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laai kraam (ลายคราม) 1. Thai. Old 
  
 porcelain from 
China, with a blue pattern. Chinaware. 
Also 
china.
			
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 2. Thai. General term for antique. 
			
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laai rod nahm (ลายรดน้ำ)   
Thai. 
‘Design washed with water’. Term used for  
 gilded lacquer.
			
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laat 
hpaat (လက်ဖက်)  
Burmese. 
			‘Tea 
leaves’. Pickled tea leaves mixed with other ingredients served as a local 
delicacy in 
																												
	Myanmar, typically in a special 
			
																												
																												lacquerware
bowl known as
laat hpaat khwat (fig.). 
In English, this snack is usually referred to as tea leaf salad. 
Pronunciation is rather la phet. See also 
			
		      cha. 
			
			
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laat hpaat khwat (လက်ဖက်ခွက်)  
Burmese. ‘Tea 
leaves bowl’. Name of a special 
																												
																												lacquerware
bowl used to serve pickled tea 
leaf salad known as 
laat hpaat (fig.). 
It consists of a footed platter, that can be closed off with a lid, and which is 
divided in different compartments, similar to a Japanese
bento. Typically, the tea leaf salad is placed in a 
rounded section in the centre, which is surrounded by about 5 fan-shaped 
segments, that contain are used to serve other munchies, such as fried garlic, 
shredded ginger, peanuts, sesame seeds, broad beans, etc. There are several 
sizes, the larger ones are sometimes also used to serve food in restaurants (fig.). 
Pronunciation is rather la phet 
oat. See also 
			
		      cha 
and 
	
	hsun ok 
or 
			      
	tiab.
			
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Laced Woodpecker  
Name of a species 
of bird in the Picidae family with the scientific name Picus vittatus. It is 
endemic to Southeast Asia, including 
			Thailand, where it is called
nok hua khwaan khiao pah phai, which translates 
as ‘green 
ax-headed 
			
			bamboo forest 
bird’. 
This approximately thirty centimeter large bird has an olive green throat and upperparts, dark and 
white speckled wing tips and tail, white and dark scaly markings on the underparts and cheeks, and a 
maroon crown and nape (fig.), which in females is black. It lives in subtropical to tropical regions, in a variety of forest types, 
including 
	            mangrove, dry forest, and moist lowland and fog forests, where it 
feeds on insects and larvae living in tree trunks, as well as ants and
            termites.
			
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%20นกหัวขวานเขียวป่าไผ่_small.jpg) 
lacquer   
A resinous substance from the 
Melanorrhea usitata, a tree that grows wild in the drier forests of northern Thailand and is similar to the sumac tree of Japan and 
China. Lacquer is a black, very durable, waterproof substance and highly functional. It is light, hard and flexible at the same time, and protects against mildew and insects. It is used mainly as a paint and varnish, as well as a primer for inlay, incision or carving of motifs, and as a background for decorative patterns 
(fig.), often applied in  
 gold leaf 
and known as   gilded lacquer. 
Whereas the black substance is in Thai called rak (รัก), 
named after the Thai name of the tree it is gained from, i.e. ton rak (ต้นรัก), 
the products coated with lacquer are known as    
kreuang kheun, 
which is Thai for 
	lacquerware.
			
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lacquerware   
Products coated with a black substance commonly known as 
  
lacquer. Popular in ancient days were the lacquerware food containers used for offering food to monks. Those were often fashioned into a 
	
	lotus shape and used as a double food container with compartments seperated by a tray. Food would be placed inside to offer to Buddhist monks. 
Lacquerware is light, hard and flexible at the same time, and protects against 
mildew and insects. In Thai    
kreuang kheun.
			
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Lady Amherst's Pheasant  
Common name of a colourful bird in the 
family Phasianidae, with the binomial name Chrysolophus amherstiae. 
Adult males are about 100-120 centimeters in length, with 
the long, black-barred, white tail accounting for most of it. Their plumage is 
somewhat reminiscent of that of the male  
Golden Pheasant 
(fig.), 
but with a black and silver head and mostly white belly. Furthermore, it has a 
black-scaled white ruff, a green mantle and breast, blue wings, as well as some 
yellow and golden orange plumage on its back and rump. 
Adult females (fig.) are much duller, with a mottled brown plumage 
all over, with fine barring and also very similar to the female Golden Pheasant (fig.), 
but with a darker head, bluish-grey legs and feet, and a barred vent. They feed on 
the ground, where they live on a diet of invertebrates, grain and leaves. 
Although they can fly, they prefer staying on the ground during the day, but 
roost in trees at night. Originally from Southwestern 
		China
 
and 
	
    
	Myanmar, 
it has been introduced in 
			Thailand, 
where it is known as 
			 
kai fah lady 
or 
			
			  
kai fah lady amherst. 
			
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          %201_small.jpg)  
Ladyfinger Cactus  
A species of 
cactus with the botanical name Mammillaria elongata.
READ ON.  
			
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Lady's Finger  
See
		
				
				krajiab. 
			
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Lady’s Slipper  
Common name 
for  
a species of terrestrial 
			
orchid 
of the genus Paphiopedilum. 
READ ON. 
			
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lae (แหล่)  
Thai. An episode in the story of the last great incarnation of the Buddha called 
  Mahachaat.
			
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Laem Phrommathep (แหลมพรหมเทพ)   
Thai. 
‘Peninsula of the god Brahma’. Name of a spit of land near the southern cape of 
Phuket island (map
					-  
fig.) known as a panoramic spot, popular for its sunset. Also   
Phrommathep and Laem Phromthep.
			
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Laem Son-on (แหลมสนอ่อน)   
Thai. ‘Peninsula of Young Pines’. Name of a 
spit of land in 
			
			Songkhla. 
 
READ ON.  
			
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lah (หลา)  
Another name 
for 
nai. 
			
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lahb (ลาบ)  
Thai. Name 
of a spicy dish of minced underdone (rare) meat or fish, mixed 
with onions, vegetables, 
	kreuang prung 
such as chili pepper and preserved fish sauce. It is eaten 
with 
rice 
and some green vegetables. 
			
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Lahn Khon Meuang (ลานคนเมือง)  
						Thai. ‘Citizen's Courtyard’. Name of a large public 
square and events square 
in front of the Governor's Court or City Hall in Bangkok and 
						usually referred to in English as 
the ‘City Square’. 
						
See TRAVEL PICTURE. 
			
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Lahn Nah   
See 
	
	Lan Na.
			
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Lahn Phra Rachawang Dusit (ลานพระราชวังดุสิต)  
Thai name for the Royal Plaza in 
			
			Bangkok, 
located in front of the 
Ananta Samahkom Hall 
(fig.) 
and at the end of 
Ratchadamnoen Avenue (fig.) 
in 
		      
		      		
		      Bangkok's 
Dusit area and home to the 
equestrian statue of King 
Chulalongkorn (fig.), 
i.e. King 
					
					
            
					Rama V. 
It is the place where on December 
4th the annual  
Military Parade of the Royal Guards 
takes place, which is known as 
Trooping the Colour
(fig.).
			
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Laho   
See   
 Lahu.
			
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Lahu  
(ลาฮู)  
The Lahu are a hill tribe of whom the majority live in the northern provinces 
		      Chiang Mai
 and 
		      Chiang Rai 
(fig.).  They are divided into  subgroups named after the main colour of their clothes.  Their pile dwellings are usually high in the mountains (fig.) were they settled at the end of the 19th century coming from Burma. Their dialect  belongs to the 
			
			
Lolo branch of the  Tibeto-Birman language group, of which the standard language is   
Lahu Na, a language also spoken by most other Lahu people outside Thailand (in Burma, 
Laos,  
Vietnam
 and 
China). The Thai  name for  these people is   
Mussur, a word derived from Burmese meaning 
‘hunter’. Sometimes called Laho.      
MORE ON THIS.
			
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Lahu Hpu   
Lahu. 
‘White Lahu’. A subgroup of the  
   
Lahu. 
  
   
MORE ON THIS.
			
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Lahu Na   
1. Lahu. 
‘Black Lahu’. 
A subgroup of the     
Lahu. In Thai 
  
Mussur Dam.
			
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2. Lahu. Standard  
   
Lahu language, belonging to the 
			
Lolo branch of the Tibeto-Burman language group  and used by all Lahu subgroups and even by some other hill tribe peoples. The language is related to that of the 
 
Lisu. 
 MORE ON THIS.
			
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Lahu Nyi   
Lahu. 
‘Red Lahu’.  A subgroup of the  
   
Lahu. Pronunciation Lahu Nai-i. 
  
   
MORE ON THIS.
			
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Lahu Shehleh     
Lahu. 
‘Black Lahu’. A subgroup of the  
   
Lahu. In Thai 
  
Mussur Dam. 
  
   
MORE ON THIS.
			
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Lahu Shi  
Lahu. ‘Yellow Lahu’. A subgroup of the  
    
Lahu. In Thai Mussur Kwi.  
    
MORE ON THIS.
			
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Lai Kheun Rang (ไหลคืนรัง)   
Thai. 
‘Flow back [to the] nest’. Name of the lowest level in the series of 
seven falls of the Erawan 
			
Waterfall (fig.) 
at 
	Erawan National Park 
	(fig.) 
	in 
	Kanchanaburi 
Province. The name might refer to the natural nest-shaped basins 
into  
which the water cascades.  
See MAP. 
			
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Lake of the Doomed  
Name of the body of water beneath the
		
						
						Bridge of Troubled Water, 
the 
bridge in Buddhist belief over which the souls of the newly deceased 
must cross on their way to 
	
	Diyu, 
	i.e. the 
	realm of the dead. 
		The bridge, a test for Good and 
Evil, is guarded by demons (fig.), 
who either allow or forbid passage. Whereas the 
		souls of the kind and 
		benevolent dead 
		are allowed to pass, those of the evil and 
		wicked people will be pushed into the Lake of the Doomed. 
A reproduction of this mythological lake can be seen 
in 
 
Vietnam at
		Am Phu Cave in Da Nang's Marble 
						Mountain of Water 
(fig.), 
and in Thailand at
		
			      Wat Rong Khun 
(fig.) 
in
		
		      Chiang Rai's 
Pah 
Oud On Chai district. In both places, the arms of the doomed can be seen 
sticking out from the surface as if calling for help. In Vietnam, the water 
underneath the Bridge of Troubled Water is called Am Dong Song (Âm Dương Sông), 
which means ‘Yin-yang
River’, and in the 
Vietnamese version, those who do not know how to cross the slippery bridge, i.e. 
those who in life did not keep a good balance between  
		      
		      
		      yin 
and  
		      
		      yang, 
fall in the water below, which is filled with poisonous snakes, crabs and other 
creatures, that will torture those who fall in. A treacherous body water that 
needs to be crossed to reach the Underworld is reminiscent of the rivers Styx 
and Acheron, i.e. the River of Woe, which form the border of hell in 
		Greek mythology.  
			
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lakhon (ละคร)   
Thai.  Traditional dance performances in Thailand, in which both men and women perform, unlike  
   
khon, in which all roles, including the  female roles,  are played by  men.  The themes  may be short versions of the  
   
Ramakien or  other  folk tales. 
See also 
National Theatre.
			
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lakhon yok (ละครยก)  
Thai. A toy theatre with miniature puppets, 
called 
tukkatah ram thai (fig.),
posing as male and female dancers 
and put in front of a shrine as an offer or veneration, i.e.  
as a 
more permanent form of 
kaebon, 
i.e. paid musical and dance 
performances at important religious shrines 
(fig.). 
			
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lak khon (หลักค้น)  
Thai. Name 
in  
		Isaan for 
a rectangular device consisting of a wooden frame of 
about 2 meters by 5 to 8 meters, with on either side about 20 or more aligned 
pins of 10-15 centimeters each, used to wind long threads of yarn onto, in order 
to make them into the right size for looming.  See also
rahng khon (fig.).
			
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lak meuang  
(หลักเมือง)   
Thai. 
‘City pillar’. A pillar usually made of wood, believed to be the dwelling place of the guardian spirit of a city. This pillar is placed in a shrine called  
   
sahn lak meuang 
and represents the centre 
of town and the point from which distances between cities are measured (fig.). 
It is hence comparable to the Greek omphalos 
(ὀμφᾰλός), i.e. the  
‘navel’ or ‘knob’ (i.e. ‘anything shaped like a navel’ or ‘belly button’), which 
in Ancient Greece represented the center of the world and in Delphi was 
symbolized by a  
				
				linga-like 
knob. Whereas the word  
phalos (φᾰλός) seemingly has an 
etymological connotation to the Greek word phallos (φαλλός), i.e.  
‘phallus’, 
the Thai lak meuang also typically takes a  
phallus-like shape. It is sometimes referred to as  
sao inthakhin, 
i.e.  
‘barrier post’ or 
‘guardian pillar’. Compare also with  
	
	linga worship. See 
	
	also
Inthakhin 
		      Chiang Mai 
and 
WATCH VIDEO. 
			
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laksana (लक्षण,
 ลักษณะ)   
1.  Sanskrit-Thai. 
‘Mark, sign, symbol, characteristic’. In physiognomy the term refers to the features of the body that may be auspicious or inauspicious, but in general it refers to the auspicious  signs of a great man, especially the 32 major marks described in Buddhist literature, from which the predestination of the  
   
Buddha may be recognized at birth. 
Sometimes transliterated lakshana.
			
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2. Sanskrit-Thai. 
‘Attribute, sign, symbol’. In    
iconography the term refers to the  
  
attributes of a deity.
			
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Lakshmana 
(लक्ष्मण)   
Sanskrit. 
‘Endowed with auspicious marks (lakshanas)’. Name of the younger half-brother of 
      
Rama 
(fig.) 
   
in the Indian   
epic    
   
Ramayana who, loyal to Rama, shared his 
14 year long exile and assisted him (fig.)
 in the battle against 
  Ravana 
(fig.). Lakshmana is allegedly the 
   incarnation  of  
  Ananta, the 
  
						
	      naga seat of  
  Vishnu (fig.). He has a golden complexion. 
In the Thai version of the story, called 
Ramakien, 
he is known as 
		            
	                Phra Lak 
(fig.). 
			
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Lakshmi 
(लक्ष्मी)   
Sanskrit. 
‘Mark, sign’. Goddess of beauty and good fortune (fig.), who surfaced  during the churning of the 
   
Ocean of Milk seated on the waves on a  
  
	
	lotus 
 
 
 flower. She became  
   
Vishnu's consort and was incarnated with him each time he incarnated as one of his  
   
avatars on earth. For example, she was born with him as  
  
Sita, the wife of 
  
     
Rama, and as 
  Rukmini, the principal wife of 
      
Krishna. The lotus is one of her 
  attributes 
(fig.) and her mount is the 
elephant or owl, though she is sometimes associated with a   
lion (fig.). 
However, Vishnu has two consorts, the other one being
Bhumidevi. 
One of them is also present during the 
Anantasayin, usually 
depicted sitting at the feet of Vishnu (fig.). 
Also known as     
Sri,  
   
Sri Mariamman 
and   
Padma.
			
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Laksi (หลักสี่)  
Thai. ‘Fourth Pillar’ or ‘Marker Four’. Name of a 
				
				khet 
in 
						
						
						Bangkok, 
that was named for its location on the fourth milestone of
Khlong Prem Prachakon, a
major canal 
			in eastern 
			
			Bangkok, 
that connects the capital with 
	
    Bang Pa-in 
in 
		Ayutthaya 
province. 
Also spelled Lak Si. 
			
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Lakulisha 
(लकुलिईश)   
Sanskrit. 
‘Lord with a club’. Reputed founder or first teacher of the  
  
Pashupati sect and by some believed to be the 28th incarnation of the Hindu god  
   
Shiva 
as well as the originator of 
		
        yoga. In art usually depicted naked with a phallus holding a club, prayer beads, a trident and a skull cup.
			
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lalitasana 
(ललितआसन)   
Sanskrit. 
‘Playful seated position’. An  
   
asana 
or seated position with one leg bent and placed on the seat or throne, and the other hanging down. It symbolizes relaxation.
			
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Lalitavistara 
(ललितविस्तर)   
Sanskrit. ‘Recitation of the beloved one’. 
A     
Sanskrit text describing the traditional legend of the  
   
Buddha's life.
			
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Lamaism   
A form of  
   
Buddhism mainly practiced in Tibet and Mongolia, 
and which is also referred to as 
Tibetan Buddhism.
			
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lamang (ละมั่ง)  
1. Thai for 
‘antelope’ and ‘gazelle’. It is the
        
		vahana of  
Vayu, 
the  
        Hindu
guardian of the Northwest (fig.).
			
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2. Thai for
Burmese Brow-antlered Deer, alongside
la-ong 
and  
la-ong lamang.
			
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lamang dam (ละมั่งดำ)  
1. Thai. 
‘Black antelope’. Name for the
	
	
	Blackbuck.
			
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2. Thai. 
‘Black antelope’. Name for a kind of entirely black stag beetle, endemic to 
Thailand and with the scientific designation Hexarthrius nigritus. Adult males 
grow between 4.3 and 7.5 centimeters in length and have large mandibles that are 
curved downwards and inwards in the front, with at the top an additional tooth 
that grows upward at an angle in only the larger males. Females have a body 
size of between 3.7 to 4.1 centimeters and much smaller mandibles. 
			
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lamut (ละมุด)  
 Thai. An evergreen tree that can grow up to thirty meters high and has the Latin name 
Manilkara zapota. Its white sap is used to make chewing gum, whilst its sweet fruits of the same name, 
which may be egg shaped to globular (fig.) 
depending on the variety, have a taste reminiscent of marzipan. 
The outer skin of the fruits is rather velvet-like. In English known as sapodilla. 
			
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Lampang (ลำปาง)   
Thai. Name of a Thai province as well as its 
provincial capital.  
READ ON. 
			
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lamphaen thalae (ลำแพนทะเล)   
Thai. ‘Sea
Sonneratia’. 
Name for the     
	
	Mangrove Apple. 
			
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lamphoo 
(ลำพู)  
Another spelling for
lamphu. 
			
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lamphu (ลำพู)  
Thai. Name for a species of 
	            mangrove, with the binomial name 
	 
	Sonneratia caseolaris. It is one of four 
species of 
Sonneratia 
found in Thailand, the others being  
Sonneratia alba (fig.), 
Sonneratia ovate and Sonneratia griffithii. 
The district Banglamphu in  
			
			Bangkok, sometimes spelled 
		
		
Banglamphoo, 
is named after this species of mangrove. The name is a compound of the words 
		
		
		bang 
 and lamphu, with 
the first word 
referring to a riverside village 
and the latter to this species of
Sonneratia 
mangrove, and thus indicating an 
earlier presence of this tree in that particular area. Also transcribed lamphoo. 
			
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Lamphun (ลำพูน)    
Thai.  
 
Capital of Lamphun province (map), a 
 
 jangwat of the same name in North Thailand. 
 
READ ON. 
			
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lampothon (ลัมโพทร)   
Thai. ‘One 
with a big, sagging belly’. Term derived from 
Sanskrit and used in  
              Hindu
		      iconography
 
to 
refer to someone with a big belly, usually a deity, such as 
Ganesha, 
who is worshipped as the god of wisdom and of various arts and sciences. A big 
belly is understood to be a characteristic of a wise person. With Ganesha, this 
wisdom derives from eating 
                
                
                Motaka, a 
sweet 
made of flour and that represents great wisdom. See also
mahothon. 
			
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lamyai (ลำไย)   
Thai. Fruit tree (fig.) with the Latin name 
Euphoria longana and Dimocarpus longan, of the botanical family Sapindaceae. The sweet and succulent fruit has a glassy whitish pink color and sits in a light brownish peel. Its round pip is dark brown and smooth. It is an evergreen and can reach a height of twelve meters and grows in Thailand mostly in the North. Its in season from the end of July to August. It is believed that eating the fruit improves the body's energy. Lamyai can be enjoyed as a desert with syrup, sticky rice or 
  
tapioca. 
It can also be dried (fig.) 
and eaten as a fruit snack called lamyai ob haeng (ลำไยอบแห้ง), a specialty from 
the region of 
	
	
	
	Lamphun which has 
some of the largest lamyai orchards in the country. The western name for both the tree and fruit is longan, 
which derives from the Chinese  
longyan and literally means 
			‘dragon eyes’. 
	See also 
	POSTAGE STAMP. 
			
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Lan Chang (ລ້ານຊ້າງ, ล้านช้าง)  
1. Lao-Thai. ‘A million elephants’. Name of an ancient Laotian kingdom founded in 1354 by Fa 
Ngum, a grandson of Souvanna Khamphong, ruler of Xieng Dong Xieng Thong. It was 
one of the largest kingdoms in Southeast Asia, extending from the borders of
China to Sambor below the
	Mekhong rapids 
at Khong Island and from the Vietnamese border to the western escarpment of the  
 
    Korat Plateau. The kingdom's name was a reference to this vast 
area, as well as to its formidable war machine. Also transcribed Lan Xang. See 
also 
    Laos. 
			
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2. Lao-Thai. Another name for the
			Mae Khong 
River used in Laos, which in Thai is spelled either Lahn Sahng (หลานซาง) 
or Lan Chang (ล้านช้าง). 
			
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lan diao (榄雕)  
Chinese. 
‘Olive carving’. Traditionally ancient folk art in 
 
China, that consists of the 
skillful chiseling of olive pits into miniature carvings of historical themes 
and legends, while taking advantage of the natural shape of the olive nut, which 
often led to the nut being carved into a boat.   
Since Guangdong is rich in olives, the art 
of olive carving became a unique trade of the province, with the technique 
already consummate in the Qing Dynasty. Olive carvings are so elaborate, that 
the flanks are carved with inscriptions of prose and poetry, while the windows 
can be opened and closed with ease. Generally, this 
art form is also known as he diao (核雕), i.e. ‘seed carving’, ‘kernel carving’ or 
‘nut carving’, yet this may also refer to the 3D relief engraving of nuts and 
pits of fruits other than olives, such as peach stones and walnuts, a variant 
which is said to date back to the Song Dynasty and having attained high 
recognition during the Ming Dynasty, when it was considered a fashionable 
possession by both the rich and high officials. 
			
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%201_small.jpg)  
lang (ลัง)  
			A Thai name for the 
Indochinese Water Dragon, alongside
			
takong and
king kah yak. 
			
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Langka (ลังกา)   
Thai name for    
Ceylon, nowadays Sri Lanka. See also 
  
Lanka.
			
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langsat (ลางสาด/ลังสาด)  
 Thai. A fruit tree with the scientific name 
Aglaia 
domestica and Lansium domesticum. It yields edible fruits with a thin yellowish skin 
and which in appearance resemble the    
longkong, 
though the skin of langsat tends to stick more to the fruit, making it harder to 
peel than the longkong. Its fruiting season is from June to August. 
See also 
look ko.
			
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Langka Suka (लंकासुख, ลังกาสุกะ)  
Sanskrit-Thai. ‘Island of happiness’. Name of an  early 
kingdom, that existed between the 2nd and the 14th century AD, and roughly 
stretched from present-day
			Songkhla in the South to 
  
			Ratchaburi 
in the North. As such, it was incorporated into the
Srivijaya kingdom as a tributary. The Srivijaya empire encompassed a much larger 
area and existed between the 7th and 13th century. By the 15th century Langka 
Suka was replaced by the much smaller 
 
Pattani sultanate. Also transcribed Langkasuka and sometimes Lankasuka or Lanka 
Suka. 
 
			
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Lanka
(लंका)   
Sanskrit. 
‘Island’. Name used in the   
 
Ramayana for 
  
 
Ceylon. It was once the summit of 
 
 
Mt. Meru but was blown into the sea by 
 
 
Vayu, the god of wind, thus becoming an island. This gigantic city kingdom of great majesty was encircled with seven broad moats and seven strong walls. It was allegedly built of gold as a residence for 
 
 
Kubera, from whom it was taken by his half-brother 
  
 
Ravana, who made it his seat. Also 
                
                
              Longka
and Langka. 
			
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Lan Na (ล้านนา)  
 1. Thai. ‘A million paddies’. A former kingdom in North Thailand that flourished during the 13th and 14th centuries AD, with 
		      Chiang Mai at its centre. It consolidated its power in the northern regions by a pact between the three kings (fig.) of  
  Chiang Mai, 
 
Sukhothai and 
 
			Phayao, known by the names 
 
			
			Mengrai,  
			
			Ramkamhaeng and 
 
			
			Ngam Meuang. 
Its  Golden Age was brought on 
by 
	
		            
			
	Phaya 
			
                Keua Nah 
	(fig.)
	around 1367 AD and lasted until 1525. Today, the name is habitually used to refer to northern Thailand in general. 
It also has its own script known as Akson Tham Lan Na (อักษรธรรมล้านนา).  Also 
spelled Lanna and Lahn Nah, See also
	
		Yonok,
	 
    
    
	POSTAGE STAMP, 
TRAVEL PICTURE,
	PANORAMA PICTURE,
	
WATCH VIDEO, and
	
 
 
 
MORE ON THIS. 
			
回     
 
   
2. Thai. An art school from the period and region of 
	 
	
	Lan Na (North Thailand).  
See also THEMATIC STREET LIGHT.
			
回   
 
_small.jpg)  
Lan Nan Htu Su  
 
Kayang name for a 
bird-like angel. 
			
回  
Lanta (ลันตา)  
Name of a decommissioned war ship 
that once sailed under the hull code 
714 and which today is made into a naval museum 
located at Khlong Jilahd (คลองจิหลาด) Pier  
in 
				Krabi, from where ferry boats commute 
between the mainland and Phi Phi Island. The bow of this highly specialized Tank Landing Ship, has a 
large door that could open and deploy a ramp in order to unload vehicles. Parked 
on its deck today is a two-bladed Bell UH-1H Iroquois utility helicopter of the 
			
			Royal Thai Police 
that is powered with a single turbo-shaft engine. 
Formerly known as the USS Stone County, the ship between 1945 and 1969 served the 
United States Navy and participated in many missions, receiving battle awards 
for service in the Korean and Vietnam Wars. In 1973, it was given to the 
Royal Thai Navy 
and renamed HTMS 
Lanta by King 
			
			Rama IX 
after 
Koh Lanta, an island in 
				Krabi, 
making it a symbol of local pride. 
Adjacent to the war ship museum is a memorial dedicated to 
Admiral 
Krom Luang 
				
Aphakon Kiatiwong,
the 28th child 
of King 
Rama V with the title
Prince of Chumphon,
who is revered nationwide as 
the Father of the Royal Thai Navy and of whom statutes can be found nationwide, 
especially at naval bases and around Thailand's coastline. By the side of
the statue is a retired LTV 
A-7 Corsair II light attack aircraft, 
and somewhat to the east of it are three large
			naga, i.e. 
mythical serpents, 
and a small statue of the monk 
Luang Poo Thuad (fig.). 
In front of this, semi-submerged in the sea at the mouth of the Krabi River, is 
a lone tree known as the Sacred Lucky Ten Tree, to which sailors reportedly pay 
respect on their way out to sea and give thanks upon a safe return.
See also EXPLORER'S MAP,
 
THEMATIC STREET LIGHT,
and 
WATCH VIDEO. 
			
回   
			
			
			
  
			
			
Lantana  
													
													
													See
													
													phakah 
													krong. 
			
回  
Lantern Festival   
Chinese 
festival held on the 15th day of 1st lunar month, and 
which coincides with the last day of 
Chinese New Year. 
On this day lantern parades and lion dances are held, and people traditionally 
eat a soup of glutinous 
rice balls served in boiling water, to celebrate the 
first full moon. In the early Tan  Dynasty 
(618-907AD), the festival was called Shan Yuan Jie (上元节), referring to the first 
period of the year, and was traditionally celebrated as the birthday of the 
Heaven Officer, who blesses human luck. According to legend, the festival was 
initiated when a beautiful bird escaped from heaven and flew down to earth, 
where it was hunted by some village people. When the
Jade Emperor (fig.) 
learned of this, he became very anger and ordered his troops to destroy the 
village with a storm of fire on the 15th lunar day. However, when the daughter 
of Jade Emperor heard of this imminent act of vengeance, she warned the 
villagers. A wise man who happened to pass by the village made the suggestion 
that on that day everyone should hang red lanterns around their houses, setup 
campfire on the streets, explode 
			
			bamboo firecrackers and made fireworks, in 
order to make the Jade Emperor believe that the village was under fire. When the 
heavenly troops indeed reported this back to the Jade Emperor, the village was 
saved and from that day on, people on the 15th lunar day annually celebrate the 
anniversary of this event by carrying red lanterns on the streets and exploding 
firecracker and fireworks. See also
Xia Yuan Jie.
			
回  
Lan Tsai-ho (藍采和)  
Chinese. 
Name of one of the
	
	
	
    Eight Immortals (fig.). Although his age and sex are unknown Lan Tsai-ho is usually 
portrayed as a effeminate boy carrying a   
			
			bamboo basket which contains a variety 
of flowers associated with longevity (fig.) 
and which can be used to communicate with the gods. His behaviour is out of norm and known for 
its bizarreness, e.g. he walks around with one foot bare and he likes to wear only 
shorts and thin shirts in winter whilst sleeping on the snow, but in summer he 
wears a thick jacket and long pants. He walks around singing and begging, though his songs, which were related to immortality, were 
unintelligible to ordinary mortals.   
When 
he has earned enough coins he strings them onto a necklace and then runs 
away through the streets, not caring if the string would break and the coins are 
lost, because when he has enough to eat he will distribute the rest of his money 
to the poor. Lan Tsai-ho may also be depicted as a young girl, a 
	
	
	kathuy 
or an aged man. 
 He is 
sometimes depicted riding 
an 
	elephant (fig.). 
Also known as Lan Caihe (fig.) and 
sometimes transcribed Lan 
Ts'ai-ho. 
			
回  
			
			
			
  
Lan Xang (ລ້ານຊ້າງ, ล้านช้าง)  
See
Lan Chang.
			
回  
			
			
			lao (หลาว)  
			1. Thai. Name of a wooden pole that can be 
			carried across the shoulder, similar to a
			
			
			mai kaan haab, but with two pairs 
			of legs for allowing it to stand. It is used for carrying bundles of 
			
			
			rice from the field to the threshing ground (fig.), haystack, barn or silo. It may 
			sometimes have the shape of a frame. 
			
			回  
			
_small.jpg)  
			2. Thai for 
			‘spear’ or ‘lance’. 
			
			回  
			
			
			lao (เหลา)  
			Thai. Name for a loft, a sky parlor or a 
			roof-deck, especially of a Chinese style building, or a Chinese 
			restaurant situated on an upper storey of a building. 
			
			回  
			
2_small.jpg)  
	
	Lao (ลาว, 
ລາວ, Lào)  
1. Thai-Lao-Vietnamese. Name of the 
inhabitants of 
	
	
	Laos, 
numbering around 3,2 million, and with around 222,500 living in Thailand. 
			
回
 2. Thai-Lao-Vietnamese. Name of the language spoken by the people of 
	
	
	Laos, 
as well as by many Thai people in parts of 
		      
		      
		      Isaan, 
where the language is usually referred to as 
			      
			Thai-Lao. 
Also known as Laotian. 
			
回
 
 3. Thai-Lao-Vietnamese. Name of an ethnic minority group in northern
Vietnam,
with a population of somewhere between 11,500 and 15,000. They are 
concentrated in and around Dien Bien City in Dien Bien Province; in Phong Tho 
and Than Uyen Districts in Lai Chau Province; and in Song Ma District in Son La 
Province. Their language belongs to the  
Tay-Thai
Group of languages and Lao 
folklore is heavily influenced by 
			      
			Thai 
culture. Women wear black skirts with 
colourful embroidery and which come up to their chests. 
At the bottom of their jackets, which are 
also richly embroidered, there are two long, flat, woven bands in different 
colours, that hang over the skirt. 
They also wear 
a black turban-like headdress decorated with colourful pins and pom-poms. 
Lao men [used to] 
have a Chinese character and an animal tattooed on their wrist and thighs. The Lao people 
primarily grow rice, whilst outside the planting and harvesting season, 
additional income is generated through weaving, blacksmithing, pottery, and 
silver production. Though many Lao people are 
		      
		      
		      Christian, 
most also practice ancestor worship, and some are influenced by 
		      
		      
		      Buddhism 
too. 
Also referred to as Lao Boc (Lào Bốc) and Lao Noi (Lào Nọi). 
			
			回
  
  
4. Thai. Name of a river 
in the northern Thai province of 
			Chiang Rai. 
			
			回  
 
Lao Changkaraat (ลาวจังกราช)  
See
Lawachakaraat. 
回  
Lao Jun 
(老君)  
			Chinese. Name for 
			
    Lao Tzu, i.e. the founder of
 
Taoism, 
in his deified form.  
READ ON. 
回  
lao khao (เหล้าขาว)  
			Thai. ‘White alcohol’. Name for a locally distilled  
rice whiskey, a strong alcoholic beverage traditionally 
made from glutinous or sticky rice; look paeng (fig.), 
yeast mixed with a starter culture to assist the fermentation process; and water. Steamed sticky 
			rice is mixed with the yeast and starter culture and kept in a fermentation 
			tank (fig.) for three days to allow the starch in the rice to change 
			to sugar. Then water, twice the amount of the rice, is added and a second fermentation takes of 
			about five to seven days to be completed. After this the rice 
whiskey is distilled (fig.) from this substance, 
which is heated over a fire creating steam. On top of the distillation tank a 
convex metal vessel filled with water is placed. When the hot steam hits the 
cold vessel it liquidizes and attaches to the vessel to eventually slowly run to 
the curved bottom of the vessel from where it drips into a funnel-shaped spoon 
attached to a pipe that leads to a bottle which slowly fills up. 
In  
		China, 
  
			Thailand, 
    Laos, 
		Cambodia,
	Myanmar and 
Vietnam, often reptiles, such as 
			      
			      snakes 
or lizards, or
scorpions, 
or body parts of wild animals, such as
			tigers, are placed in jars filled 
with rice whiskey, as it is believed by some that soaking these things in the 
alcohol, will make the whiskey into an aphrodisiac and improve overall strength 
(fig.).
			
回  
  
Lao Meng 
(ลาวเม็ง)  
			Thai. Name of the 24th King of 
the 
			Lawachakaraat 
			Dynasty that ruled the Kingdom of
			
			Hiran Ngun Yahng, as well as the father 
			
			of King 
	
			
	
	Mengrai (fig.), 
			 
			
			the first ruler of   
			the   
			Lan Na 
			Kingdom. 
His wife was 
	
	Nang
	
	Ua Ming Jom Meuang (fig.). 
			
			
			回   
          	 
          	 
             
lao moo (เล้าหมู)  
Thai. ‘Pigsty’. Place where 
pigs
are kept. The term is used for both large pig farms and the more common smaller pig stocks in rural villages, where animals are often kept underneath pile dwellings for protection against the sun and rain. 
			
回     
 
  
la-ong (ละอง)  
Thai name 
for the  
Burmese Brow-antlered Deer, alongside
lamang and
la-ong lamang.
			
回  
la-ong lamang (ละองละมั่ง)  
Thai name 
for the 
 
Burmese Brow-antlered Deer, alongside
la-ong 
and  
lamang.
			
回  
Lao Pie (เล่าปี่)   
Thai name 
for the wise and faithful ruler in the Chinese story of the 
  
Three Kingdoms (fig.). 
He was a warlord at the end of the Han dynasty and founder of the Han kingdom of 
Shu (circa 200-263), later the Shu Han dynasty. In Chinese, he is known as 
	
			
			Liu Bei (fig.) and later in life he was given the courtesy name Xuan De (玄德), which 
translates as ‘profound 
virtue’.  
			
回  
Laos 
(ລາວ)   
Thailand's neighbouring country to the northeast and west of  
Vietnam and with the official name Democratic Republic of Laos. Its covers an area of 236,800 km² and has 5,083 km of land boundaries with 
  
Burma,   
Cambodia, 
 
China, Vietnam and Thailand. The capital of Laos is
Vientiane. In 1975, the Communist Pathet Lao took control of the government, ending a six-century-old monarchy. Initial closer ties to Vietnam and socialization were replaced with a gradual return to private enterprise, a liberalization of foreign investment laws, and the admission into 
  
ASEAN
in 
  
 
 1997. It has a population of around 6 million of which 60% are Theravada Buddhist. The official language is Lao but also French and English are spoken, as well as various ethnic languages. The highest 
point is Phou Bia with 2,817 meter 
and the 
     
    
    Mae Khong River (fig.) 
is an important waterway, which is thus represented in the blue band of the 
national flag of Laos (fig.). Its currency is the 
Kip, and natural resources are timber, hydropower, gypsum, tin, gold and gemstones. 
The old name of Laos is  
Lan Chang, which means ‘Million Elephants’. Akin to the official Thai name of Thailand, i.e. Prathet Thai (ประเทศไทย), also Laos is in full 
referred to as  
Pathet Lao. See also
			
	
	
	Lao and 
			
			Thailand's Neighbours & Beyond.
			
回   
 
 
  
Lao Sohng (ลาวโซ่ง)   
Thai. Name 
of an ethnic group of about 34,000 people, spread out over Central Thailand. 
Their vernacular belongs to the Tai-Kadai (ไท-กะได) language family and they are 
descendants of Lao peoples, from the areas of Tonkin and from the East of Luang 
Prabang, whom during the 18th and 19th centuries were forcibly removed as slaves 
and corvée labourers, when their homelands were annexed by
			Siam. Most Lao Sohng were members of the Tai Dam (ไทดำ) ethnic group and many 
were used as guards for the royal courts, and to help control the powerful 
Chinese minority. Though originally devoted to
        
		animism, most now practice
			Theravada Buddhism. Often spelled Lao Song and also known as Lao Sohng Dam (ลาวโซ่งดำ), 
Tai Sohng (ไทโซ่ง) and Thai Song Dam (ไทยทรงดำ).
			
回  
 
Lao Tzu 
(老子)  
Chinese. Name of an influential Chinese philosopher in the 4th century BC, founder of 
Taoism and author of the 
  Tao-te Ching. 
 
READ ON. 
			
回  
																
Lao Wiang (ลาวเวียง)   
Thai. ‘Laotian Circle’. Name of an ethnic 
super-group of people from the lowlands of
	
	
	Laos, 
that includes several other groups, such as the Lao Khrang (ลาวครั่ง), Lao Phuan (ลาวพวน), 
and Laos Song (ลาวโซ่ง). Those found in Thailand, 
are said to have migrated from the area around 
                
                
              	Vientiane
and settled in the lower 
plains of Thailand. Like many ethic minority groups, they live self-supporting 
lives, mainly through agricultural, the farming of animals and handicrafts. Each 
ethnicity has it own unique identity. 
			
回  
Large-billed Crow  
See
Jungle Crow.
			
回  
Large-billed Leaf Warbler  
Common name 
for a kind of passerine bird in the family Phylloscopidae, and with the 
scientific designation Phylloscopus magnirostris. It is about 12.5 centimeters 
tall and has greenish-olive upperparts with a double pale wing bar and off-white 
underparts. It is similar to the 
Greenish Warbler 
(fig.), 
but has a stockier and darker or dark-tipped bill, and two wing bars, akin to 
the Two-barred Warbler, but the latter has more yellowish-green upperparts and 
its wing bars and supercilium are also more yellowish. It is more commonly found 
in India and  
	Myanmar, but rather unusual for Thailand.
			
回  
			 
          	 
          	 
          %204_small.jpg)  
Large Brown Leaf Katydid   
Name of a 
species of katydid, a large, tropical, grasshopper-like insect (fig.), in the family Tettigoniidae, which worldwide has well over 6,000 species. The name katydid is 
an   onomatopoeia and derives from the male’s repetitive call, i.e. Katy did. In 
general, katydids are also known as 
 
long-horned grasshoppers and bush-crickets. The Large Brown Leaf Katydid 
somewhat resembles a dead leaf and is known in Thai as
takkataen phung phluy, i.e. 
  
			‘pot-bellied grasshopper’. 
			
回  
     
          	 
           
            
						
Large Cuckooshrike  
Common name 
for a fairly large species of bird, with the scientific name Coracina macei. 
There are several subspecies found throughout South and Southeast Asia, 
including Coracina macei siamensis, which is found in Thailand, Coracina macei 
rexpineti, which is found in Myanmar 
and northern Indochina, and Coracina macei 
nepalensis, which is found in northern India and Nepal. 
These birds are mostly pale grey, with a stout black 
bill and blackish lores, a pale grey breast and whitish vent. Whereas the male 
has no barring below, the female is barred from breast to vent. Large 
Cuckooshrikes can grow to a size of about 30 centimeters tall. They are mostly 
insectivorous and prefer to dwell in topmost branches of the upper canopy, 
generally in open, broadleaved forests and pine forests. In Thai, this bird is 
known as nok khih thao yai (นกขี้เถ้าใหญ่), 
i.e. ‘large ashes bird’ or ‘large ashy [grey] bird’. 
			
回   
     
          	 
           
          _small.jpg)  
						
Large Indian Civet  
Common 
designation for a species of civet with the scientific name Viverra zibetha. It 
can be found in South, East and Southeast Asia, from Nepal and India in the West 
to  China in the East, 
down to Indochina, including most of mainland Southeast Asia. It is brownish 
gray, with two white and three black bars along the neck, a black and white 
banded tail, a white snout, and black paws with retractable claws. This civet is 
solitary, territorial, nocturnal and omnivorous, though feeds mostly on small 
mammals and other carnivorous food, such as birds, fish, frogs, and  
			      
			      snakes. In 
Thailand, the Large Indian Civet is known as chamot phaeng haang plong (ชะมดแผงหางปล้อง), with haang plong 
literally meaning ‘segmented tail’ and referring to the banded tail. With a body 
size of 75-85 cm long, excluding the 38-46 cm tail, Viverra zibetha is the largest of all civets in Thailand. 
See also 
			      		
			      		
			Small Indian Civet 
(fig.). 
 
			
回   
     
          	 
           
          _small.jpg)  
Large Scimitar Babbler  
Common name for a ca. 28 cm tall bird in the 
Timaliidae family and with the scientific binomial designation Pomatorhinus 
hypoleucos.
READ ON. 
 
 
			
回  
Large-toothed Ferret-badger  
See 
			 
			
			Burmese 
			Ferret-badger. 
			
回   
laterite   
A sediment of red or brown clay, produced by crumbling rocks. Laterite is soft when first dug up but becomes hard when exposed to the air. It was once frequently used as a building material for religious buildings and palaces in Thailand and Cambodia. Due to its colour 
it is in Thai sometimes called    
din daeng (red earth) or 
   
sila daeng (red stone), 
though officially it is known as
sila laeng. 
						
 
						See also 
 
						
TRAVEL PICTURES. 
			
回    
 
  
latex tree   
See   
rubber tree.
			
回  
Laughing Dove   
Common name 
for a kind of small, circa 27 centimeters tall dove, with the scientific 
designation Streptopelia senegalensis. Above, it is earthly-brown, with a 
lilac-pink head and neck, and grey patches on the shoulders, while its wing 
feathers are darker. It has a broad collar 
of black spots on the fore-neck, while the underparts are white and rufous, with 
grayish flanks, and a white tip to the outer tail feathers.  
See also WILDLIFE PICTURES.
			
回   
 
 
_small.jpg)  
Lava 
(लव)   
One of   
Sita's two twin sons in the 
   
Ramayana, neither of whom were recognized by their father 
   
Rama until they were fifteen years old. The other son was 
  
Kusa.
			
回  
Lavo (ละโว้)  
Old name of 
	
	Lopburi. Also transcribed Lawo.
			
回    
Lawa 
(ละว้า)   
Thai. 
Name for a tribe in northern Thailand, who inhabited the country before the 
migration of the Thai. See also   
Thai Lu.
			
回  
 
			
Lawachakaraat (ลวะจักราช)  
			Thai. 
			Dynasty that   
from the 7th through 
13th centuries AD ruled 
the   
early 
Meuang 
or Kingdom of
Hiran Ngun Yahng 
in present-day northern Thailand. The dynasty started in 638 AD with King Lao 
Chong (ลาวจง), after this tribal chief in the area gained the support of the 
King of 
	
	Lavo, 
and it ended 
in 1298, after the 24th reign with King
	
	Lao Meng 
(fig.), 
when the latter's son King 
			
			
			Mengrai (fig.), 
became the  first ruler of the   
	 
			Lan Na 
	Kingdom. 
The dynasty is also referred to as Lao Chong Dynasty, and in Thai known as 
 
Lao Changkaraat, 
Rachawong Lao Chong (ราชวงศ์ลาวจง) and Rachawong Lao (ราชวงศ์ลาว).
			
			
			回  
Lawkananda Zedi (လောကနန္ဒာစေတီ)   
1. Burmese. 
‘Joy 
of the World 
Pagoda’. 
Name of a Buddhist temple near    
		      
		      
		      Bagan. 
 
READ ON.
			
回   
2. Burmese.
‘Joy 
of the World 
Pagoda’. 
Name of a Buddhist temple   
	 in Sittwe. 
 
READ ON.
			
回  
Law 
Ka Nat (လောကနတ်)  
Burmese. 
‘Spirit 
of the World’ or
‘Nat 
of the World’.  
Name of a deity in 
                
                
                Myanmar, 
who is revered by the Burmese as a celestial peacemaker and 
 
guardian spirit of the universe.
According to 
 
legend, one day, when Law Ka Nat was making the rounds of his realm, he came 
upon Kethayaza
Chinthe 
 Min 
 
(fig.), i.e. the 
Flying King Lion, in battle with the Flying Elephant over some food. 
Hence, to put an end to their hostility Law Ka Nat started to sing and dance, 
while playing a rhythm on his small cymbals. Upon hearing the soothing music and 
voice, the two combatants calmed down and stopped their fight, and their 
resentment and animosity vanished, as the fire of their wrath was extinguished. 
In Myanmar, Law Ka Nat is considered the symbol of the visual arts, as well as 
the patron of the performing arts. 
He is usually depicted 
seated on a giant 
	
	lotus
leaf, whilst holding 
a pair of small 
ching-like 
hand cymbals (fig.) 
with his feet. 
He wears a crown-like 
headdress, is clothed in royal attire, and is sometimes described as being 
depicted in a dancing posture. 
He 
is often represented in the company of an 
              elephant
and a 
                
              lion. 
A wood sculpture of Law Ka Nat is portrayed on the former banknotes of 75 
                
              Kyat, 
that were issued by the Union of Burma Bank on 30 September 1985, in order to 
commemorate General Ne Win’s 75th birthday. 
His name
could 
also be transcribed 
Lokanat, which is 
reminiscent of the Thai term 
lohkkannaht,
thus 
associating him
with 
the    
Buddha. He is also 
known as the Loka Byuha
	      
          Nat. 
 
See also
	      
          nat.
			
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Lawkataraphu Phaya Kyee (လောကသရဖူဘုရားကြီး)    
Burmese. 
			‘Great 
Pagoda of the Crown of the World’. 
Name of a Buddhist 
			      
			      
                  
			      pagoda 
in the northwestern part of
		
		Ava. 
It has a large 
			      
                  
			      pagoda, of which 
the top part is gilded, topped with a 
		      
              
		      hti 
(fig.), 
i.e. an ornamental part in the 
form of a lacy umbrella crowning the spire of a Buddhist 
stupa, 
as well as a 
nga myat na, i.e. a flag-shaped ornament in 
English usually referred to as the vane (fig.), 
while in the centre, all around the stupa, are depictions of demon-like figures 
called
balu pan gai (fig.). 
It was renovated in 2017. 
 
See MAP.
			
回    
 
 
    
Law Ka Teu Kaung Hpaung Daw U Myat Swa Phaya 
(လောကထွဋ် ခေါင်ဖောင်တော်ဦး မြတ်စွာဘုရား)    
See 
		
Hpaung Daw U Pagoda.
			
回  
Laykyun Setkyar (လေးကျွန်းစင်္ကြာ)   
Burmese. 
			‘Four Islands Corridor’. 
Name of the 
129.5 
meter tall Buddha image at the 
			
Maha Bodhi Ta Htaung monastery in Monywa (map 
- 
fig.). 
The image itself is actually 116 meters tall and the base another 13.5 meters.
See MAP.
 
回  
					
					
  
Le (Lê)  
 The dynasty that ruled 
 
Vietnam from 1427 to 1789 AD, the golden era of art. 
 
			
回  
leech  
See 
	taak. 
			
回  
Leelah (ลีลา)  
1. Thai. 
					‘Style’ 
					or 
					‘Grace’. 
Name of a painting
					
					by the Thai artist Sawat Tantisuk (สวัสดิ์ 
					ตันติสุข). 
It was depicted on a Thai postage stamp 
issued on 2 August 2013 (fig.) 
as part of a set of eight stamps on contemporary art in the third series of 
commemorative stamps to mark the 2013 World Stamp Exhibition, which was held at 
the convention hall of Siam Paragon in 
 
 
			
			Bangkok between 2 and 14 August 2013.
回  
          	 
          	 
            
2.
 
Thai for 
					‘style’ 
					or 
					‘grace’, 
as well as for ‘to proceed gracefully’, 
as in 
pahng leelah.
回  
Leatherback  
Name of a species of sea
		
			
		turtle 
with the scientific name Dermochelys coriacea. It is the largest of all 
living turtles and third largest of all reptiles. It can weigh up to 700 kilograms, and with front flippers than 
can grow up to 2.7 meters. It gets its name from its unique, ridged shell which 
consists of a layer of rubbery 
skin, strengthened with thousands of tiny bone plates. Though leatherbacks also 
eat seaweed, fish, crustaceans, and other marine invertebrates,
jellyfish 
make up the biggest portion of their diet, and in order to trap their food and 
keep it from coming out, as well as to protect them from sea jelly venom, the 
inside of their mouths are covered in dozens of spikes, called papillae, from 
their teeth all the way down to their esophagus and into their anterior part of 
their gut. Sea turtles swallow a lot of seawater while eating. As they eat, 
their stomach fills up with food and seawater. They then expel all the water and 
the spikes trap food and keep it from coming out. The papillae are thus a kind 
of anti-vomiting spikes that basically act as reverse filter. As such, these 
hard spikes are a major problem if a sea turtle accidentally ingests plastic, as 
it often gets stuck. 
See POSTAGE STAMPS (1) 
and 
(2). 
			
回  
          	 
          	 
          _small.jpg)  
Legend of the Cat and Mouse  
Name of a
local myth from
										
			
			Songkhla.
READ ON.
回  
					
					
Legend of the Five Floating Buddha Statues  
See
					
					
Tamnaan Luang Pho Loy Nahm Hah Phi-Nong. 
 
			
回  
legless lizard   
See
jing lehn duang. 
			
回  
lehenga choli (लहंगा चोली)  
Hindi. 
‘Skirt-bodice’. The favourite bridal gown in 
India, especially in the North. It is usually made a
            
			silk or another quality 
fabric, and heavily decorated with embroidery, whilst the brides will 
additionally decorate themselves with bridal make-up, jewellery, and apply
mehndi (fig.) 
to their hands and feet. Sometimes transcribed lahanga choli and also known as
ghaghra choli (fig.).
			
回   
			
Leizu (嫘祖)  
Chinese. 
Name of a Chinese empress, who was the wife of
Huang Di (fig.), the legendary 
 
Yellow Emperor (fig.). According to an ancient legend she discovered
    
    silk at the age of fourteen, when a silkworm's cocoon fell into her 
  
			
			
            tea 
			cup. Trying to extract it from her drink she began to unroll the 
thread from the cocoon, resulting in the discovery of the silk thread and the 
start of  sericulture. 
It is said that she was a daughter of the  
Xi Ling Shi, the ‘West Mountain clan’, a family 
branch of the Shu Shan clan which was related to the tribe of emperor Huang by 
marriage. Shu used to mean ‘wild silkworm’, but it was later domesticated by the Shu-Di people and the Shu-Shan clan became the Can-Cong clan, with
can (蚕) 
meaning ‘silkworm’ in Chinese. Her native place was probably in ancient Can Ling 
county (present-day Diexi in Maoxian county). Because the deities on Minshan 
Mountein are all horse-headed and 
			      
			      snake or 
dragon-bodied, she was also known as 
the horse-headed lady. There are however also records saying that Leizu was from 
Yanting county, where there are many sites and legends about her, hence it is 
possible that she later moved there. It is also said that she invented the silk 
reel and silk loom and later became known as the Chinese goddess of silk
Can Shen (蚕神), 
literally the ‘goddess of the silkworm’.
			
回  
	
	
Le 
Hoan (Lê Hoàn)  
Vietnamese. Name of the Dai Co Viet emperor, who reigned from 980 to 1005 
AD, as the first emperor of the 
Le Dynasty, which followed 
the Dinh Dynasty founded by 
						
						Dinh Bo Lin. The 
Emperor 
Le 
Hoan is posthumously referred to as Dai Hanh (Đại Hành). 
			
回  
             
          	 
          _small.jpg)  
lemon  
See 
 
	manao.
			
回  
          
			
lemon balm  
See 
			
			saranae.
			
回  
Lemon Emigrant  
Another name 
for the  
Common Emigrant.
			
回  
lemon grass  
See 
			
			
			takrai. 
			
回  
						
Lemon Pansy  
Common name 
for a nymphalid butterfly found in South and Southeast Asia. 
It is brown, with dark and 
	
	
	lemon-yellow 
spots and lines on the upperside of the wings, as well as a number of 
orange-black, eyespots, that when sitting on a tree trunk resemble the eyes of 
an owl emerging from a tree hollow, and serve to deceive potential predators. 
The underside is a dull brown, with numerous wavy lines and spots in varying 
shades of brown and black, as well as some vague, faded eye-spots. In the rainy 
season, the form and markings are more distinct and vivid, and the wing shape is 
a little more rounded, against the dry season form, when the markings are more 
obscure and paler, especially on the underside, and the wing margin is more 
angular and jagged. 
			
回     
		
%20ผีเสื้อแพนซีสีตาล_small.jpg)  
Leopard  
Large 
animal of the cat family Felidae, with a black-spotted yellowish orange or all 
black coat, and seen in profile it has a rather angular head. Leopards with an 
all black coat are also referred to as Black Panthers (fig.). It is the smallest 
member in the genus Panthera (fig.) and is distributed both in Asia and Africa. Its 
binomial scientific name is Panthera pardus, yet there are eight subspecies, the 
one native to mainland Southeast Asia being Panthera pardus delacouri, the 
second largest cat in the region, after the
Tiger, 
and known by the common name Indochinese Leopard. In Thai Leopards are called
seua dao (fig.), literally ‘starry tiger’, though 
Black Panthers are called seua dam, i.e. ‘black tiger’ and the Indochinese 
Leopard is known as seua dao indojihn (เสือดาวอินโดจีน).  
			
回    
		
%20เสือดาว_small.jpg)  
Leopard Cat  
Common name 
for a small wild cat with the size of a domestic cat (Felis domesticus) and the scientific name Prionailurus bengalensis 
(fig.). It is found in Southeast Asia, including in Thailand 
(fig.), 
Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, 
Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, southern China 
and some parts of India. Leopard Cats are nocturnal and feed on a variety of 
small prey, ranging from lizards, birds, and small mammals to eggs and insects. In Thai, it is called
maew dao.
			
回   
		
_small.jpg)  
Leopard Lacewing  
Common 
designation 
for a butterfly, with the scientific name Cethosia cyane euanthes.  
READ ON.  
			
回  
Leopard Moth  
Common name 
for a moth with the scientific designation Zeuzera pyrina. It is widely 
distributed and known particularly for its destructive larvae, that bore into 
the stems and branches of a variety of shrubs and deciduous trees. They feed 
internally by eating the heartwood for up to 3 years before emerging to pupate 
under the bark. They can be a pest of fruit production. Adult moths have a 
fluffy white thorax marked with six black spots and pale wings, with numerous 
black spots and blotches. In Thai, it is only known by its generic name
phi seua non jo mai.
			
回    
		
_small.jpg)    
Leopard Shark    
Common name for a species of carpet shark, with the scientific name Stegostoma 
fasciatum (fig.) and also commonly known as Zebra Shark. It is found throughout the 
tropical Indo-Pacific, where it dwells in shallow waters to a depth of around 62 
meters, and is hence often found in coral reefs and sandy flats. Adult Leopard 
Sharks grow up to 250 centimeters in length and have a distinctive cylindrical 
body, with five longitudinal ridges, and a pattern of dark spots on a pale 
greyish-brown background. Immature Leopard Sharks, under a length of 90 
centimeters, lack the distinctive longitudinal ridges and their pattern consists 
of vertical whitish stripes on a dark background, hence the name Zebra Shark. As 
they mature the ridges become more noticeable and spots appear along the sides 
of the whitish stripes, which eventfully will vanish altogether. Leopard Sharks 
are nocturnal, hunting for food during the night, while they spend most of the 
day resting motionless on the sea floor. Despite its fearsome name, this 
slow-moving fish is harmless to humans, although it could bite if harassed. And, though listed as vulnerable (fig.), it is caught by commercial fisheries across 
most of its range. In Thai, it known as 
	                
	                
                    pla
chalaam 
			      
			seua dao. 
			
See 
also POSTAGE STAMP. 
			
回    
							        									
			  
			 
			 
_small.jpg)  
lep (เล็บ)  
Thai. 
Literally ‘fingernail’, but in cultural context it refers to eight long, usually 
golden aluminum finger pieces that are used in northern style Fingernail Dances, 
called
		
		
		Fon Lep 
(fig.). 
They are slightly bent outward and are said to replace the candles from the Fon 
Thian, the Candle Dance. Sometimes they have an extra extension with a red 
pompom at the tip, what possibly represents the flame of a candle. In southern 
Thailand, usually silver-coloured,  
aluminum
lep are worn by 
	            Manohra 
dancers (fig.). 
			
回  
		
		 
           
          %20long%20fingernail%20Thai%20dance_small.jpg)  
		
		
		lep meua nang (เล็บมือนาง)  
		Thai. ‘Lady fingernails’. Thai name 
		for the 
		Rangoon Creeper. 
			
		回  
		
		
		Lèse-majesté  
		French-English. Term used for a law that criminalizes acts of 
		disrespect or insult on the King or any member of the monarchy or regency, as well as anyone of the royal entourage, including royal pets, and in Thailand a serious crime according to Section 112 of the Thai Criminal Code 
		that supplements Article 8 of the 
		
			
			Thai Constitution. 
		
		
		READ ON. 
		
			
		回  
		 
		
		Lesser Adjutant  
		Common name of a large wading bird, with the 
		scientific name Leptoptilos javanicus and belonging to the stork family Ciconiidae. It is between 122 to 129 centimeters tall and has a wingspan 
		of about 210 centimeters (fig.). The head and yellowish neck are bare, and the 
		bill is pale, long and thick (fig.). It has vinous-tinged head-sides, and the 
		legs and slightly webbed feet are light grey. The upper body and wings 
		of non-breeding adults are black, whilst the underparts are whitish, 
		though in the breeding season males will develop dark oval spots near 
		the median covert tips and thin whitish edges to the lower scapulars (fig.), 
		as well as redder head-sides. Their habitat consists of freshwater 
		wetlands, such as marshes and pools in and near open forest, as well as 
		swamp forest and  
		
		
	            mangroves, and sometimes mudflats 
		and
		
		
			rice 
		paddies. In Thai called
		
		
		nok takrum. 
		See also 
		
		Greater Adjutant. 
		
			 
		
		
		See also WILDLIFE PICTURES (1)
		
		and  
			 
		
		(2). 
		
			
		回  
		
		 
           
          %201_small.jpg)  
		
		
		Lesser Coucal  
		Common name of a semi-large,
		
		
		crow-like bird, with the scientific 
		name Centropus bengalensis. It belongs to the Cuculidae family and is 
		found in South and Southeast Asia, including Thailand, where it is known 
		as nok krapoot lek (นกกระปูดเล็ก). 
		Adults are about 38 centimeters tall, and appear 
		similar to the
		
		
		Greater Coucal, i.e. overall glossy 
		black, with chestnut brown wings, and ruby red eyes, but are different by 
		their size and pale streaks on the head, neck and upperparts. They also lack the 
		short, protruding, hairy feathers between the bill and chin, which are typical 
		in  the Greater Coucal (fig.). The bill and legs are blackish. Juveniles have 
		rufous-brown upperparts with whitish-buff streaks and blackish bars. 
		Their underparts are buff with broad dark bars, and the bill is blackish 
		above and yellowish-grey towards the base. Like the Greater Coucal, Lesser Coucals are weak fliers, that clamber in 
		vegetation and the undergrowth, or walk on the ground searching for 
		food. They hunt for prey that consists of large insects, frogs, lizards 
		and small 
			      
			      snakes, which they catch and kill using their powerful bills. 
		Lesser Coucals are mostly solitary, only rarely seen in pairs. 
			
		回  
		
		 
           
          %20นกกระปูดเล็ก_small.jpg)  
		
		
		Lesser Green 
		Leafbird  
		Common name of a species of bird, with the scientific 
		designation Chloropsis cyanopogon and found in Southeast Asia, from
		
		
	Myanmar and
		
		
		
			Thailand to 
		
    
	Malaysia
	and Indonesia, including also Singapore and 
		Brunei. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist lowland 
		forests. The male's plumage is of a chartreuse-lime colour with a black breast and face, and a 
		slim blue throat patch under a black beak. Males have a yellowish lower 
		border around the black breast, whereas females have no black throat nor 
		face, but are overall green, with a golden-green forehead and a small 
		blue malar band. Both sexes are similar to those of the
		
		
		Greater Green Leafbird (fig.), 
		though they have a smaller bill and with a body length of about 16-19 
		centimeters they are somewhat smaller in size. Females lack the eye ring 
		and yellow 
		throat visible in females of the Greater Green Leafbird, and the 
		yellowish lower border around the black breast with males, stands more 
		out in the Lesser Green 
		Leafbird, though it is absent in certain subspecies. Like 
		all leafbirds, the Lesser Green 
		Leafbird imitates the songs of other bird species. In Thai it is 
		called  
		nok khiao kahn tong lek. See also 
		 
		
		
		Golden-fronted Leafbird
		(fig.). 
		
			
		回  
		
		
		Lesser Mouse-deer  
		Name of an even-toed ungulate, the smallest known 
		hoofed mammal. Despite its name it is neither a mouse nor a
		
		
		deer. It is shy, secretive and 
		nocturnal, but can be found throughout Southeast Asia. Adults have a 
		size of about 42 cm and weigh around 2 kg on average. It has no horns 
		and dissimilar from real deer it also lacks the antlers which are 
		characteristic of stags. The colour of its fur is reddish orange-brown 
		with a characteristic, white inverted, chevron pattern on the throat and 
		upper chest. The Lesser Mouse-deer belongs to the Tragulidae family and 
		in Thai it is called
		
		
		krajong noo, meaning ‘mouse 
		 
		
chevrotain’. Males have protruding canines. They often reside in the proximity of 
		rocks, hollow trees and in the undergrowth of dense vegetation, usually 
		near water, where they feed on leaves, shoots, fruits and sometimes 
		fungi. The difference with the
		
		
		Greater Mouse-deer can best be observed 
		by the lack of dark 
	shades around the nose, eyes and ears (fig.). 
		Also called Lesser Malay Mouse Deer and Lesser Oriental Chevrotain. See also
		
		
		krajong,
		
		
		krajong kwai and
		
		
		krajong lek.
		 
		
		回  
		
%20กระจงหนู_small.jpg)  
		
		
		Lesser Whistling 
		Duck  
		Name of a small breeding duck commonly found in 
		South and Southeast Asia and named whistling duck because of its call, a 
		slightly shrill whistle. This species often shares its habitat with the 
		
		Cotton Pygmy Goose. It has a buff head with a distinctive yellow 
		orbital ring and a long, dark grey to black bill, which is slightly hooked 
		at the tip. It plumage is brown with chestnut patches on the wings and 
		tail and has rather long legs. It has the scientific name Dendrocygna 
		javanica, but is also known as Indian Whistling Duck, Lesser Whistling 
		Teal and Lesser Tree Duck, because it sometimes nests in tree holes. Its 
		diet consists of mostly water plants, nibbling on their seeds and 
		shoots, but they also eat insects and aquatic invertebrates. In 
		Thailand, where it is the most widespread of all of the four species of 
		ducks breeding in the country and found wherever there are ponds and 
		marshes (fig.), it is called
		
		
		pet daeng, meaning ‘red duck’. 
		A male and female Lesser Whistling Duck are depicted on a postage stamp 
		which was issued in 1996 as part of a set of four stamps on ducks found 
		in Thailand (fig.). 
		
			
		
		
		回  
            
		
			
  
            
			
			Le Htat Gyi Kyaung (လေးထပ်ကြီးကျောင်း)  
            Burmese. ‘Four-storey
			School’ or ‘Four-storey
			Monastery’. 
			Another name for
			
			Le Htat Gyi Phaya 
			(fig.). 
			
			
		
		
		回  
            
			
			Le Htat Gyi Phaya 
			(လေးထပ်ကြီးဘုရား)  
            Burmese. ‘Four-storey
			
			      
			
			      Pagoda’. 
			Name of a 
			      
			      
                  
			      pagoda 
			located 
			in the present-day district of Inwa towards Hanthawaddy, south to 
			southeast of the ancient city of 
			
			Ava (fig.). 
			It was built by King Nyaung Yan in 963 AD and was destroyed by fire 
			in 1020. The special chamber built to house the temple's principal 
			Buddha image, dates from the reign of King Thibaw Min, the last king 
			of the Konbaung Dynasty. The pagodahas today all but collapsed, yet 
			the remaining part is still richly decorated with 
			
			stucco
			
		      
		      
		      
		      bai sema-like 
			ornaments that resemble 
			
			
	lotus 
			petals and each once bearing the 
			image of a 
		      
		      yaksha,
			the guardians of 
			temples (fig.), 
			in 
		      
		      
		      bas-relief, though some are today 
			damaged. It is also known 
			as 
	
			
			Le Htat Gyi Kyaung 
			and sometimes transliterated Lay Htat Gyi. 
			 
			
			
			See MAP. 
		
			
		
		
		回  
			
			
  
		
		
		leuang 
		kiri boon (เหลืองคีรีบูน)  
		Thai. ‘Yellow mountain blessing’. Name for a 
		subtropical, evergreen shrub with a soft stem which grows up to 120 
		centimeters tall and bears zygomorphic (yoke-shaped), long-throated, 
		short-lived white flowers, that emerge from overlapping, 
		bright yellow bracts on racemes. It has the botanical name Pachystachys 
		lutea and in English it is called Golden Shrimp Plant or Lollipop Plant. 
		See also 
		
		Shrimp Plant. 
		
			
		回  
		  
		 
		 
  
	
	
leucism  
Biological term used for an abnormal condition of reduced pigmentation in 
animals, sometimes referred to as partial albinism, which causes white, pale, or 
patchy colouration, and that is reportedly caused not by a lack of pigment, but 
rather by a reduced deposition thereof in skin or feathers. 
			
回   
		  
		 
 
    
leung (ลึงค์)  
Thai name for 
	
	linga. Also 
  
ling.
			
回  
Leu Thong Ping (ลื่อท่งปิง)  
Thai for
Lu Tong-pin,   
one of the
	
	
	
    Eight Immortals. 
Also transcribed Leua Thong Ping.
			
回  
li (ลี้, 
里)  
 Thai-Chinese. An ancient Chinese linear 
measure or unit of length known in English as a Chinese mile and equaling about 
500 meters. 
			
回  
liang phah (เลียงผา)  
See
Mainland Serow. 
			
回   
			
Lian Hua San Taizi (蓮花三太子)  
Chinese. ‘Third 
	
Lotus
Flower Crown Prince’. Title given to 
			the 
			
			Taoist 
			child-deity 
			
	      
	      
	      Nezha, after he 
was deified. In English, the title is 
			usually shortened to
Third Lotus Prince 
(fig.). 
			
回  
lian pu 
(脸谱)  
Chinese term used to refer to all types of facial make-up used in 
Chinese opera.
READ ON.  
			
回  
 
Libellago lineata  
Latin-scientific 
name for the
River Heliodor.
			
回   
library  
1. Name for the 
scripture hall, 
i.e. the building in a temple complex where 
Buddhist 
manuscripts are kept and which are usually stored in
lacquered 
scripture cabinets in 
order to protect the palm leaf 
manuscripts from insects, humidity, etc. 
In Thai kown as 
ho trai. 
			
回   
2. The name given to two separate buildings, located on either side and in front of the main entrance to a 
  
 Khmer temple, or the entrance to an enclosure. There is however no certainty that they were actually used as libraries.
			
回  
						
Library Train  
Name for 
decommissioned train carriages that have been renovated and turned into 
stationary railway wagons with a library for the local community, such as the 
one in front of 
				
				Hua Hin 
Railway Station (fig.)
in 
Prachuap Khirikha, 
and the one  adjacent 
to the old water tower of 
				
				Hua Lampong Train Station 
in 
Bangkok (fig.),
situated in a small park on the 
 compound of the Railway Police, a 
division of the 
			
			Royal Thai Police. The latter 
consists of two carriages that on the outside have been adorned with colourful 
paintings, one with characters and 
			animals typical to 
			Thai rural life; 
the other 
			with the national flags of the members states of 
			
			ASEAN 
and cartoons of people 
dressed in the different traditional costumes of those countries. The interior 
of the former is designed as a reading room whereas the latter has racks with 
books and magazines. On the inner walls of both carriages are some old photos 
from the past and on the compound is some discarded railway equipment. For this 
reason, the compound of the park is sometimes referred to as the Railway Outdoor 
Museum. See also 
MAP. 
			
回  
															
					
					
  
lichen 
(ไลเคน)    
Thai-English name for a composite organism 
that grows on the surfaces of trees and rocks and consists of two or more 
dissimilar organisms that form a symbiotic relationship to produce a new 
vegetative body.  
READ ON.  
			
回  
Light-vented Bulbul   
Another 
common name for the  
Chinese Bulbul.
			
回  
Lihlaa (ลีลา)  
See 
Leelah. 
			
回  
likae (ลิเก)   
Thai. A 
rather outdated form of song and dance drama, with themes about kings, queens and court, played by 
a folk performing group, usually a touring troupe or travelling theatre, which 
is hired to perform at village festivals or annual Buddhist fairs, as well as at 
private houses, e.g. to celebrate an ordination or a cremation ceremony. 
However, sometimes likar may also be staged as a paid performance inside a 
makeshift enclosure, before a paying audience. It can be performed both day and 
night. Likae performers often improvise their dialogues and lyrics, following 
the scenario provided by a story-teller and is accompanied by a
pih phaat orchestra 
that plays traditional music. It originated either in the 
late 
       
 Ayutthaya 
Period or at the beginning of the 
			Rattanakosin period and was formerly played by men only, though performers thickly apply make-up 
(fig.), 
lipstick 
and often also fake eyelashes, making them look quite feminine (fig.). Present-day actors of likae 
niyom (popular likae) dress in colourful, glittery costumes, adorned with imitation 
gemstones, and besides fake jewelry, they wear long white socks and some kind of 
headdress. Thai likae shares similarities with the  
 
Khmer 
yike theatre and its roots can be traced back 
to  
    Muslim
religious recitals. The word likae peculiarly comes from the Persian word sikaer 
which in term derives from the Arab word sikru and means ‘reading verses of 
praise’, a recall of Allah, the God of 
		
		
		
        Islam. Old 
texts mention that Shi'ite Muslims from Persia brought the chanting of likae to 
Siam in the reign of king  
Phra Phutta Leut La (Rama 
II), where it was recorded as yike (yikae/yikay), the name now still used in 
Cambodia. In southern Thailand there is a form of likae popular among Muslims 
and known as likae pah (ลิเกป่า), likae bok (ลิเกบก) or likae ram manah (ลิเกรำมะนา), 
which is played with just three performers, who wear different kinds of costumes 
and are accompanied by musicians playing instruments that include
klong ram manah,
ching and
			
			
			
			pih. Also transliterated ‘likay’ and sometimes ‘like’.
			
回    
 
		 
 
    
likay (ลิเก)   
See
	likae.
			
回  
lime   
Popular 
name for a tree of the citrus family. This family has several species and theire 
varieties, including 
the Citrus aurantifolia and Citrus medica. Its fruit is like a yellow lemon commonly 
found in the West but green, more acid, smaller and rounder. The Southeast Asian 
lime is actually almost spherical when compared to the yellow lemon. It is used 
in cooking and a fresh lime segment is often served with fried 
rice dishes. It is a good source of Vitamin C 
and is said to relieve cough, heal sore throats, drive out phlegm, cure swollen 
and bleeding gums, prevent stroke and cure constipation. Southeast Asia is its original habitat. 
In Thai lime is commonly called  
	manao, but it has many other names depending on 
the variety, e.g. kaffir lime is known as
	makrud 
(fig.), 
citron-like species are called  
som ma-ngua 
(fig.), 
etc. 
			
回     
 
  
Lime Swallowtail  
Common name 
for a butterfly, with the scientific designation Papilio demoleus, and found in 
many parts of the world, including South and Southeast Asia. The name derives from this 
butterfly's principal food-plant, i.e. lime (fig.). 
Above, the wings are black with irregular whitish spots, both large ones and 
smaller ones, as well as a reddish-orange spot on each of the hind-wings (fig.). 
On the underside, its wings are white, with black margins and a black-and-white 
chequered pattern, some orange-buff smudged spots, and a single eyespot on each 
of the hind-wings. This species of butterfly (fig.) has a wingspan of about 6.5 to 7 
centimeters and can commonly be found in open country, usually around flowers, 
but seldom near water. Despite its common name, it lacks any tails.
						Its body is white, with a black band above and black 
lines along the length of the abdomen, while its antennae are black, and its 
legs black with white. Also commonly known as Common Lime Butterfly, Small 
Citrus Butterfly, Chequered Swallowtail, Dingy Swallowtail and Lemon Butterfly. 
 
See also WILDLIFE PICTURES. 
			
回  
             
			 
          	 
          %203_small.jpg)  
Lim Ko Niau (ลิ้มกอเหนี่ยว)   
Thai-Chinese. Name of the sister of Lim To Khieng, a Chinese immigrant who married a local 
  
Pattani girl and converted to 
  
		
		
			
        Islam. Lim Ko Niau however sailed from 
 
China on a   
sampan 
to try and sway her brother to forsake Islam and return to his homeland. In a 
negative response he demonstrated his faith and in 1578 started the construction 
of the
Masayid Kreu Se (fig.). His sister then put a curse on the  
	mosque, saying it would never be completed. After a final failed attempt to persuade her brother she eventually hanged herself from a nearby 
  
cashew nut tree and from grief her brother was unable to finish 
the mosque which to this day remains uncompleted. The tree from which she hanged herself has been enshrined 
at her grave (map) and her wooden image is carried around annually in a local procession.
			
回  
_small.jpg)  
Lineated Barbet  
Common name for a bird with the scientific designation 
Megalaima lineata (fig.). This barbet is a familiar figure in deciduous forests, 
secondary vegetation and open woodlands and is overall green, with a pale 
yellowish straw head and breast, streaked with brown. It has a bare yellowish orbital eye ring and its legs and large bill are yellowish-orange, with several black 
protruding hairs between the bill and the forehead, typical with barbets. Its 
diet consists of both fruit and insects. Though largely absent from
		Isaan, it is a resident bird throughout 
most of  
			Thailand 
and occurs as far westward as northeastern India and southern Nepal. It is very 
similar to the
	
	
	Brown-headed Barbet (fig.), 
which is endemic throughout the Indian subcontinent, including Nepal (fig.) 
and Sri Lanka. In Thai, it is called nok prodok thammada (นกโพระดกธรรมดา), which translates as 
‘common barbet’. 
See also WILDLIFE PICTURE.
			
回  
  
 
lin fah 
(ลิ้นฟ้า)  
Thai. ‘Sky tongues’. Local name for 
the fruits of the 
	
	
	Indian Trumpet Tree (fig.),
which is known in Thai as
pheh-kah, among other, 
local names. The seed pods are 
edible and have a high content of bioflavonoids, which have since long been used 
in local traditional folk medicine, mainly as a remedy against cough, bronchitis 
and wheeze. 
			
回  
 
  
ling (ลิง)  
Thai for  
			‘monkey’ or ‘ape’. When reffering 
to the
	monkey-warriors
of the 
Ramakien 
(fig.), 
usually the 
			      
			      
                  Pali
term 
wahnon is used.
			
回   
ling    
(ลิงค์)    
  
Thai name for 
	
	linga. Also    
leung.
			
回  
linga 
(लिङ्ग)   
Sanskrit. ‘Emblem, gender, symbol’. A representation of a phallus, the symbol of the creative power of 
   
Shiva. 
 
READ ON.
			
回  
ling ai ngiya (ลิงไอ้เงี้ยะ)  
Thai. 
Another name for  
ling wok phu khao.
			
回  
lingam 
(लिङ्गं)  
See 
	
	linga.
			
回  
lingaparvata 
(लिङ्गंपर्वत)  
Sanskrit. ‘Mountain emblem’. A mountain peak in the form of a 
	
	linga.
			
回   
ling hang san (ลิงหางสั้น)   
Thai. ‘Short-tailed monkey’. Name for 
the Pig-tail Macaque, a kind of monkey of the genus 
Macaca (fig.) with a short, 
thinly furred or naked pig-tail 
and with the scientific designation Macaca nemestrina (fig.). This species of
	      
          
	      macaque
is often trained and used for picking 
  
coconuts at
coconut palm plantations 
(fig.). 
In Thailand, it occurs on the southernmost peninsula and is thus also called 
Southern Pig-tailed Macaque or  
	 
	
	Beruk (fig.), distinguishing it from the Northern 
Pig-tailed Macaque, genus Macaca leonina, a genus which traditionally has been 
considered a subspecies (fig.). It may also be confused with a different 
species, named  
Stump-tailed Macaque 
or  
	
	
	Bear Macaque 
(fig.). As the name suggests,  
Pig-tailed Macaques are 
distinguished by a short thin tail, that is carried sticking up over the back 
	(fig.), 
whilst male adults are recognized by their muscular 
physique and large size, almost twice that of females. Their fur may vary from 
grayish brown to reddish, with a distinctive cap of dark short hairs on the 
crown. The bare skin of their face is pinkish brown, with a bluish tint above 
the eyes. Their hands and feet are grayish pink with some fur at the top and 
dark brown nails. In Thai also known as ling 
	
 kang. 
			
回  
            
			
			
  
ling urang utang (ลิงอุรังอุตัง)  
Thai name 
for the 
              	Orang Utan.
			
回  
ling sahaem (ลิงแสม)  
Thai. 
‘Avicennia monkey’. Name for the  
			
			Crab-eating Macaque, a monkey or 
  
	      
          
	      macaque
	of the genus Macaca irus. 
It has a long tail, with a length that equals up to ten centimeters more than the size of its head and body 
together, measuring somewhere between 40-65 centimeters (fig.). Its coat is brown with some grey and the fur on its head is short and 
sticks upward, reminiscent of a
	kwan. It is a social animal that lives in 
large groups and can be found all over Thailand. It feeds on plants, insects and 
crabs, hence its English common name. Its favoured habitat is a small tree 
called sahaem of which in Thailand exist three species, all within the genus of 
Avicennia, a genus of 
	            mangrove, hence its name in Thai. 
Due to its long tail it is also called Long-tailed Macaque and in 1821, Sir 
Thomas Raffles gave the animal also the scientific name Macaca fascicularis, in 
which the latter is Latin for ‘a small band’.
	
	See also WILDLIFE PICTURES (1),
(2) and
(3), 
	
	
	TRAVEL PICTURE, 
	
																	and  
	
	
	WATCH VDO (1) 
and 
	(2). 
			
回  
            
			
			
%20ลิงแสม_small.jpg)  
            
			
			
			ling sen (ลิงเสน)  
			Thai name for the
			
			Stump-tailed Macaque, a monkey with the 
			scientific name Macaca 
		arctoides. 
			This species of 
			
    		
			Macaque, also known as Bear Macaque  
			(fig.), 
			has a dark brown fur with long shaggy hair (fig.). They have an extremely 
			short, hairless tail and a bare red bottom. Their hairless facial 
			skin, which extends to the forehead, is pink to red and darkens to 
			near-black as they grow older. They typically have canine teeth, 
			which are longer in adult males, as they are important in 
			establishing their dominance within social groups, that may consist 
			of as many as 50 individuals. They spend most of their time on the 
			ground, feeding on grasses, seeds, buds, insects and small animals, 
			but will also climb trees to pick fruit or shoots. They are found in 
			subtropical and tropical broadleaf evergreen forest, in different 
			habitats at different elevations, usually living in dense evergreen 
			rainforests below 1,500 meters and subtropical evergreen forest 
			between 1,800 and 2,500 meters, depending on the amount of rainfall 
			in the area. They range from Northeastern India and southern China 
			into Peninsular  
			
    
	Malaysia, including Bangladesh,
			
			
	Myanmar, 
			
			
			
			Vietnam and Thailand. 
			
			回  
             
			 
			 
  
            
			
			ling wok 
			(ลิงวอก)  
			Thai name for the
			
	
	Rhesus Macaque, a monkey with the 
			scientific name Macaca mulatta. Its semi-long fur is grayish brown 
			and it has a hairless, pink face and pink ears, and a reddish tint 
			in the area of its bottom. Besides the former description, it 
			somewhat resembles the  
			
			Crab-eating Macaque (fig.) 
			or Long-tailed Macaque, but with a medium-length tail, less than 
			half the size and measuring only 20-23 centimeters (fig.). Its distribution 
			in Thailand is mainly in the North and the northern part of
			
			
		Isaan. In the wild they live in troops 
			comprising a mixture of males and females and may be found in 
			grasslands, woodlands, as well as in mountainous regions, up to an 
			altitude of 2,500 meters. Due to its relatively easy upkeep in 
			captivity, this species of   
			
			
    		
	macaque is well-known to science. It 
			has been used extensively in medical and biological research. It has 
			given its name to the Rhesus factor, one of the elements of a 
			person's blood group and was launched into outer space during test 
			flights of NASA. Unlike some other macaques, they are ineffective 
			swimmers and have even been found drowned. Note that the word wok (วอก) 
			may also be used synonymous for ‘monkey’ and is often used in the
			
			
			Chinese zodiac, either simply as 
			wok or as pih wok instead of pih ling (ปีลิง), to refer to the ‘Year 
			of the monkey’.  
			
			See also WILDLIFE PICTURES.
			
			
			回  
			
%20ลิงวอก_small.jpg)  
			
ling wok phu khao 
(ลิงวอกภูเขา)  
Thai name for the Assamese Macaque, a species of 
			
    		
	macaque
	with the scientific name Macaca assamensis. 
The Thai designation is a composition of the name 
	ling wok, Thai for 
‘Rhesus Macaque’, 
 
and phu khao, which means  
‘mountain’. 
The name could thus be translated as ‘Mountain 
Rhesus Macaque’. 
This refers both to the fact that it is an upland 
species living in semi-deciduous and montane 
forests, and usually found at an altitude between 500 
and 3,500 meters, and that it somewhat resembles the Rhesus Macaque, though 
larger and with a darker face, longer hair and a grey area around its bottom, 
rather than red. It occurs throughout much 
of southern and Southeast Asia, including India, Nepal, southern China, Laos, 
Vietnam and Thailand. Its is mainly arboreal and its
diet includes leaves, buds, invertebrates, 
fruits and occasionally small animals, such as lizards. 
In Thai also known as
ling ai ngiya 
and in English also called Assam Macaque. 
Two subspecies are recognized, i.e. the Eastern Assamese Macaque (Macaca 
assamensis assamensis) and the Western Assamese Macaque (Macaca assamensis 
pelops). 
			
回  
			 
	 
			 
%20ลิงวอกภูเขา_small.jpg)  
ling zhi (灵芝)  
Chinese for 
‘mushroom of immortality’. See 
		
        
      hed lin jeu daeng.
			
回  
lingum  
See 
	
	linga.
			
回   
lintel   
A transom or girder resting on two vertical posts, usually decorated with narrative scenes or ornamental motifs. In 
  
 Khmer temples the lintel can be found above doorways and window openings, directly under the 
  
 fronton. In Thai called 
 
 thablang.
			
回  
   
lion   
In 
Hinduism, the lion is the mount of the goddess 
 
Devi, 
who is also known as in many other forms and by numerous other names (i.e.
            Uma,  
Parvati, 
etc.), and  
of the god  
 
 Manjushri (fig.), 
who in Chinese  Buddhism is referred to as 
						
						Wen Shu (fig.). In Buddhism, it is 
also the protector of the   
 dhamma, and in that way often seen as symbolic guardians at temple entrances in North Thailand and 
Myanmar, usually in pairs. 
Together with the
    
    
    bull, the  
	elephant and 
the horse, it is also one of the four animals, that represent the four stages in 
the life of the  
		Buddha (fig.). In Thai called 
  
 singh.
			
回     
 
  
Lion-tailed Macaque  
Common name 
for a species of monkey, found only in southwestern India and with the binomial 
name Macaca silenus. This rain forest dweller is overall dark brown to black and 
is characterized by a black hairless face surrounded by a silver-grey mane, and 
a long black tail with a tuft at the end, similar to that of lions, with the 
tuft of males being more developed than that of females. 
			
回  
				        									
			 
			 
			 
%201_small.jpg)  
Lipstick Palm   
See 
mahk daeng. 
			
回  
Lipstick Tree  
Common name 
for a shrub or small tree, with the botanical designation Bixa orellana, and 
also known as Annato, Urucum, and Achiote. The ripe fruits of this sun-loving 
tree grow in clusters and are usually bright to deep red, though there are also 
rarer, pale yellowish and green fruiting plants, yet all fruits turn brown when 
ripening and are dark brown after having expelled their seeds. These seeds have 
a reddish membrane that yields a yellow to orange or red dye, which is used in 
numerous commercial and industrial processes. For example, as an industrial dye 
it is used in cosmetics to make lipstick for one, and in cuisine it used as a 
food additive, to colour 
rice, as well 
as certain cheeses, such as Cheddar and Gouda, amongst others. The shrub 
originates from Central and South America and historically, the indigenous 
peoples there have used the seeds and plant for body paint. In the 17th century, 
it was introduced in Southeast Asia by the Spanish. In Thailand, it is known as 
kham saet (คำแสด) or kham ngo (คำเงาะ). The latter name is reminiscent of
    
	ngo, the Thai name for
			rambutan, a fruit tree with certain 
similarities on first sight and which name means ‘hair’, referring to the hairy 
red rind of the fruits, which also grow in clusters (fig.).
			
回  
			
%20Annato,%20Urucum,%20Achiote%201_small.jpg)  
lishi (利事)  
Chinese. ‘Beneficial thing’ or 
‘profitable item’. Another name for the money that is put 
in red envelopes or  
hong bao.
			
回  
Li Shi Xian Guan (利市仙官)  
Chinese. ‘Immortal official of market profits’ or 
‘lucky money immortal official’. It is 
the name of an informal god of wealth, more accurately the ‘official of the god 
of benefit’ and the deity that accompanies other 
Chinese wealth gods. 
He is also one of the  
		Wu Lu Cai Shen
 
			or ‘five path wealth gods’, namely the god of 
the northern direction. Li Shi means ‘profit from transactions’ and Xian Guan means 
‘immortal official’. He is a deity that takes on a specific role in the promotion of trade and the 
accumulation of commercial wealth. Amongst the Chinese it is the custom to stick 
his image on the inside of the entrance door of shops and business premises as 
the deity who calls in mercantile profits. His full name is
Li Shi Xian Guan Yao 
Shao Si. See also 
		      
		       
			      
		      
		      Cai Shen. 
			
回  
Li Shi Xian Guan Yao Shao Si 
(利市仙官姚少司)  
Full Chinese 
name of 
Li Shi Xian Guan. 
			
回  
Liso (ลีซอ)   
Another name for   
Lisu.
			
回  
  
Lisu 
 (ลีซู)  
 A   formerly nomadic hill tribe  that arrived  partly in Thailand via  
		      Chiang Mai
 at the end of the 19th  century. The Lisu language belongs to the  Yi or  Lolo branch of the Tibeto-Burman language group and probably originated in  Tibet, though the  core of the population lives mainly in the North of the Southern Chinese province 
  
Yunnan, west of the  Salween  river. 
This area is also home to the Yunnan Snub-nosed Monkey, a rare species of 
monkey, which has inspired this tribe's legend, as the Lisu people believe it to be related to their ancestors, 
and refer to it as the Wild Man of the Mountain. Today Lisu 
women are more often seen in traditional dress than the men (fig.). Also Liso. 
    
 MORE ON THIS.
			
回   
 
   
litchi  
See  
 
	
lychee.
			
回  
Li Tieh-kuai (李铁拐)  
Chinese. Name of one of the
Eight Immortals (fig.), 
who is generally depicted as an old man holding a crutch and a 
calabash (fig.). 
The name Tieh-kuai is a compound of tieh (拐) meaning 
‘strong’, ‘solid’ or ‘iron’, and kuai (杖), short for kuai zhang (拐杖) which means 
‘crutches’. In literature, Tieh-kuai is hence referred to as ‘Iron Crutch’.
In his calabash he carries a magical medicine that 
can cure any illness and never empties which he dispense to the sick. According to legend, he initially was a 
handsome man, but one day his spirit travelled to heaven to visit some 
immortals and on his return he found that his body had been cremated. He thus 
had to take another body and the only one available was that of an old and poor 
beggar with a lame leg, who had just died of starvation. Having been a student 
of 
	
	
    Lao Tzu 
before, the founder of  
Taoism gave him a strong crutch that would never break and ordered 
Li Tieh-kuai to travel to many lands to cure the sick and to alleviate their 
pain. Due to his association with medicine, an iron crutch, his symbol, can now 
still be found hanging outside some traditional Chinese apothecaries. Although 
benevolent to the sick and the needy, he is also known to be grumpy and 
bad-tempered. His mount is 
a  
	lion (fig.). 
 
Also transcribed  Li Te-guai and Li Tie Guai. 
			
回  
            
            
            
            %20Iron-Crutch%20Li%203_small.jpg)   
Little Cormorant  
Common name 
for a 51-54.5 centimeter large bird, with the binomial name Microcarbo niger. Non-breeding adults are mostly 
blackish, with greyer 
scapulars and wings with black feather-edges. In addition, it has a whitish chin 
and a greyish stubby bill, with a longer upper mandible of which the tip is bent 
downward (fig.). 
Like the 
Indian Cormorant  
and the 
Great Cormorant, 
it has dark grey to black legs and webbed feet. In flight, the bird appears 
relatively short-necked, small-winged and long-tailed. In the breeding, adults 
are overall black, with a bluish to greenish gloss on the head, neck and 
underparts, and silvery-white streaks on the crown, ear-coverts and nape, as 
well as a black bill. Though able to dive to considerable depths, they usually 
feed in shallow water, taking in a variety of fish. The Little Cormorant is a 
lowland breeder, though it may occur in areas with altitudes up to 1,450 meters. 
Its habit consists of various freshwater wetlands, as well as estuaries and
	            mangrove forests. In Thai, this bird is called
nok kah nahm, which literally translates as
‘water-crow’. 
 
See also WILDLIFE PICTURES. 
 
回   
            
            
            
            %201_small.jpg)  
Little Egret  
Common name 
of a wading bird, with the scientific name Egretta garzetta. This 55 to 
65 centimeters large, white bird has a mostly blackish bill, blackish legs and yellow feet 
(fig.), 
although during the breeding season the feet may turn reddish yellow and the 
subspecies Egretta garzetta nigripes has blackish feet. Breeding adults also 
develop long nape-, back- and breast-plumes, and the facial skin becomes reddish in colour. Their habitat consists of various open 
freshwaters (fig.) and coastal wetlands, as well as cultivation. In Thai, it is called  
nok yahng pia (นกยางเปีย) 
or nok krayahng pia (นกกระยางเปีย). See also
			Intermediate Egret and
Great Egret. 
												
												
												See also WILDLIFE PICTURES,
TRAVEL PHOTOS, and
  
			
WATCH VIDEO. 
 
回   
            
            
            
            _small.jpg)  
	
Little Grebe  
Common name 
of a small water bird, with the scientific designation Tachybaptus ruficollis, 
and which is also commonly known as Dabchick. In breeding plumage adults are 
predominantly dark brown above, with a chestnut coloured neck, cheeks and 
flanks, a black bill, and a yellow gape. In non-breeding plumage, the rufous is 
replaced by a brownish-grey wash (fig.). Immature birds are similar to adults in 
non-breeding plumage, but with a dark-striped head-side and a yellow bill with a 
small black tip (fig.). 
 
See also WILDLIFE PICTURES (1) 
and
(2). 
 
回    
            
            
            
            %201_small.jpg)  
Little Green Bee-eater  
See 
Bee-eater. 
回  
Little Heron  
Common name 
of an up to 48 centimeters tall wading bird, with the scientific name Butorides 
striatus. The subspecies that prevails in Southeast Asia is Butorides striatus 
javanicus and adults are overall grey, with a black crown, nape and 
cheek-stripe, some whitish streaks on the breast, and a small white patch behind 
the eyes, which are yellow. The skin of the lores is yellow with black, and its 
legs, feet and lower mandible are yellowish-orange. When seated, the bird's 
rather long neck is usually retracted in a hunched posture, though when feeding 
or in flight, this heron's neck may be partly or totally outstretched (fig.). 
In addition, the feathers of the black crown and nape can be raised (fig.). 
Little Herons feed on small fish, frogs 
and aquatic insects. They do this by standing motionless in shallow water 
or at the water's edge, waiting to ambush 
prey, sometimes even tricking it by
using bait, e.g. 
by dropping a feather carefully on the 
water surface and picking any fish 
that comes to investigate (fig.). 
Also known as Striated Heron and 
	            Mangrove Heron, and sometimes referred to as 
Green-backed Heron, a designation reflected in the Thai name nok yahng khiaw (นกยางเขียว), which can be 
translated as  
‘green heron’, ‘green bittern’ or ‘green 
egret’. 
回    
            
            
            
            %201_small.jpg)  
Little India  
Name 
of a neighbourhood near 
    
    
	Chinatown 
(fig.) 
in 
 
			
			Bangkok which 
is for a large part inhabited by people of Indian descent and which besides a commercial 
area with typical Indian shop houses, restaurants and a bazaar known as Phahurat 
Market, is also home to a large 
			
			
			Sikh 
temple known as 
				
Gurudwara 
			
			
			Sri 
Guru 
			
Singh 
Sabha 
(fig.), which seems squeezed into 
the many narrow alleys that at times remind of Old Delhi's Chadni Chawk area (fig.). 
回  
           
          			 
            
	
	
Little Mapwing  
Common name for a species of butterfly in the family Nymphalidae and with the scientific designation 
Cyrestis lutea. 
READ ON. 
回  
Little Ringed Plover  
Common name 
for a small, 16 centimeters tall wading bird, with the scientific name Charadrius 
dubius. It has a greyish-brown back and wings, a white belly and breast, and a 
black band around the neck. The head is white, with a black pattern and a 
pale greyish-brown crown, whilst the bill is blackish. It has a distinctive yellow eye-ring 
and short yellow legs. Its habitat consists of muddy 
areas near freshwater, where it feeds on insects and worms. It is a close 
relative of the  
Red-wattled Lapwing 
(fig.). 
In Thai, this plover is known as
nok hua toh lek kha leuang, i.e. 
   
‘small, big-headed, yellow-legged bird’. 
回     
            
            
            
            _small.jpg)  
Liu Bang 
(刘邦)    
			Chinese. Name of a 
commoner and local sheriff in his birthplace of the Han Kingdom, who after the 
death of China's first Emperor
			
			      
Qin Shi Huang Ti, 
emerged as the new leader of a unified China and became the first ruler 
of the Han Dynasty under the name
			Emperor Han Gao 
				Zu (高祖). 
READ ON. 
回  
Liu Bei 
(刘备)   
			Chinese. Name of a benevolent 
warlord in the late Eastern Han Dynasty, who founded the state of Shu Han in the
			Three Kingdoms 
Period and became its first ruler. After he was defeated by his main enemy Cao 
Cao (曹操), the warlord who controlled the Han central government and the 
figurehead Han Emperor Xian (献), he sought refuge under Liu Biao (刘表), the ruler 
of Jing Zhou (荊州). To rebuilt his strength, Liu Bei and his 
two most loyal generals 
Kuan U (fig.) 
and 
Zhang Fei (fig.)
went to see the accomplished 
			strategist 
			
			Zhu Ge Liang
			(fig.) to recruit him to their cause, by visiting him 
three times, thus showing their sincerity and eagerness 
(fig.). 
			In Thai, he is known as
			
	Lao Pie.
			
回      
            
            
            
              
Liu Hai (刘海)  
Chinese. 
Name of a male deity who is an informal 
Chinese wealth god in 
			Taoism. 
His forehead is covered with short hairs and he rides 
a toad, his personal pet, called 
chanchu. It 
conveys him to any place he wishes to go, but occasionally it would escape down 
a well, and Liu Hai would then lure it out with a line baited with gold coins (fig.). 
Often depicted with a beckoning hand and with stringed coins. Also known as Liu Hai 
 
Chan and
Hai Chan Zi. 
See also 
		      
		       
			      
		      
		      Cai Shen. 
			
回  
            
            
            
             
liuli (琉璃) 
1. Chinese. ‘Coloured 
glass’. Modern Chinese decorative artworks made 
from glass, that are tinged in one or more  wax-like colours (fig.), using an 
improved, two thousand years 
old technique and casting method, that originated 
during the Western Zhou Dynasty, and which was initially used to make 
glass earrings. Liuli is made from a combination of glass and lead dioxide,
and the raw materials are first 
melted into various kinds of [mostly] coloured glass at temperatures above 1,400 degrees 
Celsius, with the best results in translucency and 
refractive quality of the glass being reached at a mixture of at least 24% lead 
dioxide, making it heavier and also softer. Then, the gluey solution is cleaned and poured into molds for cooling. 
Afterwards, the furnace temperature is brought down to less than 1,000 degrees 
Celsius, and fired up for at least another 15 days, in order to craft the glass into fine works of art. The term liuli was coined in the Buddhist 
			
			
			sutra 
The Light of Liuli, where it signifies the 
elimination of greed and desire, illumination of the spirit of 
		
		
		Buddhism, 
and the dissemination of the glory of the 
		
		
		Buddha. 
It is also used in modern production of religious statues (fig.), 
including 
		      
		      
              Buddha images (fig.). Liuli is a product of prime quality and its development is 
quite complicated, containing dozens of processes and taking at least around two 
months to finish. The intricate production process of liuli has a low 
success-rate and it is hence superior in price and quality to ordinary glass or 
crystal products. In English, it is 
referred to as Liuli Crystal Glass. 
			
回 
            
            
            
             
2. Chinese. ‘Coloured 
glaze’ or ‘Ceramic glaze’. 
			
回 
 
Liuli Crystal Glass 
See 
liuli. 
			
回 
 
		lob (ลอบ) 
 
		Thai. A kind of fish trap used to catch 
fresh water fish in shallow water 
areas. It is made from  
			
			bamboo or rattan with a hole to let the 
fish in.  
It is 
placed 
		between a fence of sticks that guide the fish to the opening of 
the trap. There are three different kinds of lod, that is to say, the lob yeun 
(standing trap), 
lob non (lying trap) and lob kung (shrimp trap). See also 
		
saab, 
	
son,
	
	
sai
and  
sang.
			
回 
_small.jpg)   
lobster claw   
Name for a species of   
 heliconia which flowers resemble a lobster's claw. 
There are two kinds: the Expanded or Small Lobster Claw and the Hanging or Big Lobster 
Claw, also nicknamed 
 Fishtail Heliconia (fig.). 
The former includes the genera Heliconia stricta and 
Heliconia latispatha, while the 
latter includes   
    
     Heliconia 
rostrata,  
    
     Heliconia 
velutina and Heliconia bihai.
			
回  
  
Loei (เลย)   
1. Thai. The capital of Loei province (map), 520 kms North of 
			
			Bangkok and situated in the far Northwest of 
 
 Isaan has a population of around 22,000. 
 
READ ON. 
			
回  
2. Thai. Name of a river in northern 
Thailand and one of tributaries of the 
	
	Mekhong 
River. It originates at the Phu Luang plateau and for a while forms the border 
between 
	
	
	Loei 
and 
Phetchabun 
provinces, then flows across Loei town and eventually merges with the Mekhong 
River in the 
		      amphur Chiang Kahn (เชียงคาน). 
			
回  
loh (โหละ)  
			Thai. Name of a percussion 
instrument 
  
from 
southern Thailand, 
  
that
			consists of a cylindrical 
section of 
			
			bamboo 
			called 
krabok (fig.), 
which is attached to a thin yet long bamboo stick, that is curved at either end 
and serves both as a handle and as a stand. One end of this bowed stick is 
placed on the ground while the other is held by the musician, 
who 
plays the instrument by rhythmically beating the bamboo cylinder, which is 
suspended in between the two ends, using a wooden stick. 
			
回   
 
 
 
_small.jpg)  
 
loha (โลหะ, लोह)   
Thai-Sanskrit. 
‘Metal’, as in     
Lohaprasat.
			
回  
lohan  
Another transcription 
for 
		
		luohan.
			
回  
lohan guay (หล่อฮั้นก๊วย)  
Thai transcription 
for  
luohan guo.
			
回   
Lohaprasat (โลหะปราสาท)   
Thai-Sanskrit-Khmer. Structure with a spire in metal. There 
were initially only three Lohaprasat buildings in the world.  
READ ON.
			
回   
lohchingchah (โล้ชิงช้า) 
Thai. ‘Swing festival’ or 
‘swing ceremony’. A former annual brahman festival held
in honour of the Hindu god 
Shiva in which participants had to swing to catch a bag of gold tied to a fifteen meters high  
	
			
			bamboo pole. It was held in the second lunar month, from the morning of the third day until the
evening of the ninth day of the new moon. Due to the large number of victims that fell off the swing the festival was eventually prohibited during the reign of 
	
Rama VII. See also 
	
trihyampawaai 
	and  
MAP. 
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lohk (โลก)  
Thai for 
‘world’ or ‘earth’. In 
              
		      Burma, 
usually transliterated lawk. Also 
			
			phop 
and 
phiphop. 
			
回  
 
Lohkkannaht (โลกนาถ)   
Thai. 
‘The great one of the world’. A name for the     
Buddha. Also 
spelled 
Lokanat. 
See also 
Law Ka Nat. 
			
回  
 
Loi Krathong (ลอยกระทง)   
Thai. 
‘Floating flower arrangement’. Annual festival in Thailand held on the full moon 
of  
Yi Peng, the second lunar month according to the northern Thai calendar and the twelfth lunar month of a regular calendar year. A floating flower arrangement 
made from 
  
			the folded leaves of a   
			
			banana plant (fig.), flowers, candles and 
			
			
			incense sticks, 
and called    
krathong (fig.) is put to the water and pushed away to honour the goddess of water 
   
Mae Khongkha. It is generally believed that by giving an offering to the water goddess, one is forgiven for all pollution caused in the past year when using water for personal purposes. Each krathong is decorated with burning candles and incense sticks causing the water to be illuminated by thousands of floating lights. The festival is celebrated  most exuberantly in 
the North, especially in  
		      Chiang Mai 
(fig.) 
and 
Sukhothai, 
where every year colourful parades takes place (fig.). 
In the Sukhothai parade (fig.) each 
   
jangwat displays its own krathong 
as well as the elected Miss Krathong. This procession goes on in traditional dress (fig.) and within the old city (fig.). Other events are the election of the annual Miss Krathong and a sound-and-light show telling the history of this early kingdom with the ancient city ruins as a backdrop. According to the 
   
phra rachaphithi sip song deuan Loi Krathong has nothing to do with any kind of ritual or ceremony, neither Buddhist nor 
  
Brahmin, though there would be an association with the use of 
   
kohm loy, floating lanterns that the early kings of Sukhothai sent off in the air, a practice still in use today 
(fig.). 
There are several local adaptations of this ancient festival throughout 
Thailand, often with their own designations, especially in northern Thailand, 
such as in Chiang Mai where it is referred to as Yi Peng, 
and in  
 Tak, where the 
local variation is called 
 
Loi Krathong Sai 
							Lai Prathip Phan Duang or simply 
 
Loi Krathong Sai (fig.). 
In addition, it is also 
referred to as Water Candle Festival, Candle Festival and Festival of Lights. 
In  
		China, 
a similar tradition takes place during the Spirit Festival and sometimes on 
other occasions, such as during
	Qing Ming and  
			Gui Yue, 
when people set 
	
	lotus shaped 
lanterns adrift on the water at sundown (fig.), 
a tradition also known as Water Lantern Festival. Its equivalent celebrated in 
	Myanmar is known as
Tazaung Daing and 
 
			marks the end of the rainy season, as well as the end of the 
Kathin 
			season. Loi Krathong may also be spelled Loy Krathong. 
See also
POSTAGE STAMPS, 
THEMATIC STREET LIGHT 
 and 
WATCH VIDEO. 
			
回    
 
   
Loi Krathong Sai (ลอยกระทงสาย)  
Name for the
			local adaptation of the annual festival of
			 
    
    Loi Krathong  
in
			
			Tak,
			in which halved
coconut
shells are used as 
  
krathong, 
rather than the usual floating flower arrangements or 
vessels made from   
		banana plants. 
Originally, the halved coconut shells were filled with small balls formed from the latex of 
Yang trees mixed with wood chips, that are placed at the bottom of the coconut 
shell and lit, though now they are usually filled with candle wax and a thick 
wick at the centre, which is fixed into the wax. These special krathong, known as 
krathong sai (fig.), are 
often decorated in the form of flowers and floated on the 
Ping 
River in the city 
centre of Tak 
at regular interval, forming long rows of flickering lights on the 
water. With
 
    
    Loi Krathong being 
celebrated in honour of the goddess of water    
Mae Khongkha, 
the    
coconut
lights are reminiscent of the tiny 
lights set afloat daily on the 
Ganges 
River in Varanasi during a ritual known as 
Aarti (fig.), 
as well as of the 
coconut candles (fig.) 
burned  during the Hindu 
festival of 
Vijayadazaami (fig.). 
In full, the festival is called
Loi Krathong Sai 
							Lai Prathip Phan Duang.
 See also
POSTAGE STAMPS. 
 
			
回  
			
   
Loi Krathong Sai 
							Lai Prathip Phan Duang (ลอยกระทงสายไหลประทีปพันดวง)  
Thai. Full 
name for  
Loi Krathong Sai, which is an adaptation of
the nationwide festival of
			 
     
    
    Loi Krathong as celebrated in 
 
 Tak. 
 
			
回  
loka 
(लोक)   
Sanskrit. ‘World, region, or sphere (of a deity)’. A classification of the universe, 
which denotes the three spheres of existence that comprise the whole universe. In general the 
   
triloka or 
‘three worlds’ are heaven or paradise, earth and hell. Other categorizations 
mention seven and twenty-two worlds, united in the ‘Egg 
of Brahma’ and referring to the several sections within each main division. In Thai 
called lohk. 
			
回    
lokaban (โลกบาล)  
Thai for   
lokapala.
			
回 
Lokanat (โลกนาถ) 
See 
Lohkkannaht and 
Law Ka Nat. 
			
回   
lokapala 
(लोकपाल)   
Sanskrit. 
‘Guardian of the world’. In Hindu mythology there are eight  lokapalas presiding over the four 
points of the compass and the four intervening directions. 
   
Indra protects the East (fig.), 
   
Yama the South (fig.), 
  
Kubera or    
Vaisravana the North (fig.) and 
   
Varuna the West (fig.). The intervening directions are guarded by 
   
Ishana (Shiva - 
   
fig.) or 
  
Prithivi in the Northeast, 
   
Agni protects the Southeast (fig.), 
  
Surya or 
   
Nairriti the Southwest (fig.), and 
  
Vayu the Northwest (fig.). In Buddhism there may be four, eight, ten or fourteen lokapalas. Also called 
  
dikpala 
and ‘ashtadikpalas’, literally the ‘(eight) guardian(s) of the sky’. In Thai called 
  
lokaban and in Burmese 
usually referred to as 
Satu Lokapala 
(fig.), 
a term related to the Thai-Pali
word   
jatulohkabahn.
			
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Lokesvara 
(लोकईश्वर)   
Sanskrit. ‘Lord of the world’. A form of the 
   
bodhisattva
   
Avalokitesvara, who was at the centre of a prevalent cult in ancient Cambodia. He is represented on the towers of the 
   
Bayon temple and appears frequently in 
  
Khmer
   
bas-reliefs. During the reign of Jayavarman VII 
   
Buddhism in the Khmer empire consisted principally of the worship of a triad made up of the 
   
Buddha, Lokesvara and 
   
Prajnaparamita together with the tantric deity 
   
Hevajra. They are symbolically represented by three majestic monuments, namely Preah Khan commemorating Lokesvara, Bayon in honor of the Buddha, and Ta Prohm dedicated to Prajnaparamita.
			
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Lolo (โลโล)  
 1. Branch of the  Tibeto-Birman language group, of which the standard language is   
Lahu Na, a language also spoken by most other Lahu people outside Thailand. 
e.g. in Burma, Laos, 
Vietnam and 
China.  
 
2. 
Ethnic group and 
			a subgroup of the
			 
Yi 
found in  
			Thailand. 
			
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long (龙)  
Chinese for
‘dragon’. 
In 
			      
			      
Hokkien 
and 
			      
Tae Chew, 
pronounced leng, as in 
Wat Leng Hok Yi. 
See also   
Wolong. 
			
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longan   
See 
   
lamyai.
			
回  
Long-armed Parry Beetle  
Name for a species of beetle in the 
Scarabaeidae family, with the 
		scientific designation Cheirotonus 
			parryi. 
 
READ ON.
			
回  
Long-banded Silverline  
            Common name for a small butterfly with several 
			scientific names, including Spindasis lohita 
			and Cigaritis lohita, 
			and found in South Asia and Southeast Asia. Its common name derives 
			from the pattern of the wings of this butterfly, which comprises of 
			several silver lines broadly edged with dark red to black, on a pale 
			yellow background. In addition, this species has two pairs of 
			white-tipped wing-tails, as well as an orange 
			area with one large and one smaller black spot on the hindwings, 
			which at first glance is easily confused for the forelegs, head and 
			antennae of the butterfly. Its corpulent body is pale with bands 
			that do not meet at the bottom, their colour dark red to black, 
			usually corresponding to the broad edges that border the silver 
			lines on the wings. In 2001, this striking butterfly was 
			depicted on one of a set of four Thai postage stamps featuring 
			butterflies (fig.). 
			
			回  
 
			 
			 
_small.jpg)  
longboat race  
A Thai 
traditional sport in which several teams vie with 
each other in a rowing race with a longboat, called reua yao in Thai. It 
reflects the way of life of people who live near the river and takes place in 
many regions of Thailand, after the Buddhist festival of
			thod kathin, when water levels are 
at their highest. This is a period in which local people are free from labour in 
the fields and have time to make merit (tamboon), 
and are enticed into boat races for fun. Longboat races are divided into several 
categories, including races with 41-55 paddlers, races with 31-40 paddlers and 
races with fewer than 30 paddlers. Each round two teams come out against each other, competing for the fastest 
time. In Thai called  
	gaan khaeng reua yao.
			
回  
  
									
Long-bodied Bug  
See 
 
									
									
									muan mayao. 
			
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Long-headed Toothpick Grasshopper  
Common name for an insect in the family 
of grasshoppers and with the scientific name Achurum carinatum.
READ ON.  
			
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Longhouse  
1. A communal one-room building with a 
													large balcony, built on 
stilts in the jungles of Borneo, and used by a number of local riverine and 
hill-dwelling ethnic tribes, such as –and especially– the
Iban 
(fig.), though nowadays it is also copied, modernized and 
adjusted by certain nature resorts, leaving only the balcony and an inner 
corridor along one side for communal use, whilst the rest –along the other side– 
is divided into a row of private living quarters (fig.). It is also called Borneo 
Longhouse and is locally known 
	as rumah panjai, and in Malay as rumah panjang. Also spelled Long House.
			
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,%20Borneo_small.jpg)  
2. A kind of long communal building, of 
which −until the eighties− dozens could be found in the Central Highlands of 
 
Vietnam, and that accommodated the families of daughters and granddaughters of 
an extended matrilineal family, especially of the ethnic 
 
E De 
and 
Mnong (M'nong) 
people (fig.).
			
回  
			
			
  
Longka (ลงกา)   
Name for 
   
Langka as used in 
the 
						
						
			Ramakien.
			
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longkong (ลองกอง)   
Thai. Tropical fruit, resembling the 
   
lamyai, but with its flesh in segments and usually a little more sour and its peel a lighter color. 
 The fruiting season is from August to October. In appearance the fruit is comparable to the 
  
langsat, 
but the skin of longkong is more easy to peel off. Its botanical name is  
Aglaia dookkoo. 
See also 
look ko.
			
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Long-neck Karen   
Subgroup of the   
 Karen in Thailand, mainly living in the hills around 
  
Mae Hong Son and originally from Burma. In Thai called Kariang Koh Yao or Kariang Sai Koh 
and they are sometines referred to as the giraffe necks. One of their subgroups in Thailand is known by the name 
  
 Kayang. 
Also spelled Long Neck Karen and Longneck Karen.    
MORE ON THIS.
			
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Long-nosed Whip Snake   
A 
species of whip 
 
			      
			      snake 
with the scientific name Ahaetulla nasuta. Like all other 
whip snakes, a genus of which four members occur in Southeast Asia, Long-nosed 
Whip Snakes have a distinct elongated head, with eyes that have horizontal 
pupils, and are viviparous, i.e. they give birth to living young. In addition,
Long-nosed Whip Snakes have
a 
relatively long, pointed snout, terminating in a dermal appendage. Its 
colouration varies from tan to grey and yellow, though it is most commonly dark 
green above and light green below. This snake is diurnal and arboreal, and feeds 
on lizards, birds and frogs. They normally live in forests and agricultural 
areas in trees and among vegetation, but they have also be found on roads, where 
they easily become a victim of traffic (fig.). 
It is mildly poisonous. 
Long-nosed Whip Snakes occur in 
Thailand north of the Isthmus of Kra, and also in 
Indochina, India, Sri 
Lanka, Bangladesh, and Myanmar.
Also commonly known by the name 
Green Vine Snake, and in Thai 
called
ngu khiaw pahk naeb, 
meaning ‘green clamping-mouth snake’. 
See also WILDLIFE PICTURES (1) 
and
(2). 
			
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_small.jpg)   
 
Long Nu (龙女)   
Chinese. ‘Dragon Girl’ or ‘Dragon Woman’, but usually translated as ‘Dragon 
Daughter’. She is the daughter of the 
 
Dragon King 
(fig.) of the East Sea. According to 
legend, his third  son was out for a swim in the sea in the form of a carp 
and was captured by fishermen. Unable to transform into his dragon form, he was 
going to be sold on the market. When  
	
Kuan 
	Yin, the goddess of mercy, learned of his predicament, she 
gave  
    
Shan Cai (fig.) 
some money to buy him and set him free, but 
the boy was outbid by other people in the crowd. Afraid that the fish would be 
butchered, he begged the fish seller to spare its life. Kuan Yin then interfered 
and shouted to the ridiculing crowd that a life should belong to one who tries 
to save it, rather than to the one who tries to take it. Thus Shan Cai was able 
to return the carp (fig.) to the sea. As a gesture of gratitude, the Dragon King wanted 
to send a precious pearl to Kuan Yin as a gift, which his daughter volunteered 
to deliver. After offering the pearl, Long Nu decided to stay with Kuan Yin and 
became her  acolyte 
(fig.). 
In art, she is often depicted in pair with Shan Cai (fig.), sometimes at the side of 
Kuan Yin. See also 
	
	Yu Nu. 
			
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Long Sinsuk (หลง สินศุข)   
See  
 
	
	
	Luang Ahwut Sikhikorn.
			
			
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longtail boat  
See  
 
 reua hahng yahw.
			
			
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Long-tailed Broadbill  
			Common name for a species of 
passerine bird, with the scientific name Pseudochelidon sirintarae. The 
Long-tailed Broadbill is about 25 centimeters tall and has an overall green 
plumage, with a yellow face, a black crown with yellow and blue patches, and a 
blue tail. Sexes are the same, but the crown of juveniles is dark green rather 
			than black. In Thai, this species is known by the name nok phaya pahk kwaang 
haang yao (นกพญาปากกว้างหางยาว) and it is depicted on a Thai postage stamp 
issued in 1975 as part of a set on Thai birds (fig.).
			
			
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Long-tailed Macaque  
Another name for
the 
		Crab-eating macaque.
			
			
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Long-tailed Minivet  
Common 
designation for a bird with the scientific name Pericrocotus ethologus, which is 
found in South and Southeast Asia, including in Thailand, where it is known as 
nok phaya fai phan neua (นกพญาไฟพันธุ์เหนือ), i.e.    
‘northern species  
phaya  
fire bird’. Males have a black head and black upperparts, and 
red underparts. In addition, the long tail, rump and wings also have patches 
of red. It is similar to the 
Scarlet Minivet
(fig.), 
but has a longer tail and a red line on the tertials that is connected to the 
red patch on the wings, making the red patch U-shaped. In the Scarlet Minivet 
the red on the tertials is unattached and forms an additional patch, whereas in 
the Short-billed Minivet, the red patch has the form of a cartoon thunderbolt.
Females are similar, 
but the red colour is replaced by yellow and the black head by a grey-olive 
crown, whilst the lower face and chin are also yellow. The female has no line on 
the tertials, hence the yellow patch on the black wings is also 
thunderbolt-shaped. See also
Short-billed Minivet (fig.). 
 
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%201_small.jpg)  
Long-tailed Shrike  
Common name of a 
passerine bird with the scientific designation Lanius schach. It is a member of 
the family Laniidae, commonly referred to as shrikes. It has a pearl grey head 
and mantle and a black mask extending from the forehead, through the eye, to the 
ear coverts. Its tail is very long with rufous edges, whereas the 
underparts are white with rufous flanks (fig.), giving it also the name Rufous-backed 
Shrike. The beak and legs are nearly black and with the eastern variety Lanius schach 
tricolour (fig.) also the head, from the eye mask up to the crown and nape, is black 
(fig.). 
This race (fig.) is hence sometimes called the Black-headed Shrike (fig.). It preys on 
lizards, large insects, small birds and rodents and, like other shrikes, it is 
notorious for its habit of impaling their bodies upon a sharp point, such as a 
thorn. Thus secured, it allows the shrike to tear the flesh into smaller-sized 
pieces with its strong, hooked beak, whilst hoarding in the meantime, forming a 
larder that serves as a food cache for future consumption. Because of this behaviour, shrikes are sometimes called butcher birds. In Thai the Long-tailed Shrike 
is called  
nok ih-seua hua dam, meaning ‘black-headed shrike’, a term in English used only for the Lanius schach 
tricolour.  
See also WILDLIFE PICTURES.
			
			
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%201_small.jpg)  
Long Wang (龙王)  
Chinese for ‘Dragon King’.
			
			
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Long-whiskered 
Soldier Beetle  
See
		
		
		
duang nuad yao thahaan.
			
			
回  
 
longyan (龙眼)   
Chinese for
‘dragon eyes’.
			
			
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long yang (龙阳)  
Chinese.
‘Dragon
		sun’. Slang expression for ‘gay’ or ‘homosexual’. In addition to the meaning 
‘sun’, the word
        yang also 
stands for the masculine, active principle of the universe, as in  
		
        
		yin-yang (阴阳), 
 
		
        yin 
being the female principle. Besides this, Long Yang was the name of a historical 
lord who was the gay lover of the king of Wei, hence the etymology behind it. 
Long yang is also the name of a place in Shanghai, as well as of the 
international Asian gay association which has gatherings in
			
			Bangkok
too. In 
Pinyin, 
spelled Lóng Yáng. 
Other Chinese words for gay are  
duan xiu, 
tóng xìng (同性) literally ‘same sex’ and tóng xìng 
‘ài (同性爱) which means ‘same 
sex love’. Other related idioms and terms include  
fen tao,
nan feng and 
 
nan se.
			
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longyi (လုံချည်)  
Burmese. Name for a long, Burmese-style 
			
			
			sarong that 
runs from the waist to the feet (fig.). 
It is kept in place by folding the surplus fabric over at the front of the 
waist, either with or without making a knot, similar to the Thai 
						
						kaangkaeng le 
(fig.), 
yet without the use of a waistband. It is similar to the Thai  
						
			      pah nung, 
and likewise, when working or playing sports, such as
	
	chinlone (fig.) 
or 
					
			      
					takraw 
(fig.),
the front end of the longyi is brought up 
and fold between the legs to the back, where it is stuck behind the belt (fig.), 
giving the wearer more freedom. The longyi can also be wrapped in the form of a 
doughnut-shaped pad which is used as a cushion and balancing tool to help carry 
loads on the head (fig.). 
			
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look chan (ลูกจันทร์) 
1. Thai name for
the fragrant fruit a tree with the 
botanical name Diospyros decandra, in English known as Gold Apple. In Thai, the 
fruit look chan is alternatively spelled 
ลูกจันทน์ or ลูกจัน, 
and due to this similarity in name, the tree's fruit is in Thai often referred 
to as the fruit of the 
Sandalwood 
Tree, which in 
in Thai is called ton mai chan (ต้นไม้จันทน์), whereas the Diospyros decandra
(fig.) is 
in Thai usually referred to as 
			      
			      ton
			chan (ต้นจันทร์, 
ต้นจัน or 
ต้นจันทน์). 
To add to the confusion, the name look chan is additionally used for 
	      
	      
	      nutmeg
(fig.).
The 
Gold Apple is very similar in shape, colour 
and overall appearance to the 
			      persimmon
(fig.), 
a fruit in the same family of Ebony trees and in Thai is known as 
phlab and   
 
 maphlab, and with 
the scientific name Diospyros kaki. The Thai 
popular candy  
				
				
				kanom saneh jan 
(fig.)
is made
 from −and made to look like− the Gold 
Apple. Besides the alternate spellings mentioned above, the fruit is also known 
by the names in (อิน), chan-in (จันอิน), chan-in-chan-oh (จันอินจันโอ), chan 
look hom (จันลูกหอม or จันท์ลูกหอม), chan khao (จันขาว), and look in (ลูกอิน). 
Sometimes transliterated look jan. See also 
	      
ton jan and 
    jan-in. 
			
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2. Thai. Name for a style of 
Buddhist monk's 
alms bowl. It is 
a small, low-rimmed
alms bowl 
with 
a somewhat compressed shape 
and is usually referred to as 
baat 
song
look 
chan (บาตรทรงลูกจันทร์), i.e. ‘Gold 
Apple-shaped alms bowl’. 
This style of alms bowl has been in use for around 90 years.
回 
3. Thai name for
the 
	      
	      
	      nutmeg
(fig.), 
the fruit from a tree with the botanical name 
Myristica fragans, which in Thai is called ton chan 
thet or 
ton jan thet. 
			
回 
 
look chin  
(ลูกชิน, 
ลูกชิ้น)  
Thai name for small-sized balls, made of a mixture of wheat flour,
			tapioca flour (cassava starch), salt and any kind of finely pulverized meat, e.g. 
pork, beef, chicken, fish, shrimp, etc. They are of a light colour and most 
commonly boiled and served in 
  
    
    
    
    noodle 
soups (fig.) 
and sometimes in certain curries and  
			tom yam, 
but they may also be eaten as a snack, typically fried or grilled and put on a stick, like 
						
						satay 
(fig.), and poured with, or dipped in, a spicy sweet-and-sour sauce 
(fig.). 
These fried satay-like snacks of look chin are also available coated with a 
dough, making them golden-brown and crisp when fried. This snack is known in 
Thai as look chin chub paeng tho (ลูกชิ้นชุบแป้งทอ) or in short, look chin chub 
(fig.), 
pronounced look chin choob. 
																
																
A specialty at 
																
																
																Talaat Roi Pih, 
																i.e. the
																‘100-Year Old 
																Market’ 
																in 
			
			Suphanburi, 
is a giant 
	
	look chin 
(fig.). 
			
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          %20Thai%20meat%20or%20fish%20balls_small.jpg) 
look chit (ลูกชิด)
   
Thai name for the immature inner seeds of the Arenga Palm fruit (Arenga pinnata), 
in Thai known as ton taaw (ต้นตาว/ต๋าว), which are widely consumed as a dessert, 
after being boiled in sugar syrup. They are also made into canned fruits and are 
somewhat reminiscent of the inner fruit seeds of the
nipa palm, known in Thai as look
        jahk (fig.).
			
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%20immature%20inner%20seed%20of%20Arenga%20Palm%20fruit_small.jpg) 
look deuay (ลูกเดือย) 
Thai. Job's tears, the edible seeds of a plant of the genus 
Coix lachrymajob from the family Gramineae, which in English is known as Tear Grass 
 (fig.). The seeds are gained from the flower buds that are opened by crushing their hard skin. The white content of the bud can be eaten either fresh or cooked, and mixed with sticky  
rice powder it is used to make sweetmeats. On markets it is often sold in dried form. It is similar to 
  
khao fahng and is 
also called deuay, deuay hin, madeuay 
and mateuay,  and the
	Karen hill 
tribe people call it penih, whereas its Khmer name used by some in eastern 
Thailand is sakuy.
			
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look jan 
(ลูกจันทร์)  
See 
look 
chan. 
			
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look jiyab (ลูกเจี๊ยบ)  
Thai. Term 
for 
‘ducklings’, i.e. baby ducks, as 
well as for 
‘baby  chicks’. The term is  an onomatopoeia, i.e. a name coined on the 
animal's natural, distinctive call. Also transcribed 
look jeab and look jiab. 
			
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look kaew (ลูกแก้ว)  
1. Thai. 
‘Crystal’ or
‘crystal
children’. 
Northern 
Thai name for young boys that are ordained as novices during the northern Thai 
			Poi Sang Long 
ceremony. This is contrary to tradition elsewhere in Thailand, where candidate 
Buddhist monks and novices are called
buatnaag,
	naag or
	naga, and once ordained
			
phra 
or
			sahmmanaen. Young people that 
ordain are considered to gain merit in favour for their parents, not for 
themselves. It is understood that in doing so, the children pay off a debt 
towards their parents for giving birth and for raising them. All parents 
therefore expect their children to ordain at some point in life, as
ordaining children bring priceless merit onto their parents, as valuable 
as a 
‘crystal’. See also
poi. 
 
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%203_small.jpg)  
2. Thai. 
‘Glass ball’,
‘crystal’. It may refer to any 
glass or crystal, ball-shaped object, such as a glass marble or a
paperweight. 
			
回  
look kalapaphreuk (ลูกกัลปพฤกษ์)   
Thai. 
‘Fruit of the  
			
			Pink Cassia’. 
Though named after a tree with botanical name Cassia bakeriana (fig.) 
and commonly also known as Pink Shower Tree or Wishing 
Tree, it actually 
refers to a kind of  
riyan prooythaan, i.e. 
a monetary gift in the form of a coin that is wrapped in a package skillfully 
handmade from a colourful ribbon and fashioned in the form of a 
fruit. They are typically used at 
charity events or festivals, and in a 
folkloric tradition 
known as 
		
prooythaan 
(fig.), 
i.e. literally 
		‘to scatter food’ 
and in a broader sense ‘to sprinkle alms’. 
These fruit wrappers that contains money, 
are typically green and in the form of 
				
lemons, 
but sometimes other 
colours or fruits, such as 
durians, are created. 
The look
kalapaphreuk 
are traditionally thrown into the crowd of visitors during certain Buddhist 
events, such as in a 
			
			buatnaag 
ordination ceremony 
called 
buat (fig.), 
etc. Alternatively, coins are stuck inside real fruits. 
			
回  
look khaang (ลูกข่าง)  
Thai for 
‘top’ or ‘spinning top’, 
i.e. the toy spinning on a point when set in motion. There are many types, but 
the one used in  
			Thailand 
is the kind known in India as bambaram, that consists of a wooden top with a 
pointed nail, and in which  
motion is produced by pulling a string to get the starting 
spin. It is considered a traditional Thai 
children's game, though the top and the rules are similar to the game as played 
in India. In the Thai version, players have to toss their tops simultaneously 
into a circle marked out on the floor and as these clash with each other they 
must try to push the tops of other players out of the circle. If a top doesn't 
spin, or ends up outside of the ring, that player loses. In Japan, spinning tops 
have been popular for hundreds of years and are called koma (独楽). The country 
has a whole array of spinning tops, 
most of which are rotated by the finger and thumb, 
including some very distinctive models that are available nowhere else. 
The Japanese seem to have 
acquired an expertise greater then anywhere else and have made the game into a 
popular Japanese performing art known as kyoku koma (曲独楽), in which skilled masters are 
able to run a top 
back and forward on the blade of a 
samurai
sword that is less than a millimeter 
thick, or 
capable of 
spinning a top on the fine edge of a folding   
        
        
		
		
		fan.
See also POSTAGE STAMPS (1) 
and 
(2). 
回  
  
Look Khun Hall  
See
					
					
		
		Sala Look Khun. 
			
回 
look ko (ลูกฆ้อ) 
Thai. Name for 
a fruit similar to 
 
longkong (fig.) 
or 
langsat 
(a kind of longkong), but with 
creamy to orange flesh of fruit. It has a soft texture and a sweet citrus-like 
flavour. It is typically eaten with a dip that consists of a mixture of salt, 
sugar and pounded dry chilies. Also known as
Isaan
longan. 
			
回 
look lep krut (ลูกเล็บครุฑ) 
Thai. 
‘Garuda claws’. 
Name for the fruit from a kind of ornamental 
plant. 
The woody fruit has two distinctive 
hooks, that look like pointed teeth and resembles the skull of a small rodent or 
 
			      
			      snake. 
In Thai culture it is revered as an 
        
		amulet
that protects against snake bites, and is 
often decked with 
	gold leaf. 
It occurs in two natural colours, i.e. light beige and dark brown (fig.). 
Since these fang-like hooks are also reminiscent of claws, they are 
in Thai are called look lep  
krut, 
i.e. claws of the mythological bird Garuda.  
			
回  
%201_small.jpg) 
look niang (ลูกเนียง) 
Thai name for 
the large, brown beans of the Archidendron jiringa (Archidendron pauciflorum), 
also known as Pithecellobium jiringa (Pithecellobium lobatum), a tree native to 
Southeast Asia. Though mildly toxic due to the presence of djenkolic acid (a 
sulfur-containing, non-protein, amino acid), these beans are consumed in southern 
Thailand, as well as in Indonesia, Malaysia and Myanmar (fig.), mainly as an ingredient 
in curries. The tree and beans are also known by a variety of other names, 
including jengkol (เจ็งโกล), pha niang (พะเนียง), khao daeng (ขาวแดง), cha niang 
(ชะเนียง), cha iang (ชะเอียง), niang nok (เนียงนก), yiring (ยิริง), yong (หย่อง), 
yiniking (ยินิกิง), etc.
			
回  
_small.jpg)  
look nimit (ลูกนิมิต)   
Thai. Large round stones buried in the ground  
 
underneath the 
   
bai sema (fig.), marking the boundary of the consecrated area of a Thai temple on which the 
   
bot or 
  
ubosot is built. In total nine stones are used: one beneath the 
centre of the bot, and one at each corner and between the corners, in the centre of each side. The burial spots of the last eight are marked above the ground by bai sema. They can only be seen when on display (fig.) prior to the burial, when the local community is given the opportunity to make merit by attaching 
  
gold leaf on them. See also 
   
nimit.
			
回   
 
  
look prakob samunphrai (ลูกประคบสมุนไพร)  
Thai. Name for 
a herbal ball with a grip, made from linen and containing medicinal herbs and 
aromatic plants. It is steamed and then applied to the body as a hot compress in 
a particular form of
			
			
			
			traditional massage, known 
as  
prakob. Sometimes called look prakob 
samunphrai 
phaen boraan, i.e. 
‘traditional herbal massage compress’.  
			
回  
			
            
            
              
look rok (ลูกรอก)  
Thai. Name for 
a pulley, i.e. a grooved wheel for a rope to pass over, set in a block and used 
for changing the direction of a force. Traditionally, often as part of wooden 
houses on the countryside, they were made of carved wood. In weaving,
loom pulleys 
carved from wood and often decorated with mythological figures, 
are used to raise and lower the heddle bar on a traditional hand loom 
(fig.). Also called
rok and sometimes transcribed luhk rawk.
			
回   
			
            
            
            %20pulley_small.jpg)  
look sawaat (ลูกสวาท)  
Thai. Term for 
a young male who satisfies the homosexual desires of another male. The term may 
sometimes also be used for and effeminate man or boy. See also 
	
kathoey. 
			
回   
look seua  
(ลูกเสือ)   
Thai. 
‘Tiger cub’. Name for members of the Thai Scouting organization founded in 1911 by  
  
Rama VI. 
Initially, the king on 6 May 1911 founded the 
		
Wild Tiger Corps, in order to 
train government officials, as well as civilians on military drills, with the 
conviction that such a training would instill a sense of discipline and loyalty 
to the country, the monarchy and religion. After less than 2 months, the 
organization on 1 July 1911 was transformed into the Thai scouting organization, 
officially known as 
 
						Kha-na Look Seua Haeng 
					Chaht. 
Most schools have scouting as a discipline in their syllabus (fig.). As a consequence boys and girls can often be seen in their scouting uniforms on ordinary schooldays. 
The Thai Boy Scout's motto on their logo reads: 
					
					
sia chihp yah 
					sia sat, 
i.e. ‘Lose [your] Life Don't Lose [your] 
Honesty’ or  ‘Waste [your] 
Life Don't Waste [your] Promise’, which is usually translated as ‘Better to Die 
Than to Lie’ 
(fig.). 
From 
					
					28 December 2002 to 8 January 
2003, Thailand hosted the 20th World Scout Jamboree (fig.), an international event 
hosting  30,000 Scouts from all over the world. The
20th World Scout Jamboree was 
held at a Royal Thai Navy base in Sattahip 
in 
Chonburi, 
and was commemorated with a set of two Thai postage stamps (fig.). 
In 2011, the centenary of the establishment of the 
Thai scouting organization 
was also commemorated with a Thai postage stamp (fig.), 
as was the 50th anniversary in 1961 (fig.), 
and the 60th anniversary in 1971 (fig.).
See also
	TRAVEL PICTURES (1),
	
	(2),
	
	(3)
	
	and
	
	(4). 
			
回  
   
look taan (ลูกตาล)   
Thai. Fruit of the 
  
sugar palm, 
each measuring about 10 to 18 centimeters in diameter. They grow in clusters and 
have an attractive dark chestnut husk, often with a sunburst effect, gradually 
changing to a yellow-golden colour towards the top. Inside sit three pale-white, 
translucent, jelly seed sockets, covered with a thin, creamy white 
    skin (fig.). 
  
The fruits 
can be made into sugar, as well as be eaten fresh. 
 
			The endocarp is used to make
			
chao taan cheuam.
			
回   
 
  
	
	
	look 
thep (ลูกเทพ)   
Thai. 
   
 
 
‘Angel child’. Name for a kind of doll, also referred to as  
tukkatah 
look 
thep, 
which is used as a new kind of  
talisman. 
 
READ ON.
 
			
回  
 
look thung (ลูกทุ่ง)  
 1. Thai. 
‘Offspring of the field’.  Popular kind of Thai-style country music. See 
also  
			Suraphon Sombatcharoen. 
			
回  
 2. Thai. An animal born wild, as opposed to a domesticated animal. 
			
回  
 
look tihn pet nahm (ลูกตีนเป็ดน้ำ) 
Thai for the 
extremely poisonous pong pong seed, the fruit of a 
small to medium-sized tree with the botanical name Cerbera odollam. See also  
Suicide Tree.
			
回   
 
  
look 
waay (ลูกหวาย)  
Thai name for 
rattan fruits. The structure 
on the skin or coat of these small, globular fruits, which are edible, is 
somewhat reminiscent of that of the cap or cupule on acorns. Rattan fruits
are however not grown commercially, 
but harvested from the wild and hence 
also referred to as 
look waay pah, i.e.
‘wild rattan fruits’. 
Due to this the fruits are not commonly found on markets but rather consumed by 
local people who live close to the forest, such as hill tribe people, and 
especially the 
	
	Karen. 
Their taste is described as sour, akin to 
citrus. Some species of rattan fruit exude a red resin called 
              
		      dragon's blood, 
which was used as a dye for violins, 
among other things.
			
回  
 
 
 
  
look waay pah (ลูกหวายป่า)  
Thai for 
‘wild rattan fruits’. See 
	look waay.
			
回  
look yahng pah (ลูกยางป่า)   
Thai. Edible
fruit from a shrub-like vine with the botanical name 
Willughbeia edulis, that is found in the wild and for sale on forest 
markets in 
		
		
		
		
		
		Isaan. 
Since it 
is seasonal, it is only available for about one month each year, around 
March-April, when it is collected from the forests of 
			      Ubon Ratchathani 
province. The skin is greenish-orange to wholly orange when ripe, and is easily 
removed, revealing the orange fruit of flesh, which is soft and juicy. The flesh 
is sweet-and-sour and inextricably attached to the seeds, characteristics 
somewhat reminiscent to 
			passionfruit. 
It is typically eaten with 
	nahm pla. 
The roots of the plant can be used as a red dye. The plant is also known as kuy 
(คุย) and the fruits as look kuy (ลูกคุย). Whereas the Thai name yahng pah (ยางป่า) 
literally means 
 ‘wild rubber’, the common name 
used in the west is gedraphol. 
			
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%201_small.jpg)  
Lopburi    
(ลพบุรี)   
1. Thai. Name of a Thai province as well as of 
its capital city (map), 
 
located  
			in Central Thailand, 
 153 kms North of  
			
			Bangkok.
READ ON.
			
回   
2. Name given to the art from Central Thailand during the 
  
Khmer period, from the 11th to 14th centuries AD, and during the booming days of  
  
	
	Lopburi, between the 10th and 13th centuries AD. Its characteristic is a mixture of 
   Khmer,  
   
Pala   
  and local styles. 
			
回  
3. Name of a river that runs through 
	
	Lopburi 
and  
 Ayutthaya.
			
回  
Lord Shiva Temple  
See 
Wat Phra Siwa Chao.
			
			
			回   
lost wax   
Technique used in bronze casting, different from the one used in 
 
China and the West, but similar to those in the other Indianized countries of Southeast Asia.
			
回    
 
  
lod chong 
(ลอดช่อง)   
Thai. Name 
for a traditional dessert that originates from Indonesia and consists of green, 
often worm-shaped (fig.), jelly-like,  
 
rice flour dumplings, eaten with 
              coconut milk and syrup made of palm sugar.  
 
 
The green colour is usually derived from 
			pandanus 
 leaves. A Singaporean adaptation, known as  
lod chong Singapore 
(ลอดช่องสิงคโปร์), uses rice noodles instead 
and may add red beans,  
sticky rice, 
 
grass jelly, creamed corn, and crushed or shaved 
 
ice as optional extras, in addition to the base ingredients. 
In Thailand, the local variety is similar to the original one from Indonesia, 
but may alternatively be referred to as lod chong Thai (ลอดช่องไทย), 
to distinct it from the Singaporean version, which 
is  
also available locally and 
actually an  
	
	
    OTOP 
product of
 
			      Samut Songkhram. In Indonesia, Singapore and 
Malaysia, it is known as cendol (chen-doll).  
			
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%20green%20jelly-like%20rice%20flour%20dumplings_small.jpg)  
lot (ฬส)   
Synonym for 
   
solot.
			
回  
lottery  
 See 
salahk kin baeng.
			
回  
Lotoh (โลโต)  
Thai-Pali name 
of a mythological creature from
Himaphan forest, that 
 has the body of a 
	
    
	lion 
and the feet of a bird of prey, i.e. with clawed 
feet rather than paws. It 
is usually depicted brownish in colour. Also transcribed Lo To or Loto. 
			
回  
lotus   
A pink, white (fig.) 
or pink-white flower of the family of   
water lilies (fig.), 
and sacred among the Hindus. 
 
READ ON.
			
回    
lotus position   
Designation for the    
asana or 
‘seated position’ in   
iconography, in which the legs are crossed on top of each other with the feet resting on the opposite thigh, the sole of the feet up. Burmese  
              Buddha images with a 
   
bhumisparsa    
mudra are usually seated in this position (fig.), whereas Buddha images with the same mudra in Thai style, are usually seated in a 
   
half lotus position (fig.). Sometimes called yoga position. See also 
phanaeng choeng, 
   
vajrasana (fig.), and 
   
padmasana.
			
回   
 
_small.jpg)  
Lotus Sutra  
Name of one of the most popular and 
influential 
	      
	      
          
	      Mahayana 
			      
			      sutras
and fully known as Sutra on 
the White Lotus of the Sublime 
		      
		      
		      Dharma. It contains the final 
teaching of the 
		      Buddha, 
said to be complete and sufficient for salvation.
			
回  
Lotus Temple  
1. Name of a 
Baha'i 
temple 
in Delhi, India 
(fig.), 
which is shaped in the form of a giant 
	
	lotus, 
and which is not dedicated to one 
single religion, but instead invites people of all faiths to come in and pray.
			
回  
2. Name of a Buddhist
temple 
in 
Udonthani, 
Thailand, which is officially known 
as Phutta Uthayaan 
Wat Pah Dong Rai. 
Its 
			      
			      ubosot
is built  in the form of 
a giant 
	
	lotus 
located in a small lake (fig.).
			
回  
Lowland Common Frog  
 
Common name for a 
species of frog in the Ranidae family, with the scientific designation Rana 
rugulosa. It grows between 
6.5 and 
8.5 
centimeters long and its 
skin is pale yellowish to reddish-brown, with whitish toes, and darker, olive to 
brown spots on the back. In Thai, it is called kob nah (กบนา), i.e. 
  
 ‘field frog’, 
 
 named after its habitat, 
though it is  
locally also known as 
kob nah isaan (กบนาอีสาน), i.e.  
 
 ‘Isaan
field 
frog’, 
as well as kob neua (กบเนื้อ), 
i.e.    
‘flesh 
frog’ 
or    
‘meat 
frog’, 
referring to the fact that it is also eaten, especially by people living in 
Isaan and upcountry. In English, it is also commonly called Rugose Frog.
			
			
回  
_small.jpg)  
Lu (禄)  
Chinese. Name 
of one of the 
			
			
			Three Star Gods, 
together with  
Shou
and   
Fu,
which in Thai are known as
Hok Lok Siw (fig.). 
In 
		iconography, 
he is always depicted with 
 a long beard 
that usually sways to the left, whilst wearing a hat and 
often also  
holding an imperial 
scroll. He  is the symbol of 
prosperity, wealth, fame, rank and progress in work.
			
			
回  
  
 
Lua 
(ลัวะ)   
Another name for 
Lawa.
			
回  
Luang (หลวง)  
1. Thai term that means  
 
‘royal’, ‘capital’, and ‘revered’. 
			
回   
2. Thai. A non-hereditary title or 
   
bandasak, higher than a 
   
Khun and lower than a 
   
Phra.
			
回    
 
  
Luang Ahwut Sikhikorn (หลวงอาวุธสิขิกร)  
Thai. A Thai 
					Army Captain, who in 1912 
took an aviation course in France.
Afterward, he received a 
proper Air Force rank and was at the same time promoted to Group Captain. He 
took his aviation training 
course together with 
					Army Lieutenant
Thip Ketuthat 
(fig.)
at Mourmelon-le-Grand (fig.), 
a military airfield in northern France, flying 
a 
Nieuport 11 trainer monoplane
(fig.). 
They were sent to France together with 
					Army Major 
Luang Sakdi Sanyawut (fig.), 
who  received 
his initial training at 
Villacoublay (fig.), 
a military air base near Paris, and learned to fly in a 
Breguet Type III biplane 
(fig.).
	Of both aircrafts replicas are 
    on display at the
	
	Royal Thai Air Force Museum 
in  
			
			Bangkok 
(fig.) and the planes are depicted on the first 
two postage stamps of a double set of 8 postage stamps each (fig.), 
issued in 2012 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of theses pioneer's initial 
training, which eventually led to the establishment of the 
Royal 
Thai Air Force. The trio became known as the
Founding Fathers of the Royal Thai Air Force, 
sometimes referred to as the Parents of the RTAF. He is also known as 
Long Sinsuk (fig.).
回   
 
 
 
_small.jpg)   
Luang Pho (หลวงพ่อ)   
1. Thai. 
 
‘Revered father(s)’. Venerated, 
   
  
respected monk(s) in Thailand. 
  
 
Their images can often be seen in temples, and some are considered 
		      
		      arahats. To some of these monks, the 
  
   
 
Phra saksit, special spiritual
  powers
  are ascribed. 
 
See 
also POSTAGE STAMPS. 
			
回   
 
  
 2. Thai. 
‘Revered  father’. Term used by laymen to address monks. 
			
回  
 3. Thai. 
‘Revered  father’. Title used in front  
or as part of 
the name  
 
of certain highly revered
  
		
		
              Buddha images. 
			
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Luang Pho Daeng (หลวงพ่อแดง)   
 
Thai.   
Name of a revered Buddhist monk who in 1973 died whilst meditating and was 
consequently preserved in the 
			
			samahti
pose. This 
mummified 
monk is 
put on display in a glass box at
Wat Khunaram, a Buddhist temple on 
Koh 
			
			
			
			Samui (fig.),
as a reminder of the transience of human existence, though one could argue that 
mummifying ones remains and putting them on display rather demonstrates an 
attempt to try and extent ones transitory nature. 
			
			The mummified oddity is worshipped as a kind 
of  full body 
relic and the temple
is nowadays 
included as one of the island's tourist attractions. 
			
回   
 
 
_small.jpg)  
Luang Pho Khao (หลวงพ่อขาว)   
 
1. Thai.   
			‘White  
			 
 
Revered Father’.  
			Nickname 
of the 
Phra Phuttamethi Sammakon
		      
              Buddha image 
located in 
	
    
    Bangkok's 
							
							
							Sammakon 
Community (fig.) 
in Saphaan Soong 
district, which is cut from white marble (fig.).
						
			
回   
2. Thai.   
			‘White  
			 
 
Revered Father’.  
			Name 
of the principal
		      
              Buddha image
in the 
		
		wihaan 
at 
		
Wat Tha It 
in 
						
			Angthong 
and which 
		dates from the
			Ayutthaya Period.
						
			
回  
Luang Pho Khun 
(หลวงพ่อคูณ)  
 
Thai.   
Name of a revered Buddhist monk associated with 
						
						Wat Banrai 
(fig.), a 
						Buddhist temple 
 
						in 
						
						Nakhon Ratchasima. 
	
READ ON.
			
			回  
Luang Pho Lih (หลวงพ่อลี)   
 
Thai.   
Name of a venerated Buddhist monk associated with 
	
	Wat Asokaraam (fig.),  
a 
						Buddhist temple  
						in 
						
			      Samut Prakan, 
which he founded and named after  
the Indian-Mauryan Emperor 
	
	
	Asoka (fig.), 
and where his remains are kept in a golden coffin after his demise in 1961. 
Also transliterated Luang Po Lee. 
			
回   
 
 
 
_small.jpg)  
Luang Pho Loy Nahm Hah Phi-Nong (หลวงพ่อลอยน้ำ
๕ พี่น้อง)   
 
Thai.   
‘Five 
floating 
Luang Pho 
 
brothers’. 
					
					See 
					
					
Tamnaan Luang Pho Loy Nahm Hah Phi-Nong.
 
			
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Luang Pho Ngun (หลวงพ่อเงิน)    
Thai.  
Name of a revered Buddhist monk from 
the 
			      		
			      Rattanakosin
						
						
						Period, who 
was the abbot of Wat Bang Khlan, a 
Buddhist temple in  
 Phichit. 
 
READ ON.
 
			
回  
Luang Pho Prathan Phon (หลวงพ่อประทานพร)  
Thai.  
Name of a type of 
Buddha image 
seated in the 
pahng prathan phon pose 
(fig.). 
It is found in many places around the 
nation, including at the 
    
	
	
	Phra Pathom Chedi 
	in  
	
Nakhon Pathom and at 
						
			Wat Phanan Choeng 
in  
			
			Phra Nakhon Sri Ayutthaya. 
 
See MAP.
 
			
回  
_small.jpg)  
	
	
Luang Pho Sethi Nawakoht (หลวงพ่อเศรษฐีนวโกฏิ)   
Thai-Pali. 
  
‘Revered Father Ninety Million Millionaire’. Name of a   
Buddha image.
READ ON. 
			
回  
Luang Pho Toh (หลวงพ่อโต)    
 
Thai. ‘Great revered  father’. 
Name sometimes given to certain important of highly revered  
		
		
              Buddha images, 
such as the principle image of  
			
						
						Wat Bang 
			Phli Yai Nai
						in
						
			
			      Samut Prakan 
(fig.), 
the 19 meter tall gilded Buddha 
statue of 
			
Wat Phanan Choeng 
in 
			
			Phra Nakhon Sri Ayutthaya 
(fig.); 
a Mahayana-style 
 
			
        Buddha image 
enshrined in a cave-like replica cliff at
Wat Laksi Raht Samohson 
in 
			      Samut Sakon; 
the Buddha statue of
						
			Wat Kanlayanamit Woramahawihaan, 
which is also known as 
Phra Phutta Trai Rattananayok 
(fig.), 
as well as by its Chinese name Sampokong (ซำปอกง), and which was for a long time 
the tallest seated Buddha image in the capital, a record since mid-2020 broken 
by the giant 69
metre tall 
Phra Phutta Thammakaya Thep Mon
Buddha image (fig.) 
of 
Wat Pahk Nahm Phasi Chareun 
(fig.); and 
the Buddha statue of 
						Wat Jong Kham 
in 
Mae Hong Son 
(fig.). 
			
回  
Luang Poo 
(หลวงปู่)   
 
Thai. Title of respect shown to elderly relatives (often
grandfathers), while in 
the Buddhist monkhood. 
Whereas
luang is a  
non-hereditary title, poo is the Thai 
designation for a paternal grandfather, and one famous highly revered monk is 
known as 
Luang Poo Thuad (fig.), 
with thuad being a term for ‘great-grandfather’. 
See also  
Thai Family Tree
 
and  
POSTAGE STAMPS. 
			
回  
	
	
Luang Poo Sod (หลวงปู่สด)   
 
Thai. Name of a senior monk, who is fully known as 
Phra Mongkon Thepmuni.
He was the 
abbot of   
																								
			Wat Pahk Nahm Phasi Chareun 
(fig.) from 1916 until his death in 1959. 
This 
			influential monk founded the   
Dhammakaya 
tradition, revived the temple, and
			besides teaching meditation to monks, nuns and 
			laypeople alike, he 
			also built a school for 
			      
			      
                  Pali 
studies, which became a leading institute of the country. 
After his death, his body
was 
not cremated, but kept in a gilded coffin in a special hall of the temple, which 
up to present is an important place for visitors to come and pay their respects. 
The temple have also several statues of this monk, as well as a wax image. Also transliterated Luang Pu Sodh. 
			
回   
 
 
 
_small.jpg)  
Luang Poo Tai Hong Kong (หลวงปู่ไต่ฮงกง, หลวงปู่ไต้ฮงกง)  
 
Thai name for a Chinese monk (Luang Poo), 
who lived during the Song Dynasty and who is worshiped as a deity that
favours all living creatures. Little is known of him, but it is believed that he was 
a pilgrim who came to China from a foreign country. 
He collects and takes care of the bodies
of the deceased who have no relatives and 
is also known to repair roads and construct bridges where needed. 
One day, a deadly disease broke out in a certain area, killing many. Part of Luang Poo Tai Hong Kong's duties was to 
perform the holy 
 sprinkling ceremony at funerals, a ritual known in Thai as 
Phittih Phrom Nahm Mon Sop. 
One seriously ill person asked the monk to have 
	nahm mon
or holy water sprinkled on him before he died, a similar practice known in Thai 
as 
rod nahm mon
(fig.). 
The monk granted him his wish, but after being sprinkled with the holy water, 
the patient was miraculously cured and a shrine was built in honour of the monk. 
Later, many additional shrines were built throughout the nation and abroad, and 
to date these shrines, called Sahn (Sala)
Luang Poo Tai Hong Kong, provide free funeral services and coffins (fig.) for those who 
have no relatives or who can't afford it, as a continuation of the intentions of 
Luang Poo Tai Hong Kong. In 
Thailand, the Thai-Chinese philanthropic foundation that looks after this free 
service is sponsored 
by 
donations 
from 
people who want to make merit, i.e. 
			tamboon. 
In 
          
			
			Tae Chew, 
 Luang Poo Tai Hong Kong 
is also known as Chow Seu (โจวซือ), which 
is sometimes transcribed Zhou Sue. 
WATCH VIDEO. 
			
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%20Chow%20Seu%20(โจวซือ)_small.jpg)  
				
Luang Poo Thiang (หลวงปู่เที่ยง)  
Thai. Name of a 
highly venerated Buddhist monk who was a
former 
dean, abbot and 
kejih 
				
at 
Wat Muang Chum 
in 
				Kanchanaburi. 
After his death his body was mummified and put on display in a glass casket at 
this temple. This 
	
              
				Luang Poo 
was fully known as 
Phra 
Kruh 
Chanthasarophat (จันทสโรภาส). See also 
mummified 
monk. 
			
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_small.jpg)  
Luang Poo Thuad (หลวงปู่ทวด)  
Thai. ‘Great-grandfather  
	
              
				Luang Poo’. 
 
Name and title of a highly 
venerated Buddhist monk from the 16-17th century AD, who 
lived in the Ayutthaya Period.
In full, he is known as
Phra Ratchamunih Samihraam Khunoopamahjaan (พระราชมุนีสามีรามคุณูปมาจารย์), 
and he is also known as 
 
Poo Samihramoh (ปู สามีราโม) and 
	
			      
			      Somdet
		      
		      
		      Chao 
Pha-ko 
(สมเด็จเจ้าพะโคะ), yet he is 
usually referred to as 
	
                
              Luang Pho 
Thuad. 
He was born at Ban Suan Chan (บ้านสวนจันทร์) 
in the 
		      amphur 
Sathing Phra (สทิงพระ)
of 
			      
			      Songkhla
Province
on 3 March 1582 AD and passed away on 6 
March 1682 at the age of 100. He was the abbot of Wat Chang Hai (วัดช้างให้) in
			      Pattani, 
and is said to have 
performed miracles, including turning sea 
water into fresh potable water in an instance, by putting his foot in the sea 
and reciting an incantation. Another legend says that when his mother was in 
labour, a powerful thunderclap occurred, to herald the birth of this 
saint-to-be. He has 
	a magical crystal ball (fig.), 
which —as legend has it— a 
king cobra
	spat out on him when he was a baby. 
Hence, he is often portrayed with this 
	magical crystal ball in his lap and sometimes seated on a 
		      cobra
			      
			      snake 
(fig.), 
both referring to this legend. 
Today, large statues of this immortal monk 
can be found nationwide (fig.), 
such as at 
Wat Huai Mongkhon (fig.)
near 
              
              Hua Hin 
in 
			Prachuap Khirikhan 
Province, at
Phuttha Uthayaan Maharaat (fig.)
						in 
						
						
		Ayutthaya, 
and the statue (fig.) 
at 
Wat Don Sak (fig.) 
in 
			Surat Thani.
Amulets created with his image are believed to hold a great 
protective power, and traditional amulets from Wat Chang Hai are very much 
desired and sought-after. He had a boy child disciple named 
Ai Khai (fig.), 
who is also known as 
Tah Khai and whose statue 
can sometimes be found in the vicinity of Luang Poo Thuad memorials. 
See also POSTAGE STAMPS (1) 
and
(2). 
			
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_small.jpg)  
Luang Poo Toh (หลวงปู่โต)  
Thai.  
Name of a revered Buddhist 
monk, who 
is formally 
called 
			      
			      Somdet
		            
		            
	                Phra
Phuttajaan 
Toh Phrommaramsi. 
 
READ ON.  
			
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Luang Sakdi Sanyawut (หลวงศักดิ้ ศัลยาวุธ)  
Thai. A Thai 
					Army Major, who in 1912 
took an aviation course in France.
Afterward, he received a 
proper Air Force rank and was at the same time promoted to Air Marshal. He took 
his aviation training course at 
Villacoublay (fig.), 
a military air base near Paris, and learned to fly a 
Breguet Type III biplane 
(fig.), 
a French aircraft named after the early aviation pioneer and aircraft designer Louis Breguet, who first manufactured it in 1910. 
Luang Sakdi Sanyawut was sent to France together with 
Army Captain 
Luang Ahwut Sikhikorn 
(fig.) 
and Army Lieutenant
Thip Ketuthat 
(fig.), 
who both received 
their initial training at Mourmelon-le-Grand 
(fig.), 
a military airfield in northern France, flying 
a 
Nieuport 11 trainer monoplane
(fig.).
	Of both aircrafts replicas are 
    on display at the
	
	Royal Thai Air Force Museum 
in  
			
			Bangkok 
(fig.) and the planes are depicted on the first 
two postage stamps of a double set of 8 postage stamps each (fig.), 
issued in 2012 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of their training, which 
eventually led to the establishment of the 
Royal 
Thai Air Force. The pioneer trio became known as 
the
Founding Fathers of the Royal Thai Air Force, 
sometimes referred to as the Parents of the RTAF. He is also known as 
Sunih Sawanprathihp (fig.).
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_small.jpg)  
	
	
Luang Sathon Rajayukta (หลวงสาทรราชายุตก์)  
Thai name of Chai Sua Yom, a wealthy Chinese 
immigrant and businessman, who as the owner of an engineering company in 1895 
engineered the digging of a canal connecting the 
		      
		      
		      Chao Phraya 
River to the Wat Hua Lamphong Canal in order to help improve public 
transportation inside the city. For his work, he was bestowed the title Luang 
Sathon Racha Yutka by King 
			      
			      Rama V, 
and the canal became thus known as the Sathon Canal. Although the canal had not 
been used according to intended purpose for decades, the name Sathon, usually 
transliterated Sathorn, has come to identify the stretch through which it ran, 
including the roads that run along its northern and southern edges and which 
have become a major transportation link between  
			
			Bangkok's 
Phra Nakhon side and 
			      
			      
			      Thonburi. 
Chai Sua Yom had a mansion built along the canal's northern side, south of and 
adjacent to the modern-day Maha 
Nakhon Building (fig. 
-
map). 
In the 1920s, with the owner’s fortune in decline, the property changed hands 
and was converted into the up-market Hotel Royal. From 1948 to 1999, it was 
leased out and became the Embassy of the Soviet Union, and later the Russian 
Federation. Nowadays, it is a hub of up-market F&B establishments and the former 
Luang Sathorn Mansion (fig. 
- 
map) is today popularly known as the House on Sathorn. Also 
referred to as simply Luang Sathon and usually spelled Luang Sathorn.
回  
Lucky Money Toad  
See
                
                kaangkok sawan.
			
回  
luffa  
 
Name for a tropical 
and subtropical annual vine, with the scientific name Luffa cylindrica. Its gourd-like fruit is grown to maturity and used 
as a natural bath sponge (fig.) 
after being processed to remove everything but the network of xylem (woody 
tissue -   
fig.). If harvested before maturity it can be eaten as a vegetable (fig.). Also known 
as vegetable sponge, luffa sponge, loofa, loofah, Chinese okra and sponge gourd. 
Also spelled loofah and in Thai known as  
buab, 
 
rangbuab, 
 
yaibuab and 
 
sangbuab. See also  
angle luffa.
			
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Luk Khun Hall  
See
					
					
		
		Sala Look Khun. 
			
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Lumbini 
(लुम्बिनी)   
Sanskrit. The park near  
   
Kapilavatthu in present-day Nepal 
(fig.), where prince  
  
Siddhartha, the historical  
   
Buddha was born, 
and which today is home to the  
Maya Devi Temple. 
 
See MAP.
			
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Lumphini  
(ลุมพินี)   
Thai for  
   
Lumbini. See also 
			      
			      
			      
			      Suan Lumphini.
			
回   
Lumphini Park   
See  
			      
			      
			      Suan Lumphini.
			
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lung 
(ลุ้ง)   
Thai. Term for a 
flat cylindrical shaped container with a lid, which is used either to keep dry 
food and is then referred to as lung ahaan (ลุ้งอาหาร), or to keep perfumed 
clothing. It is often decorated, e.g. inlayed with of 
					
					
	mother-of-pearl. 
There is one particular kind of lung that has features similar to a 
phaan. 
See also POSTAGE 
STAMPS.
			
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luohan 
(罗汉)  
1. Chinese term for Buddhist 
		      
		      arahats, 
comparable to Immortals, who are called 
xian. 
Sometimes called lohan.
			
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2. Chinese name for 
the Flowerhorn, 
i.e. the Flowerhorn cichlid, a kind of fish
with a distinctive hump on the forehead of male 
adults, which resembles that of  
	Shou, the Chinese god of longevity (fig.), who in Thai 
is known as Siw, and who is a member of the  
			
			
			Three Star Gods,
        Hok Lok Siw (fig.). 
These fish belong to the family of Cichlidae, 
but are artificial hybrids, that do not exist in the wild and were first 
produced in Thailand, Malaysia, and Taiwan, by crossbreeding both existing 
species of cichlids with other hybrids, around the end of the second millennium. 
Today there are many different varieties and breeds, and they are much sought-after by fish hobbyists worldwide.  
The radar-shaped or golf ball-like protuberance on the head of adult male Flowerhorn 
cichlids can reach huge proportions (fig.) 
and is either of one colour, 
or has a pattern of coloured lines on the hump (fig.), 
usually a kind of an extension of its body colour, making it look somewhat like 
a large or external brain. Besides the hump, which is mostly made up of fatty 
deposits and officially known as 
kok or nuchal hump,
males differ from females (fig.) 
by a much 
thicker and more pronounced mouth, and longer anal and dorsal fins 
(fig.). In Thai, this 
species of fish is called 
 
pla moh sih.
			
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          ,%20flowerhorn,%20luohan,%20cichlidae_small.jpg)  
luohan guo (罗汉果)   
  
Chinese. 
Literally ‘luohan fruit’ or ‘arahat
 fruit’, but sometimes referred to 
as ‘monkfruit’ or ‘buddha 
fruit’. Designation 
for the herbaceous fruit of an up to 5 meter long perennial vine with 
hearth-shaped leaves, known by the botanical names Siraitia grosvenorii, 
Momordica grosvenorii and Thladiantha grosvenorii, and native to southern 
		
		China
 
and northern Thailand. 
This globular fruit is about 7 centimeters in diameter, with a smooth yet hard, 
khaki to green-brownish shell, covered with fine hairs. It contains an edible 
pulp and numerous seeds. All components are extremely sweet and, believed to 
invigorate the 
		
		
		
        yin, 
they are used in traditional Chinese medicine for a variety of ailments, 
including heat stroke, phlegm, cough, constipation and diabetes. The fruits are 
first dried and then the constituents are infused in boiling water to extract a 
medicinal drink. The fruit extract is purportedly almost 300 times sweeter than 
sugar and has been used as a natural sweetener and substitute for caloric sugar 
in China for many centuries, due to its sweetness and lack of high calories 
(only 2.3 kcal/g). Like the luohan or 
		      
		      arahats, this fruit is associated with 
longevity. In Thai, the Chinese name is usually transcribed
lohan guay. 
			
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          %20หล่อฮั้นก๊วย%202_small.jpg)   
luopan (罗盘)   
Compass used to ascertain the auspicious orientation of buildings by someone involved with 
  
geomancy. See also 
    
feng shui.
			
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_small.jpg)  
		
lu sheng (芦笙)  
Chinese. 
‘Bamboo reed’. Name for a
		bottle gourd-shaped 
wind instrument, similar to the
sheng 
(fig.), 
but with larger, semi-long to long reeds or 
			
			bamboo pipes. It is also used by 
several of hill tribes in northern Thailand, who often dance and swing the 
instrument from side to side while playing. Due to the multiple pipes, its sound 
is polyphonic. 
			The instrument's body can also be made from 
hardwood, instead of using a gourd. The  
		
        
		Hmong people 
call it  
gaeng, a word reminiscent of the Thai word
    kaen, 
which is a similar wind instrument from 
		
		
		Isaan
made from 
reed (fig.).
回  
			
			
			
  
Lu Tong-pin (呂洞賓)  
Chinese. 
Name of one of the
	
	
	
    Eight Immortals (fig.), 
said to be the most unrestrained of them all. Although 
  
Chung-li Chuan 
(fig.) is regarded 
as the official leader of the group, many consider  
Lu Tong-pin 
the informal, de facto leader. He is believed to be born around the 8-10th century AD 
(some sources claim 796 AD) and was of princely descent. While still a student 
he met a fire 
dragon
		who gave him a magic sword with which he 
could conceal himself in heaven. One day, he visited a tavern and met with
Chung-li Chuan. 
While  Chung-li Chuan 
warmed up a pot of wine (some sources speak of a pot of  
millet), Lu fell asleep and saw the whole future of his 
life in a dream. He dreamt that he would enjoy good fortune for a long time but 
then would run out. He dreamt that he took the imperial exam, excelled and thus 
was awarded a prestigious office. He married the daughter of a prosperous 
household who bore him a son and a daughter and was promoted to be the prime 
minister. But, his success and good fortune attracted jealousy of others and he 
was slandered and falsely accused of corruption which caused him to lose his 
office. His wife then betrayed him, his children were killed by bandits, and he 
lost all his wealth. As he was dying on the street in the dream, he woke up. The 
characters from his dream were actually played by 
Chung-li Chuan, in order to make him realize that one should not 
put too much importance on transient glory and success. As a result, 
Lu Tong-pin became convinced of the worthlessness of earthly ambition and 
decided to renounce the world. He followed  
Chung-li Chuan into the Ho Ling Mountains in order to seek the 
 
            Tao and achieve 
immortality, eventually becoming a  
		
Xian. In art he is 
usually depicted dressed as a scholar whilst holding a
		jamajurih
and bearing a sword on his back (fig.). 
His benevolence is represented in the Chinese proverb ‘the dog bites  
Lu 
Tong-pin’ which means to repay kindness with 
unfriendliness due to an inability to recognize goodness. Also transcribed Lu 
Dongbin, Long Dongbin and Lu Tung Pin, sometimes called Lu Yan and nicknamed 
Shun Yang Tzu. His mount is 
a 
	tiger (fig.). In Thai he is known as
		
Leu Thong Ping.
			
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_small.jpg)  
Luzon Bleeding-heart Pigeon  
Common name of  a rare ground dove, 
with the scientific name Gallicolumba luzonica. This small bird (fig.) 
is slate grey, but due to the fact that it is iridescent, it can appear to be a 
bluish-purple or bottle-green, depending on the light. The belly and under-wing 
areas are buff to chestnut, and the breast is white, with a bright red colour at 
the centre, as well as a reddish hue extending down the belly, making it appear 
to be wounded. Its common name derives in part from this patch, whereas the name 
Luzon refers to the island in the Philippines, where this species is endemic. 
Sexes are very similar, with the size of males being slightly larger and their 
red patch more distinct, whilst some sources claim that additionally the irises 
of females tend to be more purplish. In Thai it is called
nok phiraab ok daeng 
luson. 
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%20นกพิราบอกแดงลูซอน%201_small.jpg)  
Lu Yu 
(陆羽)  
Chinese. Name 
of a Chinese writer-poet, who lived between 733-804 AD. He is 
the author of the Cha Jing (茶经), i.e. 
the ‘Sutra of 
 
Tea’, the world’s first 
book on tea culture. This three-volumes scripture resulted from Lu Yu's 
long-term study on planting, cultivating and processing tea. The book also 
describes his theory on how to taste and judge tea, which has become an 
important element in Chinese tea culture. Due to his unprecedented contribution 
Lu Yu later became known as 
 Cha
		Xian 
(茶仙), the 
‘Immortal of Tea’; Cha Sheng 
(茶圣), the 
‘Saint of Tea’; or Cha Shen 
(茶神), i.e. the 
‘Spirit (god) of Tea’ (fig.). See also 
			
			tea ceremony. 
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lychee   
Sweet 
subtropical fruit with a thin reddish rind and juicy white flesh of fruit. It 
has the scientific name Litchi chinensis and, in Thailand, grows mainly in the 
northern regions, at the beginning of the rainy season (June). The Chinese word for lychee is li (荔) which has the 
same sound and tone as the word li (力), meaning ‘power’ or ‘strength’ and which 
character is used three times underneath the ‘grass radical’ (used 
for meaning and   
without pronunciation) in the word for lychee. The English name then, is derived 
from lizhi which consists of the characters li (荔) for ‘lychee’ and the 
classifier or measure word zhi (枝), meaning ‘branch’. With reference to the word li meaning 
‘power’ and since lizhi sounds the same as 
	
	
	
	
	lishi 
(利事), a 
‘profitable item’ 
and lishi (利市), 
‘market profit’, lychees are seen as Chinese symbols of power and profit, and 
hence regularly found in art and as artefacts (fig.). Also spelled litchi. 
In Thai, known as linchee (ลิ้นจี่). 
			
回    
 
  
Lychee Stink Bug  
Common name for a species of giant 
			      
			Stink 
															          Bug, 
with the scientific designation Tessaratoma papillosa. 
 
READ ON.
			
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Lyle's Flying Fox  
Common name for a species of large fruit bat 
in the family Pteropodidae and with the scientific designation Pteropus lylei, 
which is found in 
			      Thailand,
		      Cambodia 
and
Vietnam. Apart from a golden-brown 
  
upper 
back,  
chest, 
throat  
and lower body, which varies from a deep dark-brown to a brighter yellowish-brown, 
this medium-sized flying fox is mostly blackish. 
It has a large eyes (fig.) and a long dark muzzle, and the shape of its head is somewhat reminiscent 
to that of a 
fox, hence the name. It has a wingspan of about 90 centimeters, and while the 
wings are blackish, in 
flight (fig.) they may appear dark pinkish-brown, depending on the light and the background. 
The 
wings each have a clawed thumb 
at the top, which is used for climbing, scratching, and to draw food to the mouth.
When resting or sleeping, the bats hang upside-down from tree branches, with 
their wings wrapped around the body (fig.), 
like an  oversized butterfly 
cocoon (fig.), 
yet on a hot day, they frequently flap either one or both wings to cool off, or 
unfold them like an umbrella (fig.). 
 In flight, they drag their legs 
legs parallel behind their bodies, but when landing they turn into an upright position and will spread the legs, ready to grab  a tree branch. 
Upon landing they almost simultaneously 
fall into their typical head-down position (fig.).
 
The Lyle's Flying Fox 
is a species of limited distribution, 
that forms large colonies high up in trees, usually  
in or 
near areas inhabited by people, such as cities and villages, where they are 
protected and free of persecution. Lyle's Flying Foxes  
roost 
by day and at dusk they radiate out into rural areas in search for food. Yet,
these fruit-eating bats do 
sometimes 
raid fruit orchards, hence putting 
themselves at risk of being killed by fruit farmers, who consider them to be 
pests. 
Around March/April, the female bats give birth to usually only one young, and 
will carry their young (fig.), even during short flights 
(fig.). However, when they go on 
their nightly foraging trips, they leave their young at the roost. Sadly, 
sometimes the inexperienced young let go and fall to their death (fig.). 
 
See also WILDLIFE PICTURES.
 
			
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%201_small.jpg)   
Ly 
Thai To (Lý Thái Tổ)  
 Vietnamese. 
Name of the Dai Co Viet Emperor, who reigned from 1009 AD to 1028 AD, founded 
the Ly Dynasty, and declared Hanoi his capital. 
			
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Ly Thai Thong (Lý Thái Tông)  
Vietnamese. 
Name of the Dai Co Viet Emperor, who reigned from 1028 to 1054 AD. He was the 
son of  
	
	Ly Thai To 
(fig.) 
and 
had to fight off several of his brothers who 
challenged his throne. He is considered 
one of 
the greatest rulers in Vietnamese history, who reformed both the monarchy and 
the government, developed basic bureaucratic infrastructures, 
invaded the kingdom of Champa and 
defeated its 
Cham King Jaya Sinhavarman II. 
In Hanoi, he had the iconic
						
						One Pillar Pagoda (fig.) 
built, which is said to represent a 
	
	lotus 
flower in a lotus pond. 
			
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Ly 
Tu Trong (Lý Tự Trọng)  
 Vietnamese. 
Name of a 16 year old, Thailand-born, Vietnamese revolutionary, who 
rebelled against French colonial occupation and was executed for it by the 
French on 21 November 1931, a month short of his 17th birthday. He is today 
revered as a revolutionary martyr, with a street named after him in Saigon and a 
statue, in a roadside public park south of West Lake in Hanoi. 
			
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