ພາສາລາວ
Introduction
This
section is intended as a reference and aid to help recognize and determine the
transcription of certain Lao words in the
lexicon.
Lao is a
tonal language and there are five main tones with one having sub tones, the main
tones being high, low, middle, falling and rising, with the falling tone being
divided in a high falling and low falling tone. The meaning of a word changes according to its tone. These details are
lost when transcribing into Latin script. So seemingly similar words in Latin
script may be different when read in Lao script. Consonants
belong to a certain class of tone. The word-tone will be determined by this
class and the changes to it are influenced by the vowels and consonants
following it, or by ‘tone marks’. In the section ‘tone rules’ the
expression a ‘living sound’ refers to a sound that has either an open syllable
ending on a long vowel or vowel combination (e.g. phaa, pai) or a closed
syllable which end sound is nasal and reverberates (e.g. phaan, ping). With a ‘dead sound’ we refer to a sound that has a closed syllable ending with an
occlusive and does not reverberate (e.g. phat) or a sound that has an open
syllable ending on a short vowel that does not reverberate, possibly with a
glottal stop (e.g. dja). Note that most of the sounds and tone marks are the
same as in Thai, but that they often react differently and thus have another
outcome.
The script used is the Lao UI
System. See also
comparative language list. 回
Consonants
ກ .....
k (hard g)
ຂ
..... kh
ຄ .....
kh
ງ
.....
ng
ຈ
.....
ch (hard j)
ສ .....
s
ຊ .....
s
ຍ .....
ny
ດ .....
d
ຕ .....
t
ຖ .....
th
ທ .....
th
ນ .....
n |
ບ .....
b
ປ .....
p
ຜ ..... ph
ຝ
..... f
ພ ..... ph
ຟ
..... f
ມ .....
m
ຢ .....
y
ລ .....
l
ວ .....
w
ຫ .....
h
ອ .....
(is, or used with, a
vowel)
ຮ .....
h |
Note: There is also a letter ‘r’ (ຣ),
but the ‘r’ as a sound doesn't exist in Lao and the sign for ‘r’ (ຣ) is thus used only
in foreign words, written in Lao script. 回
Vowels
ອ
..... o (cons. used as a vowel)
ອະ
..... a
ອັ
..... a
ອາ
..... aa (ah)
ອຳ ..... am
ອິ
..... i
ອີ
..... ie (ih)
ອຶ
..... eu
ອື ..... euh
ອຸ
..... oe
ອ ູ
..... oeh
ເ ອ
..... e (eh)
ເອະ
..... e/ay (short)
ເອັ
..... e/ay (short)
ແອ
..... ae (long)
ແອະ
..... ae (short)
ແອວ
..... aeo (aew)
ອົ
..... o (short)
ໂອ
..... oo (oh - long)
|
ໂອະ
..... o (short)
ໂອ ຍ
..... ohy
ເອາະ
..... o (aw short)
ອໍ
..... o (short)
ອຍ
..... oy
ເອິ
..... eu
ເອີ
..... euh
ເອີຍ
..... euy
ເອັຍ
..... ia (short)
ເອຍ
..... ia (long)
ຽ
..... ia (long)
ຽວ
..... io (long)
ເອີອ
.....
eua
ອົ ວ
..... ua (long)
ອົວະ
..... ua (short)
-ວ- ..... ua (cons.
used as a vowel)
ໃອ
..... ai (ay)
ໄອ
..... ai (ay)
ເອົາ
..... ao |
Note: all the above the vowels arte written
together with the special consonant-vowel
ອ,
but can be used in combination with any other consonant. 回
Numerals
|
໑ ..... 1
໒
..... 2
໓
..... 3
໔
..... 4
໕
..... 5 |
໖
..... 6
໗
..... 7
໘
..... 8
໙ ..... 9
໐ ..... 0 |
|
Peculiarities
ຫຼ
..... l used as high class consonant, also written
ຫລ
ຫລ
.....
l used as
high class consonant (=ຫ+ລ),
also written ຫຼ
ໜ
..... n used as high class consonant (=ຫ+ນ)
ໝ.....
m used as high class consonant (=ຫ+ມ)
໌
..... mai tan takaat, kahran (silences or changes
final sound)
ໆ
..... yamok (used for repetition)
Tones (marks and rules)
Tone marks:
່
..... mai ayk
້ .....
mai tho
\
Tone rules:
High tone class |
Mid tone class |
Low tone class |
ຖ ຂ ຝ ສ
ຫ ຜ |
ກ ຈ ດ ຕ ບ ປ ອ ຢ |
ຄ
ງ ຊ ຍ ທ
ນ
ພ ຟ ມ
ລ ວ ຮ |
living sound = rising tone
dead sound (short vowel) = high tone
dead sound (long vowel) = low falling
tone
່ =
mid tone
້ = low falling tone |
living sound = rising/low tone
dead sound (short vowel) = high tone
dead sound (long vowel) = low falling
tone
່ =
mid tone
້ = high falling tone
|
living sound = high tone
dead sound (short vowel) = mid tone
dead sound (long vowel) =
high falling
tone
່ = mid tone
້ = high falling tone |
Note: The
tone for certain words may be different from region to region, e.g. the
tone for one word with a certain pronunciation characteristic may be
high for one region but low in another.
回
|