Aiton

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Proto-Southwestern Tai *sɔːŋᴬ¹ (Jonsson, 1991), from Proto-Tai *soːŋᴬ, from Middle Chinese (MC sraewng, “two”). Cognate with Thai สอง (sɔ̌ɔng), Northern Thai ᩈᩬᨦ, Lao ສອງ (sǭng), ᦉᦸᧂ (ṡoang), Tai Dam ꪎꪮꪉ, Tai Dón ꪎꪮꪉ, Tai Daeng ꪎꪮꪉ, Shan သွင် (sǎung), Tai Nüa ᥔᥩᥒᥴ (sóang), Tai Laing ꩬွꩼင်, Khamti ꩬွင်, Phake ꩬွင် (soṅ), Ahom 𑜏𑜨𑜂𑜫 (soṅ), Bouyei soongl, Zhuang song, Tày sloong.

Numeral

edit

ꩬွင် (soṅ)

  1. two

Khamti

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Proto-Southwestern Tai *sɔːŋᴬ¹ (Jonsson, 1991), from Proto-Tai *soːŋᴬ, from Middle Chinese (MC sraewng, “two”). Cognate with Thai สอง (sɔ̌ɔng), Northern Thai ᩈᩬᨦ, Lao ສອງ (sǭng), ᦉᦸᧂ (ṡoang), Tai Dam ꪎꪮꪉ, Tai Dón ꪎꪮꪉ, Tai Daeng ꪎꪮꪉ, Shan သွင် (sǎung), Tai Nüa ᥔᥩᥒᥴ (sóang), Tai Laing ꩬွꩼင်, Aiton ꩬွင် (soṅ), Phake ꩬွင် (soṅ), Ahom 𑜏𑜨𑜂𑜫 (soṅ), Bouyei soongl, Zhuang song, Tày sloong.

Numeral

edit

ꩬွင် (transliteration needed)

  1. two.

Phake

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Proto-Southwestern Tai *sɔːŋᴬ¹ (Jonsson, 1991), from Proto-Tai *soːŋᴬ, from Middle Chinese (MC sraewng, “two”). Cognate with Thai สอง (sɔ̌ɔng), Northern Thai ᩈᩬᨦ, Lao ສອງ (sǭng), ᦉᦸᧂ (ṡoang), Tai Dam ꪎꪮꪉ, Tai Dón ꪎꪮꪉ, Tai Daeng ꪎꪮꪉ, Shan သွင် (sǎung), Tai Nüa ᥔᥩᥒᥴ (sóang), Tai Laing ꩬွꩼင်, Khamti ꩬွင်, Aiton ꩬွင် (soṅ), Ahom 𑜏𑜨𑜂𑜫 (soṅ), Bouyei soongl, Zhuang song, Tày sloong.

Numeral

edit

ꩬွင် (soṅ)

  1. two