Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Burmese English Myanmar English အင်္ဂလိပ်, Myanmar English A welcome sign in English in Myanmar. Pronunciation bərˈmiz ˈɪŋ glɪʃ Native to Myanmar Region Myanmar Ethnicity Burmese people Language family Indo-European Germanic West Germanic Ingvaeonic Anglo-Frisian Anglic English Asian English Southeast Asian English Burmese English Early forms Proto-Indo-European Proto ...
The Myeik dialect, also known as Beik in Burmese, Mergui and Merguiese in English, and Marit (มะริด) in Thai, is a divergent dialect of Burmese, spoken in Myeik, the second largest town in Tanintharyi Region, the southernmost region of Myanmar. [2]
It has been updated to support the full Myanmar script range of the Unicode 9.0 standard. Myanmar3, (website 1); Myanmar3, (website 2) Myanmar2 ; TharLon; See also: Note that the most common font for Burmese script, Zawgyi, is not compatible with Unicode. Burmese text encoded with Zawgyi will appear garbled to a reader using a Unicode font and ...
Today, Burmese is the primary language of instruction, and English is the secondary language taught. [10] English was the primary language of instruction in higher education from late 19th century to 1964, when Gen. Ne Win mandated educational reforms to "Burmanise". [15] English continues to be used by educated urbanites and the national ...
The Yaw dialect of Burmese is spoken by 200,000 people near the Chin Hills in Magway Division, particularly in Gangaw District, which comprises Saw, Htilin, and Gangaw.Yaw was classified as a "definitely endangered" language in UNESCO's 2010 Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger.
Tavoyan or Dawei (ထားဝယ်စကား) is a divergent dialect of Burmese is spoken in Dawei (Tavoy), in the coastal Tanintharyi Region of southern Myanmar (Burma). ). Tavoyan speakers tend to self-identify as Bamar, and are classified by the Burmese government as a subgroup of the B
The greeting mingalaba is a relatively modern creation. The phrase first emerged during British rule in Burma in the 19th to 20th centuries, coined as a Burmese language equivalent to 'hello' or 'how are you.' [4] In the late 1960s, [5] the Burmese government institutionalized the phrase in the country's educational system.
Totally over 1600 students from Upper Myanmar and foreign countries are studied various languages in this university. Languages that are currently studied at this university are: English, Chinese, Japanese, French, Korean, German, Russian, Thai, and; Myanmar for international students.