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The Burmese kinship system is a fairly complex system used to define family in the Burmese language. [1] In the Burmese kinship system: [2] ... Son's wife: ခ ...
Journal Kyaw Ma Ma Lay (Burmese: ဂျာနယ်ကျော် မမလေး [ma̰ ma̰ léi]) is widely acknowledged as one of the greatest Burmese writers of the 20th century. Her stories are known for authentic portrayals of modern Burmese society. Along with Ludu Daw Amar, Ma Ma Lay was one of a few female authors in Burma. She died ...
According to the United Nations Population Fund, divorce rates in Myanmar are low: 3 per cent of women and 2 per cent of men are divorced or separated. [4] If a married woman divorces, she can keep what she has brought to the marriage. When a husband dies, everything he owns goes to his wife. Only after she dies does the property go to the ...
The family of Khin Maung Lat. Khin Maung Lat was the second son of Khin Maung Gyi, the minister for munitions or head of the artillery and duke of Ngape and Mindat, by his wife, Khin Bwa Thit, a maid of honor to Queen Supayalat, and Duchess of Hmanthagyi.
Pyinsa Kalayani (Burmese: ပဉ္စကလျာဏီ [pjɪ̀ɰ̃sa̰ kəljənì]; Pali: Pañcakalyāṇī) was the first wife of King Anawratha and the mother of King Kyansittha of Pagan Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar). [1]: 155 The Burmese chronicles give many inconsistent stories about her, her son and her brief husband Anawrahta. Most are ...
The fourth daughter, Myat Phaya Galay (1887–1936), married a former Burmese monk, Ko Ko Naing, and had six children, the eldest of whom, Taw Phaya Gyi (1922–1948), became pretender to the throne. His son Soe Win is the present pretender. Another son, Taw Phaya, married his cousin, Phaya Rita, daughter of Myat Phaya. [10]
The Only Mom (Burmese: လိပ်ပြာစံအိမ်, romanized: Lake Pyar San Eain) is a 2019 Burmese horror film starring Nine Nine, Wutt Hmone Shwe Yi, Daung and Pyae Pyae. The film, produced by Brave Empire Film Production, premiered in Myanmar on February 8, 2019 and became one of the highest-grossing Burmese films of the year.
Nonetheless, the chronicles accept that he was a legal son of Anawrahta per Burmese customary law, which says a child born in wedlock is presumed to have been begotten by the husband. [4] At any rate, a stone inscription at the Hledauk Pagoda in Taungbyon says that it was donated by Kyansittha, son of Anawrahta. [5]