Tai Dam ( simplified Chinese : 傣担语 ; traditional Chinese : 傣擔語 ; pinyin : Dǎidānyǔ ), also known as Black Tai ( Thai : ภาษาไทดำ ; pronounced [pʰāː sǎː tʰāj dām] ; Vietnamese : tiếng Thái Đen ; 'Black Tai language'; simplified Chinese : 黑傣语 ; traditional Chinese : 黑傣語 ; pinyin : Hēidǎiyǔ ), is a Tai language spoken by the Tai Dam in Vietnam , Laos , Thailand , and China (mostly in Jinping Miao, Yao, and Dai Autonomous County ).
5-564: Tai Dam (or Black Tai ) can refer to: Tai Dam language Tai Dam people Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Black Tai . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Black_Tai&oldid=932726820 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
10-463: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Tai Dam language The Tai Dam language is similar to Thai and Lao (including Isan ), but it is not close enough to be readily understood by most Thai and Lao (Isan) speakers. In particular, the Khmer, Pali and Sanskrit additions to Thai and Lao (Isan) are largely missing from Tai Dam. Tai Dam
15-795: Is spoken in Vietnam, China, Laos, and Thailand. In central and western Thailand, it is known as Thai Song . Tai Dam speakers in China are classified as part of the Dai nationality along with almost all the other Tai peoples. But in Vietnam they are given their own nationality (with the White Tai) where they are classified (confusingly for English speakers) as the Thái nationality (meaning Tai people). In China, Tai Dam ( Chinese : 傣朗姆 ) people are located in
20-589: The following townships of Yunnan, with about 20,000 people in Yunnan (Gao 1999). In Vietnam, all Tai peoples are taught a standardized Tai language based on the Tai Dam language, using the standardized Tai Viet script . The Khmer , Pali and Sanskrit additions to Thai and Lao (Isan) are generally absent from Tai Dam. Tai Dam lacks many of the Khmer and Indic (via Khmer) loanwords found in Thai, Lao and Isan. For
25-433: The word "I" For the word "my" Tai Dam uses an SVO word order. The Tai Dam language has its own system of writing, called Tai Viet , which consists of 31 consonants and 14 vowels. At the beginning, there was no tone marker although the language is tonal. Tone markers emerge in the 1970s in two sets: combining marks like Thai/Lao, and modifiers like New Tai Lue/Tai Nuea which are now less popular. According to Thai authors,
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