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Combined, the result was that much of the former legacy of the Khmer sastras became absorbed by the Thai culture or was forgotten. In the 16th century, a substantial body of Buddhist literature was created in the Cambodian temples. In later times, up to the present, pagodas served as library storehouses of Khmer sastras and literary works. [4]
A materialized view takes a different approach: the query result is cached as a concrete ("materialized") table (rather than a view as such) that may be updated from the original base tables from time to time. This enables much more efficient access, at the cost of extra storage and of some data being potentially out-of-date.
The Khmer Times is an English-language newspaper, launched in May 2014, [1] based in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, and owned by Malaysian national Mohan Tirugmanasam Bandam. [ 2 ] The newspaper is strongly pro- CPP in its reporting and editorials.
Khmer Times [3] (English) Koh Santepheap Daily (Khmer), founded in 1967; Moneaksekar Khmer (Khmer) The Nation Post [4] (Khmer) The Phnom Penh Post (English) The Phnom Penh WEEK [5] (English) Rasmei Kampuchea Daily (Khmer) Sneha Cheat [6] (Khmer) The Southeast Asia Weekly (English) Sralanh Khmer (Khmer) Thngay Pram Py Makara News [7] The Voice ...
Cambodian stance regarding Khmer code table in Unicode 3.2, 2002-05-14: N2459R: Revised Cambodian stance regarding Khmer code table in Unicode, 2002-05-20: L2/02-166R2: Moore, Lisa (2002-08-09), "Consensus 91-C5", UTC #91 Minutes, Leave the ROBAT as it is in the standard today (do not deprecate) and document its use appropriately. L2/02-070
Khmer is generally a subject–verb–object (SVO) language. Topicalization is common: the topic of the sentence is often placed at the start, with the rest of the sentence a comment on that topic. Like in English, prepositions are used rather than postpositions (words meaning "in", "on", etc. precede the noun that they govern). [2]
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The numbers from 6 to 9 may be constructed by adding any number between 1 and 4 to the base number 5 (ប្រាំ), so that 7 is literally constructed as 5 plus 2. Beyond that, Khmer uses a decimal base, so that 14 is constructed as 10 plus 4, rather than 2 times 5 plus 4; and 16 is constructed as 10+5+1.