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Lao phrasebook Travel Guide


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Lao script
Lao script

Lao (ພາສາລາວ pháa-sǎa láo) is the main language of Laos. Thai is also closely related to Lao, and the Isaan dialect spoken in the northeast is, with minor differences in vocabulary aside, virtually identical to Lao.

                      ==Pronunciation guide==

Lao is a tonal language with six tones in the Vientiane dialect: low, mid, high, rising, high falling, and low falling. Meanings are dependent on the tone, so try not to inflect your sentences; in particular, questions should be pronounced as flat statements, without the rising intonation ("...yes?") typical to English questions.

The script used to write Lao has the same Brahmic base as Thai and Khmer, and Thai readers will be able to figure out most of it. The Lao written language is essentially alphabetic and, thanks to extensive post-revolutionary meddling, now considerably more phonetic than Thai or Khmer. Still, there are 30 consonants, 15 vowel symbols plus 4 tone marks to learn, and the Lao also share the Thai aversion to spaces between words. Lao remains a bit of challenge to pick up, even though it is usually considered easier to learn than Thai.

Lao romanization is bedeviled by the incompatibility between French and English pronunciation. Most older transliterations are French-based, while newer ones are English-based. The French-style "Vientiane", for example, is more accurately spelled "Wiang Chan" in English. Wikitravel uses a modern English-based orthography modeled on the Thai system, but the French transliterations have been noted below when appropriate.

Vowels

Instant Lao

Speak Thai already? Here's a three-step program for instant Lao fluency:

  • The letter "r" must be eliminated.
    • At the beginning of a word, "r" turns into "l": roi ? loi "hundred"
    • Within a word, "r" turns into "l": karunaa ? kalunaa "please"
    • In a cluster, "r" disappears completely: prathet ? pathet "country"
  • All "ch" turn into "x" (pronounced "s"). chang ? xang "elephant"
  • Say baw instead of mai when you want to say "no" or ask a question.

Of course, there's quite a bit more to it than that, but it's a start!

Lao has a complicated set of vowels that distinguishes between vowel length (short and long) and vowel position (front and back). Vowel signs are always written around consonants.

French transliterations use "ou" for "u" (eg. "Louang Prabang") and often tag an unpronounced "e" at the end of words to stop the consonant from being swallowed (eg. "Kaysone Phomvihane").

i�
like in the 'i' in 'nit'
ii�
like in the 'ee' in 'beer' or 'Feet'
a�
like in the 'u' in 'bum'
aa�
like in the 'a' in 'father'
ae�
like in the 'a' in 'fat'
e�
like in the 'e' in 'fence'
eh�
like in the 'a' in 'bait'
u�
like in the 'u' for 'fruit'
ou�
like in the 'oo' in 'mood'
aw�
like in the 'aw' in 'saw'
am�
like in the 'um' in 'drum'
oe�
not found in English, but similar to the 'uh' in 'huh'
eu�
not found in English, but similar to the 'i' in 'sir' or the 'eux' from the French 'deux'

Consonants

Lao distinguishes between aspirated ("with a puff of air") and unaspirated ("without a puff of air") consonants. Unaspirated consonants exist in English too, but never alone: compare the sound of 'p' in "pot" (aspirated) and "spot" (unaspirated). Many English speakers find it helpful to pronounce an imperceptible little "m" in front to 'stop' the puff.

In romanized Lao, the distinction is usually represented by writing aspirated consonants with "h" and unaspirated ones without it. In particular, "ph" represents a hard aspirated 'p' and not a soft 'f', and Phongsali is thus pronounced "Pongsalee". Likewise, "th" is a hard aspirated 't' and hence That Luang is pronounced "Tat Luang".

b�
like 'b' in "bed"
c�
not used in Wikitravel, but in other romanizations may represent 's'
d�
like 'd' in "dog"
f�
like 'f' in "fan"
g�
not used in Wikitravel, but in other romanizations may represent unaspirated 'k'
h�
like 'h' in "help"
j�
like 'dg' in "edge"
k�
like 'k' in "skate" (unaspirated)
kh�
like 'c' in "cat" (aspirated)
l�
like 'l' in "love"
m�
like 'm' in "mother"
n�
like 'n' in "nice"
ny�
like 'ni' in "onion", can also be used at the beginning of words
ng�
like 'ng' in "sing", can also be used at the beginning of words
p�
like 'p' in "spit" (unaspirated)
ph�
like 'p' in "pig" (aspirated)
r�
not used the modern orthography, should be pronounced as 'l', 'h' or ignored
s�
like 'ss' in "hiss",
t�
like 't' sound in "stab"
th�
like 't' in "top"
v�
not used in Wikitravel, but in other romanizations may represent 'w'
w�
like 'w' in "weight"
y�
like 'y' in "yes"
x�
like 'ss' in "hiss", completely identical to 's'

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Lao phrasebook Travel Guide from Wikitravel. Many thanks to all Wikitravel contributors. Text is available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0, images are available under various licenses, see each image for details.

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