ႁူၵ်း
Appearance
Shan
[edit]< ႕ | ႖ | ႗ > |
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Cardinal : ႁူၵ်း (húuk) Ordinal : တီႈႁူၵ်း (tīi húuk) | ||
Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Southwestern Tai *xrokᴰ¹ˢ (“six”), from Proto-Tai *krokᴰ (“six”), from Old Chinese 六 (OC *ruɡ, “six”).[1] Cognate with Thai หก (hòk), Northern Thai ᩉᩫ᩠ᨠ, Lao ຫົກ (hok), Lü ᦷᦠᧅ (ḣok), Tai Dam ꪶꪬꪀ, Tai Nüa ᥞᥨᥐᥱ (hǒk), Ahom 𑜍𑜤𑜀𑜫 (ruk), Bouyei rogt, Zhuang roek or loeg, Nong Zhuang choak.
Pronunciation
[edit]Numeral
[edit]ႁူၵ်း • (húuk)
References
[edit]- ^ Pittayaporn, Pittayawat (2014) “Layers of Chinese Loanwords in Proto-Southwestern Tai as Evidence for the Dating of the Spread of Southwestern Tai”, in MANUSYA: Journal of Humanities, volume 20 (special issue), Bangkok: Chulalongkorn University, →ISSN, pages 47–68.
Categories:
- Shan terms inherited from Proto-Southwestern Tai
- Shan terms derived from Proto-Southwestern Tai
- Shan terms inherited from Proto-Tai
- Shan terms derived from Proto-Tai
- Shan terms borrowed from Old Chinese
- Shan terms derived from Old Chinese
- Shan terms with IPA pronunciation
- Shan terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:Shan/ok̚
- Shan 1-syllable words
- Shan lemmas
- Shan numerals
- Shan cardinal numbers