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1.) short (ä) - อะ

Lesson 1 - "a"sound vowels                                 

       The อะ (ä) sound vowel is pronounced with a short duration. It is an open vowel so it can't be located in between two consonants in a three letter syllable.

  To illustrate, the word (kra) shows the right location of "a" vowel, but (rak) has wrong position since the short vowel อะ (ä) is not a closed vowel.

 

      However, you will also find out that the symbol of the short vowel อะ (ä) is also used in another form of vowel combinations that we will also discuss in our future lessons.     

2.) long (aah) อา

This "a" sound vowel is pronounced with a long duration. It can be an open or closed vowel.

 

        open-  ปลา - plaah (fish)                 closed-  ปาก - paahk (mouth)

            

Let's practice reading these vowels by combining it together with our first set of Thai consonants:   go-gaiก  do-dek -ด  mo-ma

  -       gor-gai is pronounced as "g" or in between (gk) for                    the initial sound.

                                    - gah (crow)

 

               but for the final sound it is pronounced as "k".

                                   มา - mak (much)

 

initial  g-
final  - k
Reading Practice:

อะ               กะ             อา            กา

  ä                                gä                          aah                       gaah
กะอะ              อะกะ             กะอา      

  gä-ä                                ä-gä                              gä-aah

กากา             กาก             อากกา

gaah-gaah                    gaahk                       aahk-gaah               

  -     do-dek is pronounced as "d" for the initial sound.

                     example:    าบ - daahp (sword)

 

              but for the final sound it is pronounced as "t".

                    example:   กอ  - got (hug)

 

initial  d-
final  - t
initial  m-
final  - m

   mo- ma is pronounced "m" for both the initial and final sound.

Reading Practice:

ดะ                 ดา                มะ      

 dä                                     daah                                 mä             

มา                มากะ               ดามา      

maah                              maah-gä                                daah-maah        

กามามะ          มาด           กะดะ

gaah-maah-mä                 maaht                       gä-dä             

3.) Other short "a" sound   

       These other short "a" vowels are pronounced nearly the same as with the short "a" vowel sound in English.

 

       The  (u) - อั vowel is a closed vowel. It is the same with the vowel "u" pronounced as short "a" in English.  Example: gun, cut, run  

        It should be always in between consonants in a syllable. 

 

 

 

       

     The -รร- is not usually considered as a vowel, but it represents the (a) vowel in certain words. (This should not be mistaken to the consonant ร  - ro ruea)

 

 

 

If the (a)- รร as a vowel is used without a final consonant. Then (n) is implied as the final consonant. Let's use as an example the word  สวรรค์ (heaven).  Though (ค) do-dek is the last consonant , but it has a silence symbol (ค์). So instead of reading it as sa-wat, it should be read as sa-wan.

 (u) - อั

 (a)- รร

กับ - gap (with)
ธรรม - tham (fair)

 (a) Unwritten

สมอง -s(a)mong (brain)

   Thai language has a combination of consonants that is not easy to blend together. The unwritten (a) vowel is a hardly-perceptible vowel sound that is inserted in-between the consonants.  

 

 

    This becomes an unwritten -ะ sound, a very short (a) vowel. It is like you're forcing the (a) sound in between the consonants. This is one of the reason why most Thai people usually pronounce some English words for example the word  stand  as  s(a)tand  and slowly as s(a)lowly. Keeping this in mind can be a great help for you to speak like a native Thai. 

Reading Practice:

อัก          มัก          กัก          ดัก

 

มักมาก         ดักดาม        กรรม

 

มกาม         กมาม       กรรมกาด

 

ak

mak

gak

dak

mak-maahk

dak-daahm

kam

kam-gaaht

k(a)-mam

m(a)-kam

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