Verbs never change based on the person or time. To say "eat," "ate," or "will eat," you use the same word ( gin ) and just add a time marker if needed.
Thai is written without spaces between words; spaces are only used to indicate the end of a sentence or a pause. Where to Start?
Like English, Thai follows a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) structure. For example: Chun (I) gin (eat) kaow (rice). 3. Politeness Particles
are "stacked"—they can appear above, below, before, or after the consonant they belong to.
You don’t have to worry about masculine/feminine nouns or changing endings for plural objects.
Don't try to master the script on day one. Start by learning common phrases using (transliteration) and practice your tones by listening to native speakers.
Thai is a , meaning the pitch you use to say a word changes its meaning entirely. There are five tones: Mid: Flat and neutral. Low: Deep and steady.
Mispronouncing a tone can turn the word for "near" ( klâi ) into the word for "far" ( klaai ). 2. Simple Grammar Rules