Dialogue

Vocabulary

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Lesson Notes

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Lesson Transcript

INTRODUCTION
Hello and welcome to Thai Survival Phrases brought to you by ThaiPod101.com. This course is designed to equip you with the language skills and knowledge to enable you to get the most out of your visit to Thailand. You will be surprised at how far a little Thai will go.
Now, before we jump in, remember to stop by ThaiPod101.com, and there, you will find the accompanying PDF and additional info in the post. If you stop by, be sure to leave us a comment.

Lesson focus

This lesson is very straightforward, as we're going to cover counting 0 through 10. Let's jump right in.
"One" - nùeng
"Two" - sǎawng
"three" - sǎam
"four" - sìi
"five" - hâa
"six" - hòk
"seven" - jèt
"eight" - bpàaet
"nine" - gâao
"10" - sìp
Counting in Thai is not complicated, as Thai has no singular or plural forms. But don't get too happy because there is some difficulty in counting in Thai too. Unlike English, we use a pronoun in representing an object when counting instead of a noun. To make it easy for you to understand, I'll give you some example.
The word for "car" is rót.
rót
However, to say "one car" in Thai is nùeng khan.
nùeng khan
Let's hear this one more time, slowly: nùeng khan
nùeng khan
The first word, nùeng, which means "one," is followed by khan, which is a pronoun for "car." Therefore, nùeng khan means "one car."
In some cases, noun and pronoun is the same word. For example, both noun and pronoun for "person" is khon.
khon
To say "one person" in Thai is nùeng khon.
nùeng khon
Let's hear this one more time: nùeng khon
Thai has particular pronouns for each of every object. And to make your life easier, I'm going to teach you a few more pronouns that you will find very useful.
To say "two items," is sǎawng an
sǎawng an
Let's hear this one more time: sǎawng an
sǎawng an
The first word, sǎawng, mean "two," followed by an, which is the pronoun of the items. Therefore, sǎawng an means "two items."
Another useful pronouns is "dish." To say "three dishes" is sǎam jaan.
sǎam jaan
Let's hear this one more time: sǎam jaan
sǎam jaan

Outro

Okay. To close out today's lesson, we'd like for you to practice what you've just learned. I'll provide you with the English equivalent of the phrase, and you are responsible of saying it loud. You will have a few seconds before I give you the answer, so chôok-dii khâ, that mean "good luck" in Thai.
Remember, khâ is for women, and khráp is for men. Okay. Here we go.
Let’s count from one to 10 in Thai.
nùeng
sǎawng
sǎam
sìi
hâa
hòk
jèt
bpàaet
gâao
sìp
“One car” - nùeng khan
nùeng khan
nùeng khan
“One person” - nùeng khon
nùeng khon
nùeng khon
“Two items” - sǎawng an
sǎawng an
sǎawng an
“Three dishes” - sǎam jaan
sǎam jaan
sǎam jaan
All right. That’s going to do it for today. Remember to stop by ThaiPod101.com and pick up the accompanying PDF. If you stop by, be sure to leave us a comment.

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