Tai Dam language
Tai Dam | |
---|---|
Black Tai | |
ꪺꪕꪒꪾ | |
Native to | Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, China |
Native speakers
|
unknown (760,000 cited 1995–2002)[1] |
Tai–Kadai
|
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | blt |
Glottolog | taid1247 [2] |
Tai Dam, also known as Black Tai (Thai: ภาษาไทดำ; pronounced [pʰāːsǎː tʰāj dām]; "Black Tai language"; Chinese: 傣担语; pinyin: Dǎidānyǔ) is a Tai language spoken by the Tai Dam in Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, and China (mostly in the Jinping Miao, Yao, and Dai Autonomous County).
The Tai Dam language is similar to Thai and Lao, but it is not close enough to be readily understood by most Thai and Lao speakers. In particular, the Pali and Sanscrit additions to Thai and Lao are largely missing from Tai Dam.[3]
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).
Writing system
Tai Viet |
|
---|---|
Type | |
Languages | Tai Dam, Tai Dón, and Thai Song |
Direction | Left-to-right |
ISO 15924 | Tavt, 359 |
Unicode alias
|
Tai Viet |
The Tai Dam language has its own system of writing, called Tai Viet, which consists of 31 consonants and 14 vowels. Although the language is tonal, there are no tone markers, as there are in Tai and Lao. According to Thai authors, the writing system is probably derived from the old Thai writing of the kingdom of Sukhotai.[3]
Unicode
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Proposals to encode Tai Viet script in Unicode go back to 2006.[4] A Unicode subcommittee reviewed a February 6, 2007 proposal submitted by James Brase of SIL International for what was then called Tay Viet script.[5] At the ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2/WG2 meeting on April 24, 2007, a revised proposal[6] for the script, now known as Tai Viet, was accepted "as is", with support[7] from TCVN, the Vietnam Quality & Standards Centre.
Tai Viet script was added to the Unicode Standard in October, 2009 with the release of version 5.2.
The Unicode block for Tai Viet is U+AA80–U+AADF:
Tai Viet[1][2] Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) |
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0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F | |
U+AA8x | ꪀ | ꪁ | ꪂ | ꪃ | ꪄ | ꪅ | ꪆ | ꪇ | ꪈ | ꪉ | ꪊ | ꪋ | ꪌ | ꪍ | ꪎ | ꪏ |
U+AA9x | ꪐ | ꪑ | ꪒ | ꪓ | ꪔ | ꪕ | ꪖ | ꪗ | ꪘ | ꪙ | ꪚ | ꪛ | ꪜ | ꪝ | ꪞ | ꪟ |
U+AAAx | ꪠ | ꪡ | ꪢ | ꪣ | ꪤ | ꪥ | ꪦ | ꪧ | ꪨ | ꪩ | ꪪ | ꪫ | ꪬ | ꪭ | ꪮ | ꪯ |
U+AABx | ꪰ | ꪱ | ꪲ | ꪳ | ꪴ | ꪵ | ꪶ | ꪷ | ꪸ | ꪹ | ꪺ | ꪻ | ꪼ | ꪽ | ꪾ | ꪿ |
U+AACx | ꫀ | ꫁ | ꫂ | |||||||||||||
U+AADx | ꫛ | ꫜ | ꫝ | ꫞ | ꫟ | |||||||||||
Notes |
References
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External links
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- ↑ Tai Dam at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
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- Pages with reference errors
- Language articles with old Ethnologue 18 speaker data
- Articles containing Thai-language text
- Articles containing simplified Chinese-language text
- Tai languages
- Languages of Vietnam
- Languages of Laos
- Scripts encoded in Unicode 5.2
- Tai-Kadai language stubs
- Language articles citing Ethnologue 18