I am a language practitioner and a certified Thai language teacher from Bangkok, Thailand, with a passion for helping people achieve their language goals. With a background in linguistics and Thai language teaching methodologies, I have developed a range of learning materials and resources that have helped people to fluently speak and read Thai. My dedication is to create materials that are both accessible and enjoyable to use.
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Thanks. 1. For “jing di” or “jing bpa,”, because its a question, should I use a rising or higher tone when saying it? 2. All these expressions/phrases - is it necessary to add kha/krap to make it polite? Will adding kha/krap make them sound strange/funny because we would be trying to be informal/casual but too polite at the same time? Thanks😀🙏
Thanks for the lesson. For “Can I ask you something?”, why do we use “di” instead of “daai mai “ in the end of the sentence? Doesn’t “di” mean good? 😁🙏
Regarding the "What time is it?" question, I've heard Thai's pronounce it: กี่โมงละ? AND กี่โมงแล้ว? What is the most common way to say it?? I've noticed so many instances like this where the same phrase (or even noun) is said in two or more ways
Thank you very much Ms. Byu for your teaching video. Very easy to understand once you explain the necessity of the word. Keep doing these video and I don't mind to pay your fee. Thank you again from Kuala Lumpur. I am hereditary from Thailand but once my great grand parent moved to Malaysia, we forgot to practice Thai language and now having communication hiccup with our relative in Southern Thailand. Thanks again.., really appreciate your job. Teaching by a pretty teacher make me fast learning 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Hi Khruu, I have just discovered your videos and they are really helpful. Thank you so much. I think in English (I'm from the UK) we use the word 'dead' in front of adjectives to mean extremely like I'm dead hungry, dead tired , dead thirsty or dead hot. Sal
Hi Byu, thank you for this fantastic content. I'm a bit confused about the proper tone for the particle ka: when you pronounce it with a falling tone, to my ear it sounds more like a low tone and quite different from how you pronounce cheu at 6:52. Can ka be pronounced the same way as cheu, sort of starting mid, going up and then falling? I hope this makes sense, hard to describe it! Thank you!
I've just come across this video and found it very useful. Thank you. I did struggle a little to hear your voice but my kids reckon I'm going deaf. 😵💫