Isan Language

Isan (or Isaan or Esarn) is the language of the Isan region of Thailand. It is a tonal language of the Tai family, and is closely related to Lao, but has also been much influenced by Thai: the three are substantially mutually comprehensible. Phonology and the rules for determining tones vary in each dialect, but are generally similar to Lao. The Khorat dialect blends features of Isan and Thai. The vocabulary is largely the same as in Lao, except for the use of Thai loan words and neologisms. It was previously written using the Tua Tham script also used in Laos and northern Thailand, but since the introduction of Thai language schooling in the 1920s it has been written in the Thai script.

Phonology

Isan has no r sound; where this sound occurs in Thai, it is replaced in Isan by an l or a h. When writing Isan in the Thai script, ร is normally used to represent an l, while ฮ indicates an h. The other main differences from Thai are: the pronunciation of ช as s rather than ch; the common palatalisation of ย; and the absence of consonant clusters (where a consonant cluster occurs in Thai, the equivalent word in Isan retains only the first consonant).

Tones

The following six tone pattern is typical:
width="15%" valign="top" | Long vowel, or vowel plus voiced consonant width="15%" valign="top" | Long vowel plus unvoiced consonant width="15%" valign="top" | Short vowel, or short vowel plus unvoiced consonant width="15%" valign="top" | Mai ek (อ่) width="15%" valign="top" | Mai tho (อ้)
width="15%" valign="top" | High consonant width="15%" valign="top" | rising width="15%" valign="top" | low falling width="15%" valign="top" | high width="15%" valign="top" | mid width="15%" valign="top" | low falling
width="15%" valign="top" | Mid consonant width="15%" valign="top" | low rising width="15%" valign="top" | low falling width="15%" valign="top" | high width="15%" valign="top" | mid width="15%" valign="top" | high falling
width="15%" valign="top" | Low consonant width="15%" valign="top" | high width="15%" valign="top" | high falling width="15%" valign="top" | mid width="15%" valign="top" | mid width="15%" valign="top" | high falling
There are a further two, relatively rare tone marks: mai tri (อ๊) and mai chattawa (อ๋); these always indicate a high and a rising tone respectively. The letters ห (high class) and อ (mid class) are often used as silent letters to produce the correct tone. In polysyllabic words, an initial high class consonant with an implicit vowel renders the following syllable also high class.

Vocabulary

Isan contains many words not used (or more rarely used) in Thai. Some of the most common of these are:
  • ข้อย (koi) I/me
  • เจ้า (jao) you
  • บ่ (baw) not
  • หยัง (nyang) what
  • จัก (jak) how many
  • ใผ (pai) who
  • ใด (dai) which
  • แม่น (maen) be
  • เอ็ด (het) do
  • เว้า (waw) speak
  • เบิ่ง (beung) watch
  • ซิ (si) will
  • อีหลี (ee-lee) really
  • ไวๆ (wai wai) fast

Some caution has to be had. The Isan word for buffalo is pronounced like the vulgar Thai word for penis. Also, the common phrase buk seew, which means 'young friend' is considered pejorative in Thai.

References

  • Basic Isaan phrases (Some basic Isaan phrases with soundfiles.)
  • Ethnologue
  • Mollerup, Asger. Thai- Isan- Lao Phrasebook. White Lotus, Bangkok, 2001. ISBN 9747534886

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
list of cities in saint lucia
tahoua
volcanic bomb
heliodorus of emesa
intermediate filament
list of cities in rwanda
vlad ii dracul
will h. hays
eastern tiger swallowtail
list of cities in samoa
papilio
paid inclusion
swallowtail butterfly
mreb
julia thorne
ftsz
mississippi sea wolves
mucus
rider (politics)
new living translation
association of american railroads
microtubule organizing center
nocodazole
mitotic apparatus
pixel art
flow cytometry
illustration of the shooting method
2nd london) division
60th division
intelligence community
naproxen
arse
list of radio stations in washington
passion (disambiguation)
l'aiglon
referee (football)
magrath, alberta
allegheny
alpena
post industrial society
soham (sanskrit)
chris berman
signal peptide
translocon