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Myanmar–English Dictionary (Burmese: မြန်မာ-အင်္ဂလိပ်အဘိဓာန်) is a modern Government project in Myanmar (formerly Burma), first published in 1993 by the Government of Myanmar's Myanmar Language Commission.
The Bible Society of Myanmar. 1999. Caciim K'thai. Cho (Chin) New Testament. The Bible Society of Myanmar (Translated by Ng'Thang Ngai Om). The Catholic K'cho Old and New Testaments were translated by Sayar John Ng'Ling Ghùng and are in Hmong-K'cha dialect. Ghùng, John Ng'lìng. Old Testament Translation. Manuscript. Privately Published. Mindat.
All are native Burmese words; Yadanar Khin (ရတနာခင်) Yadanar is a Burmese loan of Pali ratana, "jewel" Khin is a native Burmese word; Khin Sandar Win (ခင်စန္ဒာဝင်း) Sandar is a Burmese loan of Pali chanda, "moon" Khin and Win are native Burmese words; Tayza (တေဇ) (also spelled Tay Za or Teza by media)
MLC's predecessor, the Literary and Translation Commission (ဘာသာပြန်နှင့် စာပေပြုစုရေး ကော်မရှင်), was set up by the Union Revolutionary Council in August 1963, tasked with publishing an official standard Burmese dictionary, Burmese speller, manual on Burmese composition, compilation of Burmese lexicon, terminology, and ...
A Burmese speaker, recorded in Taiwan. Burmese (Burmese: မြန်မာဘာသာ; MLCTS: Mranma bhasa; pronounced [mjəmà bàθà]) is a Tibeto-Burman language spoken in Myanmar, [2] where it is the official language, lingua franca, and the native language of the Bamar, the country's largest ethnic group.
Standard Jinghpaw as spoken in Shan State often has ʔə- added to monosyllabic words, and also places the interrogative particle ʔi before verbs. Nkhum / Enkun 恩昆 (n̩˧˩kʰum˧ ka˧˩) is spoken in Lianghe, Ruili, Longchuan, and Luxi counties of Yunnan, China. [8] It is the most widely spoken Jingpo dialect in China.
မသွား ma.swa: [məθwá နဲ့ nai. nɛ̰] မသွား နဲ့ ma.swa: nai. [məθwá nɛ̰] 'Don't go' မသွား ma.swa: [məθwá ဘူး bhu: bú] မသွား ဘူး ma.swa: bhu: [məθwá bú] '[I] don't go' Nouns Burmese nouns are marked for case. Case markers The case markers are: High register Low register Subject thi (သည်), ká (က), hma (မ ...
Aside from Burmese and its dialects, the hundred or so languages of Myanmar include Shan (Tai, spoken by 3.2 million), Karen languages (spoken by 2.6 million), Kachin (spoken by 900,000), Tamil (spoken by 1.1 Million), various Chin languages (spoken by 780,000), and Mon (Mon–Khmer, spoken by 750,000).