词条 | Languages of Thailand | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| country = Thailand | image = | image size = | caption = | official = Central Thai (Siamese) | national = Central Thai, Isan (Laotian), Northern Thai, Southern Thai | regional = {{hlist |Bru |Chong |Chung |Jahai |Kensiu |Khmer ({{small|Northern}} {{small|*}} {{small|Western}}) |Kintaq |Kuy |Mlabri |Mon |Nyah Kur |Palaung |Ten'edn |Thavung |Vietnamese |Cham |Malay ({{small|Pattani Malay}} {{small|*}} {{small|Satun Malay}} {{small|*}} {{small|Bangkok Malay}}) |Moken |Moklen |Urak Lawoi’ |Hmong |Iu Mien |Akha |Eastern Pwo |Lisu |Nuosu |Mpi |Northern Pwo |Phrae Pwo |Red Karen (Eastern Kayah) |S'gaw Karen |Ugong |Khün |Lao |Phu Thai |Phuan |Shan |Tai Lü |Tai Nüa |Thai Song |Min ({{small|Teochew}} {{small|*}} {{small|Hokkien}} {{small|*}} {{small|Hainanese}} {{small|*}} {{small|Hokchew}}) |Hakka |Cantonese |Mandarin }} | foreign = {{hlist | item_style=white-space:nowrap; |Burmese |English |Hindi |Punjabi |Korean |Japanese | sign = Thai Sign Language | keyboard = Kedmanee layout | keyboard image = }} An ethnolinguistic map of Thailand. Thailand, and its neighbor Laos, are dominated by languages of the Southwestern Tai family. Karen languages are spoken along the border with Burma, Khmer is spoken near Cambodia and Malay in the south near Malaysia. The following table comprises all 62 ethnic groups recognised by the Royal Thai Government in the 2011 Country Report to the UN Committee responsible for the International Convention for the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, available from the Department of Rights and Liberties Promotion of the Thai Ministry of Justice.[1]{{RP|3}}
The following table shows all the language families of Northeast Thailand, as recognised in the same report.
Note that population numbers are for the Northeast region only. Languages may have additional speakers outside the Northeast. The Thai hill tribes speak numerous small languages, many Chinese retain varieties of Chinese, and there are half a dozen sign languages. The Ethnologue reports 73 living languages are used in Thailand. The Royal Thai Government's 2011 Country Report to the Committee Responsible for the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,[1] relying mainly on the 2005 Ethnolinguistic Maps of Thailand data,[2] lists 62 languages. ThaisIn Thailand the four major dialects of Thai are: Central Thai, Thai version of Lao which is called Isan, Southern Thai and Northern Thai language. The sole official language of Thailand is Central Thai, a Kra-Dai language closely related to Lao, Shan in Burma, and numerous smaller languages of southern China and northern Vietnam. It is the principal language of education and government and is spoken throughout the country. The standard is written in the Thai alphabet, an abugida that evolved from the Khmer script. However, Central Thais speak a folk language in Central (including the metropolitan area), Eastern, Southwestern Thailand, Nakhon Ratchasima Provinces and Thai of Chinese origin community outside these area. Althrough Isan, Southern Thai and Northern Thai language classified as another languages many linguistics (like English and Germans), but was downplay by government as dialects, from political reasons, what are partly mutual intelligibility. Several other Tai languages exist: Southern Thai is spoken in the provinces that were formerly part of the vassal state of Nakhon Si Thammarat, and Northern Thai is spoken in the provinces that were formerly part of the independent kingdom of Lanna. Minority languagesIn the far south, Yawi, a dialect of Malay, is the primary language of the Malay Muslims. Khmer are spoken by the elder Northern Khmer. Varieties of Chinese are also spoken by the elder Thai Chinese population, with the Teochew dialect being best represented. However, the younger Northern Khmer trend to speak Central Thai, younger Thai Chinese speak Central Thai, and Peranakan speak Southern Thai language only. Tribal languagesNumerous tribal languages are also spoken, including those belonging to:
Sign languageSeveral village sign languages are reported among the hill tribes, though it is not clear whether these are independent languages, as only Ban Khor Sign Language has been described. Two related deaf-community sign languages developed in Chiangmai and Bangkok; the national Thai Sign Language developed from these under the influence of American Sign Language. English is a mandatory school subject, but the number of fluent speakers remains very low, especially outside the cities. Most widely spoken languageThe following table shows official first languages in Thailand with equal to or more than 400,000 speakers according to the Royal Thai Government's 2011 Country Report to the Committee Responsible for the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination,[1] mainly using the Ethnolinguistic Maps of Thailand data.[2] Official first languages of Thailand with equal to or more than 400,000 speakers[1]{{Failed verification|date=May 2018|reason=This table doesn't appear in given source nor does the source give any list of languages with more than 400,000 speakers. The source does give some limited ethnicity data, but ethnicity does not equal language.}}
The following table employs 2000 census data. Caution should be exercised with Thai census data on first language. In Thai censuses, the four largest Tai-Kadai languages of Thailand (in order, Central Thai, Isan (majority Lao),[3] Kam Mueang, Pak Tai) are not provided as options for language or ethnic group. People stating such a language as a first language, including Lao, are allocated to 'Thai'.[4] This explains the disparity between the two tables. For instance, self-reporting as Lao has been prohibited, due to the prohibition of the Lao ethnonym in the context of describing Thai citizens, for approximately one hundred years.[5][6] This was due to the promotion of a 'Thai' national identity to cement Siamese claims over the Lao city-states of what is now Northern and Northeast Thailand following the 1893 Franco Siamese War and subsequent threat posed by French Indochina to Lao tributary states of Siam. Some historian argued that the birth of a homogenizing Thai ethnocentric national identity sufficient to begin transforming Siam from an absolute monarchy into a modern nation-state was achieved by assimilating the Lao within this Thai 'identity', equivalent to what is now known as the Tai–Kadai_languages, under a 'Greater Thai Empire', and can be traced back to at least 1902.{{citation needed|date=August 2018}} But this view neglects the fact that "Lao", as a unified ethnic group, was also created by the French in order to sever the Siamese influence over Lan Xang and to justify the annexation of "Laos"—as a created territory—to its Indochinese "protectorate." [7] The 2011 Country Report data is therefore more comprehensive and better differentiates between the large Tai-Kadai languages of Thailand.{{citation needed|date=August 2018}} As a country submission to a UN convention ratified by Thailand, it is also arguably more authoritative.
Provincial language data
See also
Further reading
Referencesไทย1. ^1 2 3 4 5 {{cite book|title=International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination; Reports submitted by States parties under article 9 of the Convention: Thailand|date=28 July 2011|publisher=United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination|url=http://www.rlpd.go.th/rlpdnew/images/rlpd_1/HRC/CERD%201_3.pdf|accessdate=8 October 2016|language=English, Thai}} 2. ^1 {{cite book|title=Ethnolinguistic Maps of Thailand|date=2004|publisher=Office of the National Culture Commission|url=http://www.newmandala.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Thailand-Ethnolinguistic-Maps.pdf|accessdate=8 October 2016|language=Thai}} 3. ^{{cite journal |last=Draper |first=John |last2= Kamnuansilpa|first2= Peerasit|date= 2016|title= The Thai Lao Question: The Reappearance of Thailand's Ethnic Lao Community and Related Policy Questions|journal= Asian Ethnicity|volume= 19|issue= |pages= 81–105|doi= 10.1080/14631369.2016.1258300}} 4. ^Luangthongkum, Theraphan. (2007). The Position of Non-Thai Languages in Thailand. In Lee Hock Guan & L. Suryadinata (Eds.), Language, nation and development in Southeast Asia (pp. 181-194). Singapore: ISEAS Publishing. 5. ^Breazeale, Kennon. (1975). The integration of the Lao states. PhD. dissertation, Oxford University. 6. ^Grabowsky, Volker. (1996). The Thai census of 1904: Translation and analysis. In Journal of the Siam Society, 84(1): 49-85. 7. ^{{cite book|last=Ivarsson|first=Søren|title=Creating Laos: The Making of a Lao Space between Siam and Indochina, 1860–1945|publisher=NIAS Press|year=2008|pages=240|isbn=978-8-7769-4023-2}} 8. ^Population by language, sex and urban/rural residence, UNSD Demographic Statistics, United Nations Statistics Division, UNdata, last update 5 July 2013. 9. ^{{cite web|url=http://web.nso.go.th/pop2000/finalrep/burirumfn1.pdf |title=burirum.xls |date= |accessdate=2017-03-08}} 10. ^http://web.nso.go.th/pop2000/finalrep/chanburifn.pdf 11. ^{{cite web|url=http://web.nso.go.th/pop2000/finalrep/mahakamfn.pdf |title=mahakam.xls |date= |accessdate=2017-03-08}} 12. ^http://web.nso.go.th/pop2000/finalrep/roietfn.pdf 13. ^{{cite web|url=http://web.nso.go.th/pop2000/finalrep/sakaeofn.pdf|title=Sakaeo: Key indicators of the population and households, Population and Housing Census 1990 and 2000|last=|first=|date=|website=|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=2017-03-08}} 14. ^{{cite web|url=http://web.nso.go.th/pop2000/finalrep/srisaketfn.pdf|title=Si Sa Ket: Key indicators of the population and households, Population and Housing Census 1990 and 2000|last=|first=|date=|website=|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=2017-03-08}} 15. ^{{cite web|url=http://web.nso.go.th/pop2000/finalrep/surinfn.pdf|title=Surin: Key indicators of the population and households, Population and Housing Census 1990 and 2000|last=|first=|date=|website=|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=2017-03-08}} 16. ^http://web.nso.go.th/pop2000/finalrep/tratfn.pdf 17. ^{{cite web|url=http://web.nso.go.th/pop2000/finalrep/ubonfn.pdf|title=Ubon Ratchathani: Key indicators of the population and households, Population and Housing Census 1990 and 2000|last=|first=|date=|website=|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|accessdate=2017-03-08}} 18. ^{{Cite web|url=http://google.com/|title=Google|website=google.com|language=en|access-date=2018-08-09}} External links
1 : Languages of Thailand |
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