISO 639-1 None
ISO 639-2 pht
ISO 639-3 pht
Indic script
This page contains Indic text. Without rendering support you may see irregular vowel positioning and a lack of conjuncts. More...

Phu Thai (Thai: Phasa Phuthai, ภาษาผู้ไท), also known as Phuu Thai,[1] is the language of the Phutai people.[2] It is a closely related language to the Tai Dam, Tai Don, as well as the Isan and the Lao languages, having only few vocabulary, tonal and pronunciation differences.

Contents

Speakers

Speakers of the Phu Thai language in Thailand numbered about 156,000 in 1993. They can be found mainly in the areas around Khamcha-i, Nakhon Phanom, Ubon Ratchathani, Kalasin and Sakhon Nakhon. Phu Thai speakers live as well in the Khammouan, Savannakhet, Saravan, and Champassak provinces of Laos (with 154,400 speakers in 2001), northern areas of Vietnam (209,000 speakers in 2002) and possibly also in China.[3]

There is little dialect differentiation in this language.

Status

Despite its rich heritage, and regional fame, in Thailand this language group is increasingly becoming integrated into the mainstream Issan language. This is due in large part to a campaign by the Thai government to modernize all Thai people, as well as due to outside influences of television, Internet and local radio broadcasts. Most younger members of northeastern tribal groups in Thailand prefer to be called Thais rather than by their traditional tribal group name. Due to its beautiful sound, it is likely that the Phu Thai language will become a traditional language used as a showpiece of rich Northeast Thai culture within fifty years.

See also

References

External links


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Phu Thai" Read more