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Is it worth learning Thai


robint

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44 minutes ago, DaRoadrunner said:

 

Problem now is I can't switch it off and am forced to listen to what the morons are saying. It is amazing how primitive and basic their mentality is.

 

 

Ha ha, classic, try wax earplugs I always ram them in when around Thais, especially the women. Basic mentality, never a truer thing typed on TV!

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1 hour ago, Maestro said:

I find Google Translate from and to Thai useless.

Agreed.  For any European language then it's a really useful tool but Thai throws up all sorts of nonsense.  It's early days so hopefully will improve over some considerable time to come.

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I find it very convenient to understand what your Thai friends and relatives write in social media.

I usually answer to the Thai language messages in English. For me written Thai is much easier, probably because I stay in HK or Europe most of the year and I am exposed to spoken Thai only 4 months a year. I have already lost my ability to speak any coherent Thai.

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19 hours ago, BritManToo said:

It's something you can do on your own without paying a Thai teacher.

Most of the Thai teachers I hired were completely hopeless.

Apart from BoonMark who worked for AUA in ChiangMai, he was brilliant.

Can I please know how I can get contact with BoonMark, thanks

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Just now, Bang Bang said:

Jeez, other than the little thing that the 60,000,000 people around you speak Thai and little English, it does help to be able to get the point across in the supermarket/pharmacy/bank/taxi/...

That rather depends on where you live. I live in central Bangkok ie. between Lumphini Park and the river, and haven't had a problem speaking only English with all of the above for several years now.  The most recent time where the Thai struggled with me was on the rare occasion I visited my bank; the official just pulled up Google Translate on his phone and we were in business

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17 hours ago, Aforek said:

I think I know what people who say that suggest: what I love in Thai language script is that the tones are written in the word; the signs that you see above the letters are, or vowels, or tone marks  and when you know the tone rules, you know how to pronounce the syllabe, just in looking how the word is written , that's why people who can read have normally a good prononciation; as for me, I can read easily, it's a very interesting language, I live upcountry, nobody speaks English, and even if I lived in Bangkok, I would read , just for pleasure ; the more complex is the alphabet, the more I like it ????

for the guy above who could read and write after two years, I am not surprised, if you are motivated, you can do it, it's not as difficult as it seems at the beginning 

 

ps: agree with the post above, reading not too difficult, writing , beyong my motivation; very difficult to remember the spelling of every word

I learned to read and write (not spell) to a basic level in around 40hrs. Definitely depends on your learning resource. 

I had a motorcycle crash and have an Acquired Brain Injury that set me back for some time. I’m back into self teaching now 

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1 minute ago, ThaiBunny said:

That rather depends on where you live. I live in central Bangkok ie. between Lumphini Park and the river, and haven't had a problem speaking only English with all of the above for several years now.  The most recent time where the Thai struggled with me was on the rare occasion I visited my bank; the official just pulled up Google Translate on his phone and we were in business

You're lucky. Not the case where I live near VM. And then I like to get out of Bkk every now and then as well.

 

I have no head for languages, my tones are mangled so my Thai assaults the ears of native speakers no doubt. Still as long as I can limp home with what I want to say I am happy.

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I speak decent amount of Thai, but no matter how hard I try, they still don't understand my number 8.

Fun thing to do with some of those translator programs is to enter sentence in English, get Thai translation, copy and past into new iteration, back and forth a few times. Somewhat like game of telephone...

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4 minutes ago, Emdog said:

I speak decent amount of Thai, but no matter how hard I try, they still don't understand my number 8. 

Fun thing to do with some of those translator programs is to enter sentence in English, get Thai translation, copy and past into new iteration, back and forth a few times. Somewhat like game of telephone...

My downfall is 5. I keep slipping on the tone. And far vs. near. I will die a happy man if I can ever straighten the two out.

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41 minutes ago, Bang Bang said:

My downfall is 5. I keep slipping on the tone. And far vs. near. I will die a happy man if I can ever straighten the two out.

mai glai (abrupt), mai glai (relaxed), nit noi glai (relaxed).

Not near not far little bit far ............ as they say

 

if you bark the 'near glai' and drawl the far glai they will understand you.

Modifying your emotion as you speak will change your tone.

Edited by BritManToo
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5 minutes ago, BritManToo said:

mai glai (abrupt), mai glai (long), nit noi glai (long).

Not near not far little bit far ............ as they say

 

if you bark the 'near glai' they will understand you.

Modifying your emotion as you speak will change your tone.

Khob khun, krub, BritManToo. If this works I shall owe you a great debt of gratitude.

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"A lot of thais in bkk hated that you spoke their language (falang lo mak).  Very very anti."

 

That hasn't been my experience at all, I wonder where you find those Thais.

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21 hours ago, Peterw42 said:

Yes, of course its worth learning, I just wish I was better at learning.

I still find it very difficult, I cant hear or reproduce the tonal differences, 5 minutes later I have forgotten the word anyway.

 

If some old Thai lady who left school at 12 years old can learn some of my language, makes me feel pretty stupid, that I cant learn some of her language. It would certainly be worth it.

 

I think its a cop out to say its not necessity, not worth it, I choose not to learn etc.

The natives should have never been allowed to join the empire club if you ask me, lol

 

 

 

 

 

As I have got older I find my ability to distinguish tones has steadily disappeared, so i can no longer tell the difference between 'near' and 'far'. I wonder if Thais have problem with this? But it was still worth the effort to learn to speak and read Thai. 

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21 hours ago, simon43 said:

Being able to write Thai is a useful skill for me that meets a particular need. 

You are able to write Thai? That is amazing. Read and speak ok, but write. I will never learn how to write and even many Thais are very bad in writing their own language.

The same sound can be produced by different letters and the resulting tone might differ depending of the letter combination. Its really hard to learn.

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2 minutes ago, andre47 said:

The same sound can be produced by different letters and the resulting tone might differ depending of the letter combination. Its really hard to learn.

Thais don't learn speaking or writing by tone rules.

They memorise each entire word, it's more of a pictorial language.

Edited by BritManToo
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I began learning Thai 27 years ago and can speak central Thai well,read and write Thai. I struggle with reading newspapers.

As much as I speak Thai it has not helped with understanding the Thai mentality and way of thinking . Sometimes I think I would be less frustrated in not knowing the language ! 5555

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