What other languages are spoken in Thailand?

What other languages are spoken in Thailand?

Languages of Thailand
OfficialCentral Thai
NationalCentral Thai, Laotian (Isan), Northern Thai, Southern Thai

What countries speak Kazakh?

The Kazakh language is spoken primarily in Kazakhstan and in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in China but is also found in Uzbekistan, Mongolia, and Afghanistan.

What are the top 5 languages spoken in Thailand?

Of the 51 indigenous tongues spoken in Thailand, there are five main discernible language families they can be sorted into. These include Austronesian, Hmong-Mien, Thai, Mon-Khmer and Sino-Tibetan.

What language do Kazakhs speak?

Russian
Kazakh
Kazakhstan/Official languages

Is Thai language similar to Korean?

Thai and Korean have basically nothing in common at all. They are also both very different from both Portuguese and English. Thai is a “monosyllabic” tonal language like Chinese and Vietnamese, but not related to either.

Is Thai a Sino Tibetan language?

A fourth literary language, Thai, or Siamese (written from the 13th century), represents what was accepted for a long time as a Tai division of Sino-Tibetan or as a division of a Sino-Tai family.

Do they speak Arabic in Kazakhstan?

The official languages of Kazakhstan are Kazakh and Russian. Both Kazakh and Russian are used on equal grounds….

Languages of Kazakhstan
ImmigrantTurkic languages
ForeignEnglish; Arabic (coming with Islam); Chinese;
Keyboard layoutЙЦУКЕН The Kazakh keyboard.

Is French spoken in Thailand?

Very few. Of course some Thais have studied French in school or independently or have lived in French speaking countries; however, despite France having an influence in Vietnam and Laos, Thailand had very little French interaction.

What are the top 3 languages spoken in Kazakhstan?

The official languages of Kazakhstan are Kazakh and Russian. Both Kazakh and Russian are used on equal grounds. German (30,400 speakers), Tajiki, Tatar (328,000 speakers), Turkish, Ukrainian (898,000 speakers), Uyghur (300,000 speakers), and Uzbek are officially recognized by the 1997 Language Law, No. 151-1.

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