บรมราชา

Thai

edit

Etymology

edit

From บรม (bɔɔ-rom, great; supreme; utmost; etc) +‎ ราชา (raa-chaa, king); ultimately from Sanskrit परमरज (paramaraja, supreme king), probably via Old Khmer paramarājā, pūrammarājjā. Compare Modern Khmer បរមរាជា (bârômréachéa).

Historian Sujit Wongthes (สุจิตต์ วงษ์เทศ) suggested that the term was created after the legendary leader Borom.[1]

Pronunciation

edit
Orthographicบรมราชา
ɓ r m r ā d͡ʑ ā
Phonemic
บอ-รม-รา-ชา
ɓ ɒ – r m – r ā – d͡ʑ ā
บอ-รม-มะ-รา-ชา
ɓ ɒ – r m – m a – r ā – d͡ʑ ā
RomanizationPaiboonbɔɔ-rom-raa-chaabɔɔ-rom-má-raa-chaa
Royal Institutebo-rom-ra-chabo-rom-ma-ra-cha
(standard) IPA(key)/bɔː˧.rom˧.raː˧.t͡ɕʰaː˧/(R)/bɔː˧.rom˧.ma˦˥.raː˧.t͡ɕʰaː˧/(R)

Noun

edit

บรมราชา (bɔɔ-rom-raa-chaa)

  1. emperor; high king; king of kings.

References

edit