Lesson 2 — Introducing Yourself: Names & Origins

Phonetic Keys:

  • Tones: mid (no mark), à = low, á = high, â = falling, ǎ = rising
  • Vowels: long vowels are doubled (aa, ii, uu, ʉʉ, əə, etc.).
  • Consonants: kh, th, ph = aspirated; k, t, p = unaspirated (often sound like g, d, b).
  • Special vowels: ʉ (/ɯ/), ə (/ə/).

1) Vocabulary

คุณ (khun) — you (polite)


ชื่อ (chʉ̂ʉ) — name


คุณชื่ออะไร (khun chʉ̂ʉ à-rai) — what is your name?


ผม (phǒm) — I/me (male)


ฉัน (chǎn) — I/me (female)


ยินดีที่ได้รู้จัก (yin-dii thîi dâai rúu-jàk) — nice to meet you


คุณมาจากไหน (khun maa jàak nǎi) — where are you from?


ผมมาจาก… (phǒm/chǎn maa jàak …) — I’m from…


ประเทศ (bprà-thêet) — country


ไทย (thai) — Thailand/Thai


อเมริกา (a-mee-rí-gaa) — America/USA


อังกฤษ (ang-grìt) — England


คนไทย (khon thai) — Thai person


คนอเมริกัน (khon a-mee-rí-gan) — American (person)


2) Dialogue

3) Grammar notes

  1. Pronouns: Pronouns are actually quite complicated in Thai. However, to simplify things, remember that ผม (phǒm) is used to mean I by men, and ฉัน (chǎn) means I for women.
  2. Polite Particles: The terms ครับ/ค่ะ don’t have any inherent meaning in themselves, but in Thai, words are added at the ends of sentences to change the feeling of the sentence. Add ครับ/ค่ะ at the end of a sentence or phrase for politeness.
    • Just a side note: If you are asked a yes or no question, ครับ/ค่ะ alone can be used as a response to mean ‘Yes.’ So in that specific case, they do mean ‘yes.’ But in general, they just change the feeling of the phrase they are put at the end of.
  3. Name pattern: ผม/ฉัน + ชื่อ + [name] → e.g., ผมชื่อไมค์ (phǒm chʉ̂ʉ Mái). Very simple!
  4. Question words at the end: อะไร (à-rai = what), ไหน (nǎi = where) are a few examples you’ve seen in this lesson. The question word will usually go at the end of the sentence, as in “คุณมาจากไหนคะ”

4) Flash Cards


00:00

Settings


Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *