Audio Books Home

Login to enhance your shopping experience.

Login or Create an Account
Categories
Information
Online Store Menu
Quick Store Search

Advanced Search
Shopping Cart

There are no items in your shopping cart.

Australia - Learn to speak Thai - Audio CD - Learning Thai is easy

Learning to Speak the Thai Language

Pocket Thai Dictionary, Thai-English and English-Thai

audio book audiobook
Pocket Thai Dictionary Thai-English and English-Thai Other Learn to Speak Thai Audio and Books click here Pocket Thai Dictionary - Paperback Paperback - 88pp This convenient pocket-sized dictionary contains all the most common Thai words that you will need to use and understand whether as a traveler or as a beginner in the early stages of learning the language. Different meanings of the same words are clearly distinguised so that you will always be able to make the correct choice with confidence more details.....

Spoken Word Thai - Living Language - Coursebook and 6 Audio CDs

audio book audiobook
Spoken Word Thai Living Language - 6 audio CDs and Coursebook More Thai Language Learning click here Spoken Word Thai - Living Language - 6 Audio CDs and Coursebook Brand New: 6 CDs and coursebook This simple and effective introduction to Thai teaches everything one needs to speak understand read and write in Thai. This program assumes no background in the language and it explains each new concept clearly with plenty of examples making it ideal for beginners or anyone who wants a thorough review more details.....

Pimsleur Basic Thai Language 5 AUDIO CD -Discount - Learn to speak Thai

audio book audiobook
Pimsleur Basic Thai 5 Audio CDs More Thai Language Learning click here Pimsleur Basic Thai 5 Audio CDs Brand New : . 5 CDs This Basic program contains 5 hours of audio-only effective language learning with real-life spoken practice sessions. The Pimsleur Method provides the most effective language-learning program ever developed. The Pimsleur Method gives you quick command of Thai structure without tedious drills. Learning to speak Thai can actually be enjoyable and rewarding. The key reason mos more details.....

Berlitz Thai Travel Pack -Audio CD and Phrase Book - Learn to speak Thai

audio book audiobook
Berlitz Thai Travel Pack - Phrase Book and Audio CD Get Other Thai Audio click here Berlitz Thai Travel Pack - Phrase Book and Audio CD Brand New 1 Audio CD 192 page Phrase Book This travel pack offers a fast and effective way for travellers to learn basic words and phrases. Based on the Berlitz listen-and-repeat approach the CD features more than 300 essential expressions while the book contains more than 1200 words and phrases. * 1 200 words and phrases * sections color-coded by topic * easy more details.....

Conversational Thai: Learn to Speak and Understand Thai with Pimsleur Language Programs Audio CD

audio book audiobook
Pimsleur Conversational Thai 8CDs 16 Lessons Audio CDs play on Car/Portable/Home CD player More Thai Language Learning click here Pimsleur Conversational Thai 8 Audio CDs Brand New : . 8 CDs This Basic program contains 8 hours of audio-only effective language learning with real-life spoken practice sessions. The Pimsleur Method provides the most effective language-learning program ever developed. The Pimsleur Method gives you quick command of Thai structure without tedious drills. Learning to sp more details.....

Thai-English English-Thai Dictionary

audio book audiobook
Thai- English English-Thai Dictionary Includes Classifiers and Tones for English speakers More Thai Language Learning click here Thai- English English-Thai Dictionary - Softcover 982 pages This practical Thai English English Thai dictionary is designed to help English speakers communicate in Thai whether or not you can read the Thai alphabet. All Thai words are listed in both Thai script and an easy-to-learn English-like pronunciation system that fully expresses the Thai sound including th more details.....

Pimsleur Comprehensive Thai Level 1 - Discount - Audio 16 CD

audio book audiobook
Pimsleur Comprehensive Thai Level 1 Get other Thai Language audio click here Comprehensive Thai I includes 30 lessons of essential grammar and vocabulary -- 16 hours of real-life spoken practice sessions -- plus an introduction to reading. Upon completion of this Level I program you will have functional spoken proficiency with the most-frequently-used vocabulary and grammatical structures. You will be able to: * initiate and maintain face-to-face conversations * deal with every day situations -- more details..... This item is currently out of stock - more coming soon

Thai Phrasebook - Lonely Planet

audio book audiobook
Lonely Planet Thai Phrasebook Two-way dictionary and Phrasebook Other Learn to Speak Thai Audio and Books click here Lonely Planet Thai Phrasebook - Paperback Paperback - 258pp If your handle on Thai extends no further than asking the chef to hold the chilli then you need this guide. Wrap your tongue around all those essential phrases and you'll be booking in and ordering up before you know it. 3500-word two-way dictionary guide to pronunciation and phrase-building practicalities - buying the ri more details.....

Collins Thai Phrasebook and CD

audio book audiobook
Collins Thai Phrasebook and CD Includes Phrasebook and CD More Thai Language Learning click here Collins Thai Phrasebook - Book and CD "The Right Word in Your Pocket" Brand New In Original Packaging In all of the most common travel situations‚ you need the reassurance that you can communicate with ease. A reliable‚ portable and easy-to-use phrasebook is a travel essential‚ and now with the completely re-designed Collins Thai Phrasebook‚ the right word will always be at your finge more details..... This item is currently out of stock - more coming soon

Teach Yourself Complete Thai Language 2 Audio CD's and Book

audio book audiobook
Teach Yourself Complete Thai Book and Double CD By David Smyth More Thai Language Learning click here Teach Yourself Thai Book and 2 Audio CDs Now fully updated to make your language learning experience fun and interactive. You can still rely on the benefits of a top language teacher and our years of teaching experience but now with added learning features within the course and online.The course is structured in thematic units and the emphasis is placed on communication so that you effortlessly more details.....

Thai Conversation - Booklet and Audio CD - Learn to speak Thai

audio book audiobook
Teach Yourself Thai Conversation 3 audio CDs and Booklet More Thai Language Learning click here Teach Yourself Thai Conversation - 3 Audio CDs and Booklet CD Brand New (still shrink wrapped): 3 CDs and booklet - by David Smyth Talk in Thai with confidence "Teach Yourself Thai Conversation" is an entertaining nonintimidating way for you to build conversational proficiency or brush up on your skills. Ten common situations--such as buying food and drink shopping asking for directions and visiting l more details.....

Thai in 60 Minutes - Berlitz - Audio CD and Booklet

audio book audiobook
Thai in 60 Minutes Berlitz - Start Speaking Thai in 60 minutes More Thai Language Learning click here Berlitz - Thai in 60 minutes - Booklet and Audio CD Brand New: 1 CD and booklet Start speaking Thai in just one hour! Get a quick start to learning basic everyday Thai words with an all-audio course including more than 250 essential words and phrases needed to start communicating no textbook needed and no grammar rules to learn! Repetition helps learners retain what they ve heard and a 16-page b more details.....

 

About the Thai Language

Thai is the national and official language of Thailand and the mother tongue of the Thai people, Thailand's dominant ethnic group. Thai is a member of the Tai group of the Tai-Kadai language family. The Tai-Kadai languages are thought to have originated in what is now southern China, and some linguists have proposed links to the Austroasiatic, Austronesian, or Sino-Tibetan language families. It is a tonal and analytic language. The combination of tonality, a complex orthography, relational markers and a distinctive phonology can make Thai difficult to learn for those who do not already speak a related language.

Standard Thai, also known as Central Thai or Siamese, is the official language of Thailand, spoken by about 65 million people (1990) including speakers of Bangkok Thai (although the latter is sometimes considered as a separate dialect). Khorat Thai is spoken by about 400,000 (1984) in Nakhon Ratchasima; it occupies a linguistic position somewhere between Central Thai and Isan on a dialect continuum, and may be considered a variant or dialect of either.

The Thai language uses a phonemic alphabet of 44 consonants and 32 vowels. All syllables must contain a vowel sound, but may begin and/or end with a consonant sound. A syllable which ends in a vowel sound is called open, and a syllable which ends in a consonant is called closed. Each syllable is pronounced in one of five tones: mid, high, low, rising, or falling; as a result, speaking correctly creates pleasing melodic patterns which has led the language to sometimes be called a sing-song language by foreigners. Since the alphabet is phonemic (like English but unlike Chinese), it is possible to pronounce a word without knowing it's meaning.

Most Thai words are a simple single immutable syllable; there are no suffixes, declensions, subject-object agreement, or word conjugations. Thai words are assembled into larger forms by aggregation; perhaps because of this, "Thais greatly appreciate puns and double-entendres which, besides enlivening everyday vernacular, spice and propel outrageous dialogue in popular art forms such as folk theatre." In general, Thai grammar is much simpler than Western languages, as particles and other helper-words are sprinkled about to fine-tune the meaning of a sentence.

Some beginning students are intimidated by the initricacies of language used by people of different social class in Thailand. This is not a problem, however, since the rules are quite general, and foreigners may be allowed more leeway, since the effort to speak Thai is widely appreciated. There are many ways to say "I" or "you," for example, but some are only used by royalty, ecclesiastics, etc., so they won't be of concern to the beginner.

Transcription

There is no universal standard for transcribing Thai into the Latin alphabet. For example, the name of King Rama IX, the present monarch, is transcribed variously as Bhumibol, Phumiphon, phuuM miH phohnM, or many other versions. Guide books, text books and dictionaries may each follow different systems. For this reason, most language courses recommend that learners master the Thai alphabet.

What comes closest to a standard is the Royal Thai General System of Transcription (RTGS), published by the Thai Royal Institute only in Thai at . This system is increasingly used in Thailand by central and local governments, especially for road signs. Its main drawbacks are that it does not indicate tone or vowel length. It is not possible to reconstruct the Thai spelling from the RTGS transcriptions.

Thai alphabet

The Thai alphabet is derived from the Khmer alphabet , which is modeled after the Brahmic script from the Indic family. The language and its alphabet are closely related to the Lao language and alphabet. Most Laotians are able to read and understand Thai, as more than half of the Thai vocabulary, grammar, intonation, vowels and so forth are common with the Lao language. Much like the Burmese adopted the Mon script (which also has Indic origins), the Thais adopted and modified Khmer script to create their own writing system. While the oldest known inscription in the Khmer language dates from 611 CE, inscriptions in Thai writing began to appear around 1292 CE. Notable features include:

1. It is an abugida script, in which the implicit vowel is a short /a/ in a syllable without final consonant and a short /o/ in a syllable with final consonant.
2. Tone markers are placed above the consonant just before the vowel sound of the syllable.
3. Vowels sounding after a consonant are nonsequential: they can be located before, after, above or below the consonant, or in a combination of these positions.

Other Thai Dialects

Thai is the national language of Thailand, spoken by around eighty percent of the sixty million residents of the South-East Asian country. Linguists consider it an "uninflected, primarily monosyllabic, tonal language" in the "Ka-Tai group." The spoken language is believed to have originated in the area which is now the border between Vietnam and China, an idea which provides clues to the origin of the Thai people, an area of continued scholarly debate. Linguistically, the language is related to languages spoken in eastern Burma (Myanmar), northern Vietnam, Yunnan, and Laos.

The written Thai Language was introduced by the third Sukothai period king, Ramkamhaeng, in 1283. This writing system has undergone little change since its introduction, so inscriptions from the Sukothai era can be read by modern Thai readers. The writing was based on Pali, Sanskrit, and Indian concepts, and many Mon and Khmer words entered the language.

Within Thailand, there are four major dialects, corresponding to the southern, northern ("Yuan"), northeastern (close to Lao language), and central regions of the country; the latter is called Central Thai or Bangkok Thai and is taught in all schools, is used for most television broadcasts, and is widely understood in all regions. Nowadays, English is also taught in all public schools. There are a few minor Thai dialects such as Phuan and Lue, spoken by small populations. Also within Thailand, small ethnic minority groups (including so-called "hill tribes") account for around sixty languages which are not considered related to Thai.

The four primary dialects of Thai should not be confused with four different "languages" used by Thais in different social circumstances. For example, certain words are used only by Thai royalty, creating a royal language. There are also languages used for religious figures, polite everyday interactions, and gruff or crude communications.

* Isan (Northeastern Thai), the language of the Isan region of Thailand, considered by some to be a dialect of the Lao language, which it very closely resembles (although it is written in the Thai alphabet). It is spoken by about 15 million people (1983).
* Nyaw language, spoken mostly in Nakhon Phanom Province, Sakhon Nakhon Province, Udon Thani Province of Northeast Thailand.
* Galung language, spoken in Nakhon Phanom Province of Northeast Thailand.
* Lü (Tai Lue, Dai), spoken by about 78,000 (1993) in northern Thailand.
* Northern Thai (Lanna, Kam Meuang, or Thai Yuan), spoken by about 6 million (1983) in the formerly independent kingdom of Lanna (Chiang Mai).
* Phuan, spoken by an unknown number of people in central Thailand and Isan.
* Phu Thai, spoken by about 156,000 around Nakhon Phanom Province (1993).
* Shan (Thai Luang, Tai Long, Thai Yai), spoken by about 56,000 in north-west Thailand along the border with the Shan States of Burma (1993).
* Song, spoken by about 20,000 to 30,000 in central and northern Thailand (1982).
* Southern Thai (Pak Dtai), spoken about 5 million (1990).
* Thai Dam, spoken by about 20,000 (1991) in Isan and Saraburi Province.

Many of these languages are spoken by larger numbers outside of Thailand. Most speakers of dialects and minority languages speak Central Thai as well, since it is the language used in schools and universities all across the kingdom.

Numerous languages not related to Thai are spoken within Thailand by ethnic minority hill tribespeople. These languages include Hmong-Mien (Yao), Karen, Lisu, and others.

Standard Thai is composed of several distinct registers, forms for different social contexts:

* Street Thai informal, without polite terms of address, as used between close relatives and friends.
* Elegant Thai : official and written version, includes respectful terms of address; used in simplified form in newspapers.
* Rhetorical Thai: used for public speaking.
* Religious Thai: (heavily influenced by Sanskrit and Pāli) used when discussing Buddhism or addressing monks.
* Royal Thai (influenced by Khmer) used when addressing members of the royal family or describing their activities.

Many Thais can speak at only the first and second levels, though they will understand the others.

Transliteration

The ISO published an international standard for the transliteration of Thai into Roman script in September 2003 (ISO 11940). By adding diacritics to the Latin letters, it makes the transcription reversible, making it a true transliteration. This system is intended for academic use and is hardly ever used in Thailand for the common public.

Grammar

From the perspective of linguistic typology, Thai can be considered to be an analytic language. The word order is Subject Verb Object, although the subject is often omitted. The Thai pronominal system varies according to the sex and relative status of speaker and audience.

Alphabet, tones, and grammar

The Thai alphabet uses forty-four consonants and fifteen basic vowel characters. These are horizontally placed, left to right, with no intervening space, to form syllables, words, and sentences. Vowels are written above, below, before, or after the consonant they modify, although the consonant always sounds first when the syllable is spoken. The vowel characters (and a few consonants) can be combined in various ways to produce numerous compound vowels (diphthongs and triphthongs).

Unlike the Chinese language, Thai is alphabetic, so pronunciation of a word is independent of its meaning (English is also an alphabetic language). On the other hand, Thai is tonal, like Chinese and unlike English. This means that each word has a certain pitch characteristic with which it must be spoken to be properly understood. The Thai language uses five tones: mid, low, high, rising, and falling.

Each syllable, consisting of one or more consonants and a simple or compound vowel (possibly inherent or implied, and thus not written) has a "default" tone determined by several factors, including the type of consonant(s) present (consonants are divided into three classes for this purpose). The syllable's tone can be modified by one of four tone marks. Some people incorrectly assume that the tone marks identify all necessary tones, or perhaps force certain tones, but neither of these is correct. Actually the final tone of a syllable is determined by the tone mark in conjunction with the type of syllable, as determined by the vowel and consonant characters present.

The grammar of the Thai language is considerably simpler than grammar in Western languages, and for many students, this makes up for the additional difficulty of tones. Most significantly, words are not modified or conjugated for tenses, plurals, genders, or subject-verb agreement. Articles such as a, an, or the are also not used. Tenses, levels of politeness, verb-to-noun conversion, and other language concepts are accomplished with the simple addition of various modifying words (called particles) to the basic subject-verb-object format.

Many westerners do not make time to learn written Thai, focusing instead only on speaking. One problem with this approach is that the various reference materials you will accumulate each have a different transcription (phonemic spelling with a western alphabet) scheme, and it thus becomes difficult to recognize connections between your multiple sources of information. Although only you can decide whether to make the extra effort to study Thai script, I think it can provide a valuable and rewarding foundation for continued learning of the Thai language.

 

 

 

Thai News

Frozen tiger parts among Thai police wildlife haul - Ninemsn

Boston.comFrozen tiger parts among Thai police wildlife haulNinemsnThai police have discovered the frozen body parts of several tigers and other big cats thought to be destined for buyers in Vietnam and China in a raid on a suburban Bangkok house. Two men, one Thai and one Vietnamese, were arrested after police found ...Thai police seize tiger carcasses believed destined for ChinaWashington Postall 130 news articles »

17 May 2012 | 2:36 pm

Thai PM supports Thai-Qatar private sector becoming strategic economic partners - Thai News Agency MCOT

Gulf TimesThai PM supports Thai-Qatar private sector becoming strategic economic partnersThai News Agency MCOTDOHA, May 17 - Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra affirmed that the Thai government will support the Thai and Qatar private sectors to foster their cooperation and become strategic partners. Ms Yingluck was on an official visit to Qatar and ...Thai ambassador: Qatar wishes to boost trade ties with ThailandPattaya MailStrong Thai ties praisedGulf Daily NewsQatar 2022 Secretary General meets Thai Prime MinisterGulf TimesBahrain News Agencyall 15 news articles »

17 May 2012 | 12:11 pm

Thai Baht Climbs on Speculation of Exporter Demand; Bonds Gain - Bloomberg

Thai Baht Climbs on Speculation of Exporter Demand; Bonds GainBloombergThailand's baht rebounded from its weakest level since January on speculation exporters will convert earnings at a more-favorable exchange rate. Government bonds rose for a second day. The Bloomberg-JPMorgan Asia Dollar Index snapped a four-day drop as ...and more »

17 May 2012 | 11:46 am

Thai delegation interacts with city businessmen - Times of India

Thai delegation interacts with city businessmenTimes of IndiaVADODARA: The Thai trade delegation that was on a two-day visit to the city on Tuesday and Wednesday was impressed by the power situation in the state. At an interaction with prominent industrialists and businessmen from the city, the delegation ...and more »

17 May 2012 | 10:10 am

Thai company wants to boost Australian sugar production - ABC Online

ABC OnlineThai company wants to boost Australian sugar productionABC OnlineBy Caitlyn Gribbin A Thai sugar giant that's taken over five Australian sugar mills wants to increase southern Queensland production by a third. Mitr Phol took over MSF Sugar earlier this year and is offering .5 million in loans to Maryborough ...and more »

17 May 2012 | 9:15 am

Execs vow to swell ranks of Pheu Thai - Bangkok Post

The NationExecs vow to swell ranks of Pheu ThaiBangkok PostThe 111 former executives of the disbanded Thai Rak Thai Party look set help the Pheu Thai Party sharply increase its membership rolls. Chaturon Chaisaeng, a core member of the 111 Thai Rak Thai Foundation, said the five-year ban, which will expire on ...Pheu Thai set to welcome 111Pattaya TodayMP denies being in new Pheu Thai factionThe Nationall 13 news articles »

17 May 2012 | 3:46 am

IBM teams up with Thai Red Cross AIDS Research Centre to reduce new HIV ... - R & D Magazine

IBM teams up with Thai Red Cross AIDS Research Centre to reduce new HIV ...R & D MagazineBy IBM Bangkok - 16 May 2012: IBM is collaborating with the Thai Red Cross AIDS Research Centre (TRCARC) to strengthen HIV prevention effort and to make Bangkok the world's first city to achieve "Zero New HIV Infections" by 2015.and more »

17 May 2012 | 2:10 am

Tonight's dinner: Chicken pad thai - Herald Sun

Tonight's dinner: Chicken pad thaiHerald SunCHICKEN pad thai is always a favourite when eating out. Now you can make it yourself at home. Take your tastebuds on a world tour with the May issue of Australian Good Taste. It's the world food issue - get your copy now for only .95.

16 May 2012 | 11:03 pm

Undiscovered Thai paradise - The West Australian

The West AustralianUndiscovered Thai paradiseThe West AustralianIt's 8am on this brilliant sunny day along a pristine stretch of beach at the height of Thailand's tourist season, and the only footprints in the sand are mine. As far as the eye can see there's not a soul. The horizon is clear save for two local ...and more »

16 May 2012 | 10:03 pm

The Thai Fund, Inc. Announces Change in Benchmark, Suspension of Discount ... - MarketWatch (press release)

The Thai Fund, Inc. Announces Change in Benchmark, Suspension of Discount ...MarketWatch (press release)NEW YORK, May 16, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- The Thai Fund, Inc. (NYSE:TTF) (the "Fund") announced today that its Board of Directors has approved a change in the Fund's benchmark to the Stock Exchange of Thailand (SET) Total Return Index.and more »

16 May 2012 | 9:32 pm

Account Menu
Popular Pages
     

Site Map     About Us      House of Oojah AudioBook Home Page