Online Dictionaries & Thai Language ResourcesA Catalogue of Member Contributions
#26Posted 2008-03-10 04:08:07
For a list of special subject dictionaries published by The Royal Institute, see www.royin.go.th/en/printing/detail.php?ID=96 Change the final number serially up to 122 to see the dictionaries published in this series. Many of these appear to be Thai-English, English-Thai.
Does anyone know 1. if these books are still published and sold; 2. where they might be available? This evening I saw the separate dictionaries on Law; Science; Technology and Computers; and, Economics on the shelves of the B2S store at Central Festival Phuket. #27Posted 2008-04-01 00:19:22
This new one is cool:
http://slice-of-thai.com/language/ It works in multiple romanization systems (IPA, the one from thai-language.com, Becker, and so on). There's - flashcards (PDF) you can print - thai consonants and vowels - a page on the tones of thai with sample sounds, spectrograms and a "voice viewer" to see your own voice - pages on the consonant and vowel sounds of Thai - stuff about Thai fonts - a chart of Thai consonant shapes #28Posted 2008-04-23 18:46:09
www.thai-language.com doesn't appear to be working at the moment.
#29Posted 2008-04-23 21:59:32
I believe they are adding some new features to the sight, this may explain why the sight is down.
#31Posted 2008-06-14 20:20:36
After reading this post, I chose thai2english.com to compile a small working vocabulary for a beginner learning Thai.
Starting at 500, it soon grew to 1000 and now it's closer to 1500(still not finished). All using thai2english.com for final spelling and pronunciation. But then I read in the "engthaisearch" post that thai2english.com is riddled with mistakes. "With all due respect, the only dictionary which you can take as a reference seriously is from RID." But RID is not for beginners, correct? So could I please get knowledgable advice on a reputable dictionary for beginners? Preferably online. Hardcopy if online dictionaries can't be trusted. Thanks in advance. Edited by desi, 2008-06-14 20:21:48. #32Posted 2008-07-14 15:18:11 Quote It maybe because of my own mouse at home, but there is an annoying problem with this website; it always tells you that right click mouse is being disabled for this website...even when you want to left click...which causes trouble for the registration itself. Anyone else has tried ( and has had same problem/ it worked well) to browse on this website?? i had the same problem, too annoying to bother trying to use that site #33Posted 2008-07-14 16:38:40
Learning thai with audio files:
http://www.langhub.com Thai-english dictionary: http://thai.sealang.net Dutch-Thai + Thai-Dutch dictionary: http://www.pluk-in.com/thai/ Edited by kriswillems, 2008-07-14 16:41:58. #34Posted 2008-09-29 10:20:54
I use quite often the ten lesson free online words and phrases available here:
http://free.lessons....e-lesson-1.html The pronunciation is quite good. You can also play audio with that. Sometimes when I have too many tabs open in Firefox the audio does not work. But it works fine with all other browsers. #35Posted 2008-11-18 13:52:30
I have mentioned before that I am quite happy with the phrasebook from l-ceps (see my previous post). I am also using their software product (personaltrainer) which uses the same audio files as the free phrasebook but is very comprehensive. What I like their, is that it also includes pictures for every word and sentence and it really makes the Thai language stick in your brain!
#36Posted 2008-12-23 08:37:32
I like to use the virtual thai keyboard to type in text that I can't copy and paste directly into thai2english for translation. An example would be the lines on a Karaoke video or I book. Should I find a Thai video on youtube that I would like to study further, I download it directly to the hard drive with a free program available at CNET downloads. For a sound recording and editing program there is Audacity, also available at CNET. With this program one can record directly off one's computer to a file on the hard drive. Then when you play it back with Audacity, it is easy to select a phrase or sentence and play it over and over again with one click. If they are talking too fast, it can also be slowed down. It is very useful for studying learningthai audio books for instance.
The links, most of which already posted: virtual thai keyboard http://www.learningt...m/thaikeyboard/ youtube downloader http://www.download.com/YouTube-Downloader...4-10647340.html Audacity http://www.download.com/Audacity/3000-2170....html?tag=mncol thai2english http://www.thai2english.com/ Audio books http://www.spokentha...books/index.php Also a good Karaoke site I came across on the forum. http://www.ethaimusic.com/ . #38Posted 2009-06-15 03:42:25
anyone know how to isolate the thai language files on one computer so that they can be moved to another?
i do not have the windows disk with me anymore and the thai files therefore cannot be installed on my laptop. my desktop however, does have them already installed. #39Posted 2009-06-30 09:01:52
Here is another "Learning Thai" site to add to the list. It appears to be a new site (this year). At the moment, they have 15 free Thai Language lessons available with promises of more to come. http://www.its4thai.com I looked at several sites for learning Thai, and its4thai was my choice. I have done all 15 free lessons and learned a lot of basic sentence construction (with audio) that have eluded me for the year I have been in Thailand. I just subscribed to the whole course for $6.99 per month. EXCELLENT SITE. #40Posted 2009-07-11 22:42:49
I'm surprised nobody mentioned
http://learn-thai-podcast.com They have some free lessons but the premium course is more structured and in my opinion the best self study course (and I have been through a lot of books, dvds and other online resources). #41Posted 2009-07-16 10:44:48
Not sure if this is the best thread for this question, but i'll try here first - does anyone have an mp3 audio for the Gethings reader? I've got the weblink, but I can only stream it not download as I don't have Quicktime Pro. Anyone got the whole lot on mp3?
thanks in advance SW #42Posted 2009-07-17 11:03:46
Thanks to ElZorro for pointing out that both the text AND the audio are dowloadable from here
A Thai Reader A fantastic free resource. Many thanks also to the people responsible for producing it and putting online. Edited by SoftWater, 2009-07-17 11:04:17. #43Posted 2009-07-21 20:06:23
Hello Thailand! I'm from the Philippines and I need Thai help please. I got a thai motorcycle and i'd really like to find out what's written on the tank. I can't find (and i don't think there is), translator that will translate thai writing to english.. or if there is, i don't know which character is which to begin with.
Hoping someone could help me translate this with the complete thought or word for word if possible.. please help ![]() Thank you very much in advance.. to the kind soul who can help me #44Posted 2009-07-22 15:59:03
To start the bike from cold:
1. Pull the choke all the way out. 2. Press the starter button without opening the accelerator. Remember: Drive carefully. Wear a crash helmet. Protect the environment. Read the owner's handbook carefully?... (glare on pic!) Warning: You may suffer death or injury if you don't wear a crash helmet. Petrol or gasohol (E10) 91. #45Posted 2009-07-22 16:22:20
And one I posted a few days ago from MOE: <a href="http://www.teachthai.com/" target="_blank">http://www.teachthai.com/</a> It maybe because of my own mouse at home, but there is an annoying problem with this website; it always tells you that right click mouse is being disabled for this website...even when you want to left click...which causes trouble for the registration itself. Anyone else has tried ( and has had same problem/ it worked well) to browse on this website?? thanks i use it all the time. great website and never had any problems #46Posted 2009-07-23 08:55:19
To start the bike from cold: 1. Pull the choke all the way out. 2. Press the starter button without opening the accelerator. Remember: Drive carefully. Wear a crash helmet. Protect the environment. Read the owner's handbook carefully?... (glare on pic!) Warning: You may suffer death or injury if you don't wear a crash helmet. Petrol or gasohol (E10) 91. . #47Posted 2009-07-23 12:18:09
Writing Thai Letters
Lots of useful fixed patterns for writing letters to people in Thai It's an old one, but I haven't seen it posted here (sorry if I didn't look carefully enough) There's also a very useful and quite comprehensive section of formal patterns used in letter writing in the appendix of the Oxford River English-Thai dictionary, a first class resource in itself, well worth the 1000 baht price tag. BTW, does anyone have a recommendation for a good Thai-English and good Thai-Thai dictionary? (paper dictionary I mean, not online!) I use the Thaiways 'Thai-English', but I'm looking for something more comprehensive, like the Oxford River one mentioned above, but in reverse. I'd also like to know what is the most 'usable' Thai-Thai dictionary - many of them are so poorly laid out or typographically unattractive I can't make head nor tail of them! Thanks in advance (ขอบคุณไว้ล่วงหน้าครับ) Edited by SoftWater, 2009-07-23 12:22:02. #48Posted 2009-07-23 14:56:12
To start the bike from cold: 1. Pull the choke all the way out. 2. Press the starter button without opening the accelerator. Remember: Drive carefully. Wear a crash helmet. Protect the environment. Read the owner's handbook carefully?... (glare on pic!) Warning: You may suffer death or injury if you don't wear a crash helmet. Petrol or gasohol (E10) 91. . To improve it slightly, in the above translation I would replace the word 'accelerator' with 'throttle' and 'Read the owner's handbook carefully?... (glare on pic!)' with 'Read the owner's handbook carefully before riding'. #49Posted 2009-07-24 22:06:17
BTW, does anyone have a recommendation for a good Thai-English and good Thai-Thai dictionary? (paper dictionary I mean, not online!) I use the Thaiways 'Thai-English', but I'm looking for something more comprehensive, like the Oxford River one mentioned above, but in reverse. I'd also like to know what is the most 'usable' Thai-Thai dictionary - many of them are so poorly laid out or typographically unattractive I can't make head nor tail of them! Have a look at "A NEW THAI-ENGLISH DICTIONARY" by Tianchai Woramate. 1200 pages, hard cover, plenty of examples and Thai definitions for some entries for 760 Baht. See a sample here. I found quite a few misspellings in the English part, but on the whole I think it is very good value for its price. #50Posted 2009-08-07 09:38:07
BTW, does anyone have a recommendation for a good Thai-English and good Thai-Thai dictionary? (paper dictionary I mean, not online!) I use the Thaiways 'Thai-English', but I'm looking for something more comprehensive, like the Oxford River one mentioned above, but in reverse. I'd also like to know what is the most 'usable' Thai-Thai dictionary - many of them are so poorly laid out or typographically unattractive I can't make head nor tail of them! Have a look at "A NEW THAI-ENGLISH DICTIONARY" by Tianchai Woramate. 1200 pages, hard cover, plenty of examples and Thai definitions for some entries for 760 Baht. See a sample here. I found quite a few misspellings in the English part, but on the whole I think it is very good value for its price. Thanks - I found at least half-a-dozen dictionaries by this author from varous dates (going back to 1998) in the Chula bookstore next to the British Council building in Siam Square. He's got both thai-thai and thai-english in various sizes and covers. I bought the biggest of each! As ElZorro says, there are plenty of example sentences in the entries, which for me is a huge plus. |
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