
Burmese (Burmese: မြန်မာဘာသာ; MLCTS: Mranma bhasa; pronounced [mjəmà bàθà]) is a Tibeto-Burman language spoken in Myanmar, where it is the official language, lingua franca, and the native language of the Bamar, the country's largest ethnic group. Burmese is also spoken by the indigenous tribes in Bangladesh's Chittagong Hill Tracts, India's Mizoram, Manipur, Tripura states and the Burmese diaspora. The Constitution of Myanmar officially refers to it as the Myanmar language in English, though most English speakers continue to refer to the language as Burmese, after Burma—a name with co-official status until 1989 (see Names of Myanmar). Burmese is the most widely-spoken language in the country, where it serves as the lingua franca. In 2019, Burmese was spoken by 42.9 million people globally, including by 32.9 million speakers as a first language, and an additional 10 million speakers as a second language. A 2023 World Bank survey found that 80% of the country's population speaks Burmese.
Burmese | |
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Myanmar language | |
မြန်မာဘာသာ, Mranma bhasa | |
Pronunciation | [mjəmà bàθà] |
Native to |
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Speakers | L1: 33 million (2007) L2: 10 million (no date) |
Sino-Tibetan
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Early forms | Old Burmese
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Official status | |
Official language in | |
Regulated by | Myanmar Language Commission |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | my |
ISO 639-2 | bur (B) mya (T) |
ISO 639-3 | mya – inclusive codeIndividual codes: mya – Myanmarint – Inthatco – Taungyorki – Rakhinermz – MarmaTay – Tavoyan dialects |
Glottolog | mran1234 |
Linguasphere | 77-AAA-a |
Areas where Burmese is spoken (dark blue signifies areas where it is more widely spoken). This map does not indicate whether the language is a majority or minority. |
Burmese is a tonal, pitch-register, and syllable-timed language, largely monosyllabic and agglutinative with a subject–object–verb word order. Burmese is distinguished from other major Southeast Asian languages by its extensive case marking system and rich morphological inventory. It is a member of the Lolo-Burmese grouping of the Sino-Tibetan language family. The Burmese alphabet is ultimately descended from a Brahmic script, either the Kadamba or Pallava alphabets.
Classification
Burmese belongs to the Southern Burmish branch of the Sino-Tibetan languages. Burmese is the most widely spoken of the non-Sinitic Sino-Tibetan languages. Burmese was the fifth of the Sino-Tibetan languages to develop a writing system, after Classical Chinese, Pyu, Old Tibetan and Tangut.
Dialects
The majority of Burmese speakers, who live throughout the Irrawaddy River Valley, use variants of standard Burmese, while a minority speak non-standard dialects found in the peripheral areas of the country. These dialects include:
- Tanintharyi Region: Merguese (Myeik, Beik), Tavoyan (Dawei), and Palaw
- Magway Region: Yaw
- Shan State: Intha, Taungyo, and Danu
Arakanese in Rakhine State and Marma in Bangladesh are also sometimes considered dialects of Burmese and sometimes as separate languages.
Burmese dialects mostly share a common set of tones, consonant clusters, and written script. Several Burmese dialects differ substantially from standard Burmese with respect to vocabulary, lexical particles, and rhymes. Below is a summary of lexical similarity between major Burmese dialects:
Dialects | Burmese | Danu | Intha | Rakhine | Taungyo |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Burmese | 100% | 93% | 95% | 91% | 89% |
Danu | 93% | 100% | 93% | 85-94% | 91% |
Intha | 95% | 93% | 100% | 90% | 89% |
Rakhine | 91% | 85-94% | 90% | 100% | 84-92% |
Taungyo | 89% | N/A | 89% | 84-92% | 100% |
Marma | N/A | N/A | N/A | 85% | N/A |
Irrawaddy River valley
Spoken Burmese is remarkably uniform among Burmese speakers, particularly those living in the Irrawaddy valley, all of whom use variants of Standard Burmese. The standard dialect of Burmese (the Mandalay-Yangon dialect continuum) originates from the Irrawaddy River valley. Regional differences between speakers from Upper Burma (e.g., Mandalay dialect), called anya tha (အညာသား) and speakers from Lower Burma (e.g., Yangon dialect), called auk tha (အောက်သား), largely occur in vocabulary choice, not in pronunciation. Minor lexical and rhyme differences exist throughout the Irrawaddy River valley. For instance, for the term ဆွမ်း, "food offering [to a monk]", Lower Burmese speakers use [sʰʊ́ɰ̃] instead of [sʰwáɰ̃], which is the pronunciation used in Upper Burma.
The standard dialect is typified by the Yangon dialect because of the modern city's media influence and economic clout. In the past, the Mandalay dialect represented standard Burmese. The most noticeable feature of the Mandalay dialect is its continued use of the first-person pronoun ကျွန်တော်, kya.nau [tɕənɔ̀] by both men and women. In Yangon, only male speakers use the same pronoun, while female speakers use ကျွန်မ, kya.ma. [tɕəma̰]. Moreover, with regard to kinship terminology, Upper Burmese speakers differentiate the maternal and paternal sides of a family, whereas Lower Burmese speakers do not.
Mon has also influenced subtle grammatical differences between the varieties of Burmese spoken in Lower and Upper Burma. In Lower Burmese varieties, the verb ပေး ('to give') is colloquially used as a permissive causative marker, similar to other Southeast Asian languages, but unlike in most Tibeto-Burman languages. This usage is hardly used in Upper Burmese varieties, and is considered a sub-standard construct.
Outside the Irrawaddy basin
More distinctive non-standard varieties of Burmese emerge as one moves farther away from the Irrawaddy River valley toward peripheral areas of the country. These varieties include the Yaw, Palaw, Myeik (Merguese), Tavoyan and Intha dialects. Despite substantial vocabulary and pronunciation differences, there is mutual intelligibility among most Burmese dialects, especially with language convergence.
Dialects in Tanintharyi Region, including Palaw, Merguese, and Tavoyan, are especially conservative in comparison to Standard Burmese. The Tavoyan and Intha dialects have preserved the /l/ medial, which is only found in Old Burmese inscriptions. These dialects also often reduce the intensity of the glottal stop. Beik has 250,000 speakers while Tavoyan has 400,000. The grammatical constructs of Burmese dialects in Southern Myanmar show greater Mon influence than Standard Burmese.
The most pronounced feature of the Arakanese language of Rakhine State is its retention of the [ɹ] sound, which has become [j] in standard Burmese. Moreover, Arakanese features a variety of vowel differences, including the merger of the ဧ [e] and ဣ [i] vowels. Hence, a word like "blood" သွေး is pronounced [θwé] in standard Burmese and [θwí] in Arakanese.
History
The Burmese language's early forms include Old Burmese and Middle Burmese. Old Burmese dates from the 11th to the 16th century (Pagan to Ava dynasties); Middle Burmese from the 16th to the 18th century (Toungoo to early Konbaung dynasties); modern Burmese from the mid-18th century to the present. While Burmese phonology has evolved significantly, word order, grammatical structure, and vocabulary have remained markedly stable well into Modern Burmese, with the exception of lexical content (e.g., function words).
Old Burmese
The earliest attested form of the Burmese language is called Old Burmese, dating to the 11th and 12th century stone inscriptions of Pagan. The earliest evidence of the Burmese alphabet is dated to 1035, while a casting made in the 18th century of an old stone inscription points to 984.[19]
Owing to the linguistic prestige of Old Pyu in the Pagan Kingdom era, Old Burmese borrowed a substantial corpus of vocabulary from Pali via the Pyu language. These indirect borrowings can be traced back to orthographic idiosyncrasies in these loanwords, such as the Burmese word "to worship", which is spelt ပူဇော် (pūjo) instead of ပူဇာ (pūjā), as would be expected by the original Pali orthography.
In the mid-15th century, bilingual Pali-Burmese texts called nissaya (နိဿယ) emerged. These texts played a significant role in shaping the standard language, leading Burmese postpositional markers to be reinterpreted as equivalents of Pali inflections, giving them new grammatical roles that were compatible with their original use but not inherent to them. Over time, these markers became integral to the morphological structure of Burmese and were seen as more obligatory in literary Burmese, and to a lesser extent, colloquial Burmese.
Middle Burmese
The transition to Middle Burmese occurred in the 16th century. The transition to Middle Burmese included phonological changes (e.g. mergers of sound pairs that were distinct in Old Burmese) as well as accompanying changes in the underlying orthography.
From the 1500s onward, Burmese kingdoms saw substantial gains in the populace's literacy rate, which manifested itself in greater participation of laymen in scribing and composing legal and historical documents, domains that were traditionally the domain of Buddhist monks, and drove the ensuing proliferation of Burmese literature, both in terms of genres and works.[20] During this period, the Burmese alphabet began employing cursive-style circular letters typically used in palm-leaf manuscripts, as opposed to the traditional square block-form letters used in earlier periods.[20] The orthographic conventions used in written Burmese today can largely be traced back to Middle Burmese.
Modern Burmese
Modern Burmese emerged in the mid-18th century. By this time, male literacy in Burma stood at nearly 50%, which enabled the wide circulation of legal texts, royal chronicles, and religious texts.[20] A major reason for the uniformity of the Burmese language was the near-universal presence of Buddhist monasteries (called kyaung) in Burmese villages. These kyaung served as the foundation of the pre-colonial monastic education system, which fostered uniformity of the language throughout the Upper Irrawaddy valley, the traditional homeland of Burmese speakers. The 1891 Census of India, conducted five years after the annexation of the entire Konbaung Kingdom, found that the former kingdom had an "unusually high male literacy" rate of 62.5% for Upper Burmans aged 25 and above. For all of British Burma, the literacy rate was 49% for men and 5.5% for women (by contrast, British India more broadly had a male literacy rate of 8.44%).
The expansion of the Burmese language into Lower Burma also coincided with the emergence of Modern Burmese. As late as the mid-1700s, Mon, an Austroasiatic language, was the principal language of Lower Burma, employed by the Mon people who inhabited the region. Lower Burma's shift from Mon to Burmese was accelerated by the Burmese-speaking Konbaung Dynasty's victory over the Mon-speaking Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom in 1757. By 1830, an estimated 90% of the population in Lower Burma self-identified as Burmese-speaking Bamars; huge swaths of former Mon-speaking territory, from the Irrawaddy Delta to upriver in the north, spanning Bassein (now Pathein) and Rangoon (now Yangon) to Tharrawaddy, Toungoo, Prome (now Pyay), and Henzada (now Hinthada), were now Burmese-speaking.[20] The language shift has been ascribed to a combination of population displacement, intermarriage, and voluntary changes in self-identification among increasingly Mon–Burmese bilingual populations in the region.[20]
Standardized tone marking in written Burmese was not achieved until the 18th century. From the 19th century onward, orthographers created spellers to reform Burmese spelling, because of ambiguities that arose over transcribing sounds that had been merged. British rule saw continued efforts to standardize Burmese spelling through dictionaries and spellers.
Britain's gradual annexation of Burma throughout the 19th century, in addition to concomitant economic and political instability in Upper Burma (e.g., increased tax burdens from the Burmese crown, British rice production incentives, etc.) also accelerated the migration of Burmese speakers from Upper Burma into Lower Burma. British rule in Burma eroded the strategic and economic importance of the Burmese language; Burmese was effectively subordinated to the English language in the colonial educational system, especially in higher education.
In the 1930s, the Burmese language saw a linguistic revival, precipitated by the establishment of an independent University of Rangoon in 1920 and the inception of a Burmese language major at the university by Pe Maung Tin, modeled on Anglo Saxon language studies at the University of Oxford. Student protests in December of that year, triggered by the introduction of English into matriculation examinations, fueled growing demand for Burmese to become the medium of education in British Burma; a short-lived but symbolic parallel system of "national schools" that taught in Burmese, was subsequently launched. The role and prominence of the Burmese language in public life and institutions was championed by Burmese nationalists, intertwined with their demands for greater autonomy and independence from the British in the lead-up to the independence of Burma in 1948.
The 1948 Constitution of Burma prescribed Burmese as the official language of the newly independent nation. The Burma Translation Society and Rangoon University's Department of Translation and Publication were established in 1947 and 1948, respectively, with the joint goal of modernizing the Burmese language in order to replace English across all disciplines. Anti-colonial sentiment throughout the early post-independence era led to a reactionary switch from English to Burmese as the national medium of education, a process that was accelerated by the Burmese Way to Socialism. In August 1963, the socialist Union Revolutionary Government established the Literary and Translation Commission (the immediate precursor of the Myanmar Language Commission) to standardize Burmese spelling, diction, composition, and terminology. The latest spelling authority, named the Myanma Salonpaung Thatpon Kyan (မြန်မာ စာလုံးပေါင်း သတ်ပုံ ကျမ်း), was compiled in 1978 by the commission.
Registers
Diglossia
Burmese is a diglossic language with two distinguishable registers (or diglossic varieties):
- Literary High (H) form (မြန်မာစာ mranma ca): the high variety (formal and written), used in literature (formal writing), newspapers, radio broadcasts, and formal speeches
- Spoken Low (L) form (မြန်မာစကား mranma ca.ka:): the low variety (informal and spoken), used in daily conversation, television, comics and literature (informal writing)
The literary form of Burmese retains archaic and conservative grammatical structures and modifiers (including affixes and pronouns) no longer used in the colloquial form. Most verbs and some nouns also have longer forms in literary Burmese. Literary Burmese, which has not changed significantly since the 13th century, is the register of Burmese taught in schools. Case marking is highly developed and consistently used in literary Burmese, covering markers for subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, the ablative and locative. Spoken Burmese also uses case markers, but does so less consistently, particularly for subjects and direct object marking. The equivalent affixes used in Literary and Spoken Burmese are totally unrelated to each other. Examples of this phenomenon include the following lexical terms:
Gloss | Literary HIGH | Spoken LOW |
---|---|---|
"this" (pronoun) | ဤ i | ဒီ di |
"that" (pronoun) | ထို htui | ဟို hui |
"at" (case) | ၌ hnai. [n̥aɪʔ] | မှာ hma [m̥à] |
plural (suffix) | များ mya: | တွေ twe |
possessive (case) | ၏ i. | ရဲ့ re. |
"and" (conjunction) | နှင့် hnang. | LOW နဲ့ ne. |
"if" (conjunction) | လျှင် hlyang | ရင် rang |
Historically the literary register was preferred for written Burmese on the grounds that "the spoken style lacks gravity, authority, dignity". In the mid-1960s, some Burmese writers attempted to abandon the literary form in favour of the spoken vernacular form. Some Burmese linguists such as Minn Latt, a Czech academic, proposed moving away from the high form of Burmese altogether. Although the literary form is heavily used in written and official contexts (literary and scholarly works, radio news broadcasts, and novels), the recent trend has been to accommodate the spoken form in informal written contexts. Nowadays, television news broadcasts, comics, and commercial publications use the spoken form or a combination of the spoken and simpler, less ornate formal forms.
Burmese uses also distinct spoken and written forms for question pronouns. The following examples demonstrate significant differences in the pronouns, verbs, and other markers used between the literary and spoken forms (contrasts in bold):
Literary:
Spoken:
Gloss:
မည်သူ
ဘယ်သူ
who
များ
တွေ
PL
က
"
TOP
မိမိ
ကိုယ့်
my
၏
ရဲ့
POS
အသက်လမ်းကြောင်း
"
lifeline
ဆက်လက်
ဆက်
continue
ပေး
"
give
နေ
"
CONT
သည့်
တဲ့
POS
ခလုတ်
"
plug
ကို
"
OBJ
ဖြုတ်ချ
ဖြုတ်
pull
ကြ
"
PL
မည်
မယ်
FUT
နည်း?
လဲ?
Q
'Who will discontinue my life support?'
Literary:
Spoken:
Gloss:
ရှစ်လေးလုံးအရေးအခင်း
"
8888 Uprising
ဖြစ်
"
occur
သောအခါက
တုံးက
when
လူ
"
people
ဦးရေ
အယောက်
MW
၃၀၀၀
"
3,000
မျှ
လောက်
approximately
သေဆုံး
သေ
die-V
ခဲ့
"
PAST
ကြ
"
PL
သည်။
တယ်။
FP
'When the 8888 Uprising took place, approximately 3,000 people died.'
Honorific terms
Burmese has politeness levels and honorifics that take into account the speaker's status and age in relation to the audience. The suffix ပါ (pa) is frequently used after a verb to express politeness. Moreover, Burmese pronouns relay varying degrees of deference or respect. Polite speech (e.g., addressing teachers, officials, or elders) employs feudal-era third person pronouns or kinship terms in lieu of first- and second-person pronouns.
Honorific vocabulary is used in Burmese to distinguish Buddhist clergy from the laity (householders), especially when speaking to or about bhikkhus (monks). Distinct honorific vocabulary (often euphemistic in nature) is also employed to distinguish commoners from royals. The honorific markers -တော် (daw) and -တော်မူ (dawmu) are suffixed to nouns and verbs respectively, in relation to Buddhist clergy and royals. Lexical items from standard Burmese, royal vocabulary, and clerical vocabulary are shown side by side in the table below:
Gloss | Standard | Polite | Religious | Royal |
---|---|---|---|---|
'eat' (verb) | စား ca: | သုံးဆောင် sum: hcaung | ဘုဉ်းပေး bhuny: pe: | ပွဲတော်တယ် pwai dau te |
'sleep' (verb) | အိပ် ip | ကျိန်း kyin: | စက်တော်ခေါ် cak tau khau | |
'die' (verb) | သေ se | ကွယ်လွန် kwe lwan | ပျံတော်မူ pyam tau mu | နတ်ရွာစံ nat rwa cam |
'father' | အဖေ a hpe | ဖခင် hpa hkang | ခမည်းတော် hka many: tau | |
'live, dwell' (verb) | နေ ne | နေထိုင် ne htuing | ကိန်း kin: | စံ cam |
Vocabulary
Burmese has primarily inherited its monosyllabic vocabulary from Sino-Tibetan stock. The language has also adopted polysyllabic loanwords from Indo-European languages like Pali and English, as well as sesquisyllabic words from Mon, an Austroasiatic language. Burmese loanwords are overwhelmingly in the form of nouns.
Of the Indo-European languages, Pali, the liturgical language of Theravada Buddhism, had the most profound influence on enriching the Burmese vocabulary. Burmese has readily adopted words of Pali origin; this may be due to phonotactic similarities between the two languages, and the Burmese script's inherent ability to reproduce Pali spellings with complete accuracy. Pali loanwords are often related to religion, government, arts, and science.[non-primary source needed] Burmese loanwords from Pali primarily take four forms:
- Direct loan: direct import of Pali words with no alteration in orthography
- Abbreviated loan: import of Pali words with accompanied syllable reduction and alteration in orthography, usually by means of a placing a diacritic, called athat အသတ် (llit. 'nonexistence') atop the last letter in the syllable to suppress the consonant's inherent vowel
- Double loan: adoption of two different terms derived from the same Pali word
- Hybrid loan (e.g., neologisms or calques): construction of compounds combining native Burmese words with Pali or combine Pali words
Category | Gloss | Burmese | Pali |
---|---|---|---|
Direct loan | 'life' | ဇီဝ jīva | ဇီဝ jīva |
'life' | ဘဝ bhava | ဘဝ bhava | |
'music' | ဂီတ gīta | ဘဝ gīta | |
Abbreviated loan | 'karma' | ကံ kam | ကမ္မ kamma |
'dawn' | အရုဏ် aruṇ | အရုဏ aruṇa | |
'merit' | ကုသိုလ် kusuil | ကုသလ kusala | |
Double loan | 'arrogance' | မာန māna | မာန māna |
'pride' | မာန် mān | ||
'strength' | ဗလ bala | ဗလ bala | |
'leader' | ဗိုလ် buil | ||
Hybrid loan | 'airplane' | လေယာဉ်ပျံ leyāñpyaṃ | ယာဉ် (from yāna, 'vehicle') |
'name' | နာမည် nāmaññ | နာမ (from nāma, 'name') |
Burmese has also adapted numerous words from Mon, traditionally spoken by the Mon people of Lower Burma. Most Mon loanwords are so well assimilated that they are not distinguished as loanwords, as Burmese and Mon were used interchangeably for several centuries in pre-colonial Burma. Mon loans are often related to flora, fauna, administration, textiles, foods, boats, crafts, architecture, and music.
As a natural consequence of British rule in Burma, English has been another major source of vocabulary, especially with regard to technology, measurements, and modern institutions. English loanwords tend to take one of three forms:
- Direct loan: adoption of an English word, adapted to the Burmese phonology
- "democracy": English democracy → Burmese ဒီမိုကရေစီ
- Neologism or calque: translation of an English word using native Burmese constituent words
- "human rights": English 'human rights' → Burmese လူ့အခွင့်အရေး (လူ့ 'human' + အခွင့်အရေး 'rights')
- Hybrid loan: construction of compound words by joining native Burmese words to English words
- 'to sign': ဆိုင်းထိုး [sʰã́ɪ̃ tʰó] ← ဆိုင်း (English, sign) + ထိုး (native Burmese, 'inscribe').
To a lesser extent, Burmese has also imported words from Sanskrit (religion), Hindi (food, administration, and shipping), and Chinese (games and food). Burmese has also imported a handful of words from other European languages such as Portuguese.
Here is a sample of loan words found in Burmese:
Gloss | Burmese | Source |
---|---|---|
'suffering' | ဒုက္ခ [dowʔkʰa̰] | Pali dukkha |
'radio' | ရေဒီယို [ɹèdìjò] | English radio |
'crab' | ကဏန်း [ɡənáɴ] | Mon ဂတာံ |
'flatter' | ဖော်လံဖား [pʰɔ̀làɴpʰá] | Hokkien 扶𡳞脬 (phô͘-lān-pha) |
'wife' | ဇနီး [zəní] | Sanskrit जनी (janī) |
'noodle' | ခေါက်ဆွဲ [kʰaʊʔ sʰwɛ́] | Shan ၶဝ်ႈသွႆး [kʰāu sʰɔi] |
'foot' (unit) | ပေ [pè] | Portuguese pé |
'flag' | အလံ [əlã̀] | Arabic: علم ʿalam |
'storeroom' | ဂိုဒေါင် [ɡòdã̀ʊ̃] | Malay gudang |
Since the end of British rule, the Burmese government has attempted to limit usage of Western loans (especially from English) by coining new words (neologisms). For instance, for the word "television", Burmese publications are mandated to use the term ရုပ်မြင်သံကြား (lit. 'see picture, hear sound') in lieu of တယ်လီဗီးရှင်း, a direct English transliteration. Another example is the word "vehicle", which is officially ယာဉ် [jɪ̃̀] (derived from Pali) but ကား [ká] (from English car) in spoken Burmese. Some previously common English loanwords have fallen out of use with the adoption of indigenous neologisms. An example is the word "university", formerly ယူနီဗာစတီ [jùnìbàsətì], from English university, now တက္ကသိုလ် [tɛʔkət̪ò], a Pali-derived neologism recently created by the Burmese government and derived from the Pali spelling of Taxila (တက္ကသီလ Takkasīla), an ancient university town in modern-day Pakistan.
Some words in Burmese may have many synonyms, each having certain usages, such as formal, literary, colloquial, and poetic. One example is the word "moon", which can be လ la̰ (native Tibeto-Burman), စန္ဒာ/စန်း [sàndà]/[sã́] (derivatives of Pali canda 'moon'), or သော်တာ [t̪ɔ̀ dà] (Sanskrit).
Phonology
Consonants
The consonants of Burmese are as follows:
Bilabial | Dental | Alveolar | Post-al./ Palatal | Velar | Laryngeal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | voiced | m | n | ɲ | ŋ | ||
voiceless | m̥ | n̥ | ɲ̊ | ŋ̊ | |||
Stop/ Affricate | voiced | b | d | dʒ | ɡ | ||
voiceless | p | t | tʃ | k | ʔ | ||
aspirated | pʰ | tʰ | tʃʰ | kʰ | |||
Fricative | voiced | ð ([d̪ð~d̪]) | z | ||||
voiceless | θ ([t̪θ~t̪]) | s | ʃ | ||||
aspirated | sʰ | h | |||||
Approximant | voiced | l | j | w | |||
voiceless | l̥ | ʍ |
According to Jenny & San San Hnin Tun (2016:15), contrary to their use of symbols θ and ð, consonants of သ are dental stops (/t̪, d̪/), rather than fricatives (/θ, ð/) or affricates. These phonemes, alongside /sʰ/, are prone to merger with /t, d, s/.
An alveolar /ɹ/ can occur as an alternate of /j/ in some loanwords.
The final nasal /ɰ̃/ is the value of the four native final nasals: ⟨မ်⟩ /m/, ⟨န်⟩ /n/, ⟨ဉ်⟩ /ɲ/, ⟨င်⟩ /ŋ/, as well as the retroflex ⟨ဏ⟩ /ɳ/ (used in Pali loans) and nasalisation mark anusvara demonstrated here above ka (က → ကံ) which most often stands in for a homorganic nasal word medially as in တံခါး tankhá 'door', and တံတား tantá 'bridge', or else replaces final -m ⟨မ်⟩ in both Pali and native vocabulary, especially after the OB vowel *u e.g. ငံ ngam 'salty', သုံး thóum ('three; use'), and ဆုံး sóum 'end'. It does not, however, apply to ⟨ည်⟩ which is never realised as a nasal, but rather as an open front vowel [iː] [eː] or [ɛː]. The final nasal is usually realised as nasalisation of the vowel. It may also allophonically appear as a homorganic nasal before stops. For example, in /mòʊɰ̃dáɪɰ̃/ ('storm'), which is pronounced [mõ̀ũndã́ĩ].
Vowels
The vowels of Burmese are:
Monophthongs | Diphthongs | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Front | Central | Back | Front offglide | Back offglide | |
Close | i | u | |||
Close-mid | e | ə | o | ei | ou |
Open-mid | ɛ | ɔ | |||
Open | a | ai | au |
The monophthongs /e/, /o/, /ə/, /ɛ/ and /ɔ/ occur only in open syllables (those without a syllable coda); the diphthongs /ei/, /ou/, /ai/ and /au/ occur only in closed syllables (those with a syllable coda). /ə/ only occurs in a minor syllable, and is the only vowel that is permitted in a minor syllable (see below).
The close vowels /i/ and /u/ and the close portions of the diphthongs are somewhat mid-centralized ([ɪ, ʊ]) in closed syllables, i.e. before /ɰ̃/ and /ʔ/. Thus နှစ် /n̥iʔ/ ('two') is phonetically [n̥ɪʔ] and ကြောင် /tɕàũ/ ('cat') is phonetically [tɕàʊ̃].
Tones
Burmese is a tonal language, which means phonemic contrasts can be made on the basis of the tone of a vowel. In Burmese, these contrasts involve not only pitch, but also phonation, intensity (loudness), duration, and vowel quality. However, some linguists consider Burmese a pitch-register language like Shanghainese. Spoken Burmese exhibits tone sandhi in the form of a shift from a low to an induced creaky tone, to indicate possession.
There are four contrastive tones in Burmese. In the following table, the tones are shown marked on the vowel /a/ as an example.
Tone | Burmese | IPA (shown on a) | Symbol (shown on a) | Phonation | Duration | Intensity | Pitch |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Low | နိမ့်သံ | [aː˧˧˦] | à | modal | medium | low | low, often slightly rising |
High | တက်သံ | [aː˥˥˦] | á | sometimes slightly breathy | long | high | high, often with a fall before a pause |
Creaky | သက်သံ | [aˀ˥˧] | a̰ | tense or creaky, sometimes with lax glottal stop | medium | high | high, often slightly falling |
Checked | တိုင်သံ | [ăʔ˥˧] | aʔ | centralized vowel quality, final glottal stop | short | high | high (in citation; can vary in context) |
For example, the following words are distinguished from each other only on the basis of tone:
- Low ခါ /kʰà/ "shake"
- High ခါး /kʰá/ "be bitter"
- Creaky ခ /kʰa̰/ "to wait upon; to attend on"
- Checked ခတ် /kʰaʔ/ "to beat; to strike"
In syllables ending with /ɰ̃/, the checked tone is excluded:
- Low ခံ /kʰàɰ̃/ "undergo"
- High ခန်း /kʰáɰ̃/ "dry up (usually a river)"
- Creaky ခန့် /kʰa̰ɰ̃/ "appoint"
In spoken Burmese, some linguists classify two real tones (there are four nominal tones transcribed in written Burmese), "high" (applied to words that terminate with a stop or check, high-rising pitch) and "ordinary" (unchecked and non-glottal words, with falling or lower pitch), with those tones encompassing a variety of pitches. The "ordinary" tone consists of a range of pitches. Linguist L. F. Taylor concluded that "conversational rhythm and euphonic intonation possess importance" not found in related tonal languages and that "its tonal system is now in an advanced state of decay."
Spoken Burmese exhibits tone sandhi in the form of a shift from a low to an induced creaky tone: to indicate possession and to pronounce low-toned numerals in conjunction with other digits. For the former, this does not occur in literary Burmese, which uses ၏ [ḭ] as postpositional marker for possessive case instead of ရဲ့ [jɛ̰]. Examples include the following:
ငါ
/ŋà/
>
>
ငါ့
/ŋa̰/
'me' > 'my'
အမေ
/ʔəmè/
>
>
အမေ့
/ʔəmḛ/
'mother' > 'mother's'
ဆယ်
/sʰɛ̀/
>
>
ဆယ့်တစ်
/sʰɛ̰tɪʔ/
'ten' > 'eleven'
Syllable structure
The syllable structure of Burmese is C(G)V((V)C), which is to say the onset consists of a consonant optionally followed by a glide, and the rime consists of a monophthong alone, a monophthong with a consonant, or a diphthong with a consonant. The only consonants that can stand in the coda are /ʔ/ and /ɰ̃/. Some representative words are:
Structure | Example | IPA | Meaning |
---|---|---|---|
CV | မယ် | /mɛ̀/ | title for young women |
CVC | မက် | /mɛʔ/ | 'to crave' |
CGV | မြေ | /mjè/ | 'earth' |
CGVC | မျက် | /mjɛʔ/ | 'eye' |
CVVC | မောင် | /màʊɰ̃/ | term of address for young men |
CGVVC | မြောင်း | /mjáʊɰ̃/ | 'ditch' |
A minor syllable has some restrictions:
- It contains /ə/ as its only vowel
- It must be an open syllable (no coda consonant)
- It cannot bear tone
- It has only a simple (C) onset (no glide after the consonant)
- It must not be the final syllable of the word
The Mon language is attributed with the development of frequent sesquisyllabic reduction in Burmese words, a pattern that does not appear in other Burmic languages. Some examples of words containing minor syllables:
- ခလုတ် /kʰə.loʊʔ/ 'switch, button'
- ပလွေ /pə.lwè/ 'flute'
- သရော် /θə.jɔ̀/ 'mock'
- ကလက် /kə.lɛʔ/ 'be wanton'
- ထမင်းရည် /tʰə.mə.jè/ 'rice-water'
Writing system

The Burmese alphabet consists of 33 letters and 12 vowels and is written from left to right. It requires no spaces between words, although modern writing usually contains spaces after each clause to enhance readability. Characterized by its circular letters and diacritics, the script is an abugida, with all letters having an inherent vowel အ a. [a̰] or [ə]. The consonants are arranged into six consonant groups (called ဝဂ် vag) based on articulation, like other Brahmi scripts. Tone markings and vowel modifications are written as diacritics placed to the left, right, top, and bottom of letters.
Orthographic changes subsequent to shifts in phonology (such as the merging of the [-l-] and [-ɹ-] medials) rather than transformations in Burmese grammatical structure and phonology, which by contrast, has remained stable between Old Burmese and modern Burmese.[clarification needed] For example, during the Pagan era, the medial [-l-] ္လ was transcribed in writing, which has been replaced by medials [-j-] ျ and [-ɹ-] ြ in modern Burmese (e.g. "school" in old Burmese က္လောင် [klɔŋ] → ကျောင်း [tɕã́ʊ̃] in modern Burmese). Likewise, written Burmese has preserved all nasalized finals [-n, -m, -ŋ], which have merged to [-ɰ̃] in spoken Burmese. (The exception is [-ɲ], which, in spoken Burmese, can be one of many open vowels [i, e, ɛ].) Similarly, other consonantal finals [-s, -p, -t, -k] have been reduced to [-ʔ]. Similar mergers are seen in other Sino-Tibetan languages like Shanghainese, and to a lesser extent, Cantonese.
Written Burmese dates to the early Pagan period. Burmese orthography originally followed a square block format, but the cursive format took hold from the 17th century when increased literacy and the resulting explosion of Burmese literature led to the wider use of palm leaves and folded paper known as parabaiks (ပုရပိုက်).
Grammar
The basic word order of the Burmese language in syntactic construction is subject-object-verb. Pronouns in Burmese vary according to the gender and status of the audience, although pronouns are often omitted. Affixes are used to convey information. Verbs are almost always suffixed and nouns declined.
Case affixes
Burmese is an agglutinative language with an extensive case system in which nouns are suffixed to determine their syntactic function in a sentence or clause. Sometimes the case markers are different between the two registers.
The case markers are:
High register | Low register | |
---|---|---|
Subject | thi (သည်), ká (က), hma (မှာ) | ha (ဟာ), ká (က) |
Object | ko (ကို) | ko (ကို) |
Recipient | à (အား) | |
Allative | thó (သို့) | |
Ablative | hmá (မှ), ká (က) | ká (က) |
Locative | hnai (၌), hma (မှာ), twin (တွင်) | hma (မှာ) |
Comitative | hnín (နှင့်) | né (နဲ့) |
Instrumental | hpyin (ဖြင့်), hnin (နှင့်) | |
Possessive | í (၏) | yé (ရဲ့) |
Adjectives
Burmese does not have adjectives per se. Rather, it has verbs that carry the meaning "to be X", where X is an English adjective. These verbs can modify a noun by means of the suffix တဲ့ tai. [dɛ̰] in colloquial Burmese (literary form: သော sau: [t̪ɔ́]), which is suffixed as follows:
Literary:
Spoken:
Gloss:
ချော
ချော
beautiful
သော
တဲ့
POS
လူ
လူ
person
'beautiful person'
Adjectives may also form a compound with the noun (e.g. လူချော lu hkyau: [lù tɕʰɔ́] 'person' + 'be beautiful').
Comparatives are usually ordered: X + ထက်ပို htak pui [tʰɛʔ pò] + adjective, where X is the object being compared to. Superlatives are indicated with the prefix အ a. [ʔə] + adjective + ဆုံး hcum: [zṍʊ̃].
Verbs
The roots of Burmese verbs almost always have affixes which convey information like tense, aspect, intention, politeness, mood, etc. Many of these affixes also have formal/literary and colloquial equivalents. In fact, the only time in which no suffix is attached to a verb is in imperative commands.
The most commonly used verb affixes and their usage are shown below with an example verb root စား ca: [sá] ('to eat'). Alone, the statement စား is imperative.
The affix တယ် tai [dɛ̀] (literary form: သည် sany [d̪ì]) can be viewed as an affix marking the present tense and/or a factual statement:
စား
ca:
[sá
တယ်
tai
dɛ̀]
'I eat'
The affix ခဲ့ hkai. [ɡɛ̰] denotes that the action took place in the past. However, this affix is not always necessary to indicate the past tense such that it can convey the same information without it. But to emphasize that the action happened before another event that is also currently being discussed, the affix becomes imperative. The affix တယ် tai [dɛ̀] in this case denotes a factual statement rather than the present tense:
စား
ca:
[sá
ခဲ့
hkai.
ɡɛ̰
တယ်
tai
dɛ̀]
'I ate'
The affix နေ ne [nè] is used to denote an action in progression. It is equivalent to the English '-ing'.
စား
ca:
[sá
နေ
ne
nè
တယ်
tai
dɛ̀]
'I am eating'
This affix ပြီ pri [bjì], which is used when an action that had been expected to be performed by the subject is now finally being performed, has no equivalent in English. So in the above example, if someone had been expecting the subject to eat, and the subject has finally started eating, the affix ပြီ is used as follows:
(စ)
(ca.)
[(sə)
စား
ca:
sá
ပြီ
pri
bjì]
'I am [now] eating'
The affix မယ် mai [mɛ̀] (literary form: မည် many [mjì]) is used to indicate the future tense or an action which is yet to be performed:
စား
ca:
[sá
မယ်
mai
mɛ̀]
'I will eat'
The affix တော့ tau. [dɔ̰] is used when the action is about to be performed immediately when used in conjunction with မယ်. Therefore, it could be termed as the "immediate future tense suffix".
စား
ca:
[sá
တော့
tau.
dɔ̰
မယ်
mai
mɛ̀]
'I'm going to eat [right away]'
When တော့ is used alone, however, it is imperative:
စား
ca:
[sá
တော့
tau.
dɔ̰]
'eat [now]'
Verbs are negated by the prefix မ ma. [mə]. Generally speaking, there are other suffixes on verb, along with မ.
The verb suffix နဲ့ nai. [nɛ̰] (literary form: နှင့် hnang. [n̥ɪ̰̃]) indicates a command:
မစား
ma.ca:
[məsá
နဲ့
nai.
nɛ̰]
'don't eat'
The verb suffix ဘူး bhu: [bú] indicates a statement:
မစား
ma.ca:
[məsá
ဘူး
bhu:
bú]
'[I] don't eat'
Nouns
Nouns in Burmese are pluralized by suffixing တွေ twe [dwè] (or [twè] if the word ends in a glottal stop) in colloquial Burmese or များ mya: [mjà] in formal Burmese. The suffix တို့ tou. [to̰], which indicates a group of persons or things, is also suffixed to the modified noun. An example is below:
Literary:
Spoken:
Both:
Gloss:
မြစ်
မြစ်
မြစ်
river
များ
တွေ
တို့
PL
'rivers'
Plural suffixes are not used when the noun is quantified with a number.
ကလေး
hka.le:
/kʰəlé
child
၅
nga:
ŋá
five
ယောက်
yauk
jaʊʔ/
CL
"five children"
Although Burmese does not have grammatical gender (e.g. masculine or feminine nouns), a distinction is made between the sexes, especially in animals and plants, by means of suffix particles. Nouns are masculinized with the following suffixes: ထီး hti: [tʰí], ဖ hpa [pʰa̰], or ဖို hpui [pʰò], depending on the noun, and feminized with the suffix မ ma. [ma̰]. Examples of usage are below:
- ကြောင်ထီး kraung hti: [tɕã̀ʊ̃ tʰí] "male cat"
- ကြောင်မ kraung ma. [tɕã̀ʊ̃ ma̰] "female cat"
- ကြက်ဖ krak hpa. [tɕɛʔ pʰa̰] "rooster/cock"
- ထန်းဖို htan: hpui [tʰã́ pʰò] "male toddy palm plant"
Numerical classifiers
Burmese uses numerical classifiers (also called measure words) when nouns are counted or quantified. This is similar to neighbouring languages like Thai, Bengali, and Chinese. This approximately equates to English expressions such as "two slices of bread" or "a cup of coffee". Classifiers are required when counting nouns, so ကလေး ၅ hka.le: nga: [kʰəlé ŋà] (lit. 'child five') is incorrect, since the measure word for people ယောက် yauk [jaʊʔ] is missing; it needs to suffix the numeral.
The standard word order of quantified words is: quantified noun + numeral adjective + classifier, except in round numbers (numbers that end in zero), in which the word order is flipped, where the quantified noun precedes the classifier: quantified noun + classifier + numeral adjective. The only exception to this rule is the number 10, which follows the standard word order.
Measurements of time, such as "hour", နာရီ "day", ရက် or "month", လ do not require classifiers.
Below are some of the most commonly used classifiers in Burmese.
Burmese | MLC | IPA | Usage | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
ယောက် | yauk | [jaʊʔ] | for people | Used in informal context |
ဦး | u: | [ʔú] | for people | Used in formal context and also used for monks and nuns |
ပါး | pa: | [bá] | for people | Used exclusively for monks and nuns of the Buddhist order |
ကောင် | kaung | [kã̀ʊ̃] | for animals | |
ခု | hku. | [kʰṵ] | general classifier | Used with almost all nouns except for animate objects |
လုံး | lum: | [lṍʊ̃] | for round objects | |
ပြား | pra: | [pjá] | for flat objects | |
စု | cu. | [sṵ] | for groups | Can be [zṵ]. |
Affixes
The Burmese language makes prominent usage of affixes (called ပစ္စည်း in Burmese), which are untranslatable words that are suffixed or prefixed to words to indicate tense, aspect, case, formality etc. For example, စမ်း [sã́] is a suffix used to indicate the imperative mood. While လုပ်ပါ ('work' + suffix indicating politeness) does not indicate the imperative, လုပ်စမ်းပါ ('work' + suffix indicating imperative mood + suffix indicating politeness) does. Affixes are often stacked next to each other
Some affixes modify the word's part of speech. Among the most prominent of these is the prefix အ [ə], which is prefixed to verbs and adjectives to form nouns or adverbs. For instance, the word ဝင် means "to enter", but combined with အ, it means "entrance" အဝင်. Moreover, in colloquial Burmese, there is a tendency to omit the second အ in words that follow the pattern အ + noun/adverb + အ + noun/adverb, like အဆောက်အအုံ, which is pronounced [əsʰaʊʔ ú] and formally pronounced [əsʰaʊʔ əõ̀ʊ̃].
Pronouns
Burmese exhibits pronoun avoidance, where pronouns are avoided for politeness. In Burmese, speakers account for social distinctions linguistically, reflecting gender, relative age, kinship, social status, and intimacy. Burmese uses "negative politeness," whereby speakers avoid directly addressing people. Instead, Burmese relies on status and kinship terms, titles, personal names, and other terms of address, rather than regular pronouns. Burmese kinship terms are commonly substituted as pronouns. For example, an older person may use ဒေါ်လေး dau le: [dɔ̀ lé] ('aunt') or ဦးလေး u: lei: [ʔú lé] ('uncle') to refer to himself, while a younger person may use either သား sa: [t̪á] ('son') or သမီး sa.mi: [t̪əmí] ('daughter').
Burmese has developed an elaborate hierarchical system of pronouns that are grammatically underspecified, but highly marked for the complex relation between speaker and addressee according to their relative position in the society. In Burmese, the polite forms of first-person pronouns ကျွန်တော် (kya. nau [tɕənɔ̀], lit. 'royal slave') for males, and ကျွန်မ (kya. ma. [tɕəma̰], lit. 'female slave') for females humble the speaker, while the polite forms of second-person pronouns မင်း (min [mɪ́ɴ]; lit. 'lordship'), ခင်ဗျား (khang bya: [kʰəmjá]; lit. 'master lord') or ရှင် (hrang [ʃɪ̀ɴ]; lit. 'ruler, master') elevate the addressee. The original pronouns ငါ nga [ŋà] ('I/me') and နင် nang [nɪ̃̀] ('you') have been relegated to use with people of higher or equivalent status, although most speakers prefer to use third person pronouns.
Burmese also uses case markers to mark subject pronouns (က [ɡa̰] in colloquial, သည် [t̪ì] in formal) and object pronouns (ကို [ɡò] in colloquial, အား [á] in formal), although these are generally dropped in spoken Burmese.
The basic pronouns are:
Person | Singular | Plural* | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Informal | Formal | Informal | Formal | |
First-person | ငါ nga [ŋà] | ကျွန်တော်‡ kywan to [tɕənɔ̀] ကျွန်မ† kywan ma. [tɕəma̰] | ငါဒို့ nga tui. [ŋà do̰] | ကျွန်တော်တို့‡ kywan to tui. [tɕənɔ̀ do̰] ကျွန်မတို့† kywan ma. tui. [tɕəma̰ do̰] |
Second-person | နင် nang [nɪ̃̀] မင်း mang: [mɪ̃́] | ခင်ဗျား‡ khang bya: [kʰəmjá] ရှင်† hrang [ʃɪ̃̀] | နင်ဒို့ nang tui. [nɪ̃̀n do̰] | ခင်ဗျားတို့‡ khang bya: tui. [kʰəmjá do̰] ရှင်တို့† hrang tui. [ʃɪ̃̀n do̰] |
Third-person | သူ su [t̪ù] | (အ)သင် (a.) sang [(ʔə)t̪ɪ̃̀] | သူဒို့ su tui. [t̪ù do̰] | သင်တို့ sang tui. [t̪ɪ̃̀ do̰] |
- * The basic particle to indicate plurality is တို့ tui., colloquial ဒို့ dui..
- ‡ Used by male speakers.
- † Used by female speakers.
Other pronouns are reserved for speaking with bhikkhus (Buddhist monks). When speaking to a bhikkhu, pronouns like ဘုန်းဘုန်း bhun: bhun: (from ဘုန်းကြီး phun: kri: 'monk'), ဆရာတော် chara dau [sʰəjàdɔ̀] ('royal teacher'), and အရှင်ဘုရား a.hrang bhu.ra: [ʔəʃɪ̃̀ pʰəjá] ('your lordship') are used depending on their status ဝါ. When referring to oneself, terms like တပည့်တော် ta. pany. tau ('royal disciple') or ဒကာ da. ka [dəɡà], ('donor') are used. When speaking to a monk, the following pronouns are used:
Person | Singular | |
---|---|---|
Informal | Formal | |
First person | တပည့်တော်† ta.paey. tau | ဒကာ† da. ka [dəɡà] |
Second person | ဘုန်းဘုန်း bhun: bhun: [pʰṍʊ̃ pʰṍʊ̃] (ဦး)ပဉ္စင်း (u:) pasang: [(ʔú) bəzín] | အရှင်ဘုရား a.hrang bhu.ra: [ʔəʃɪ̃̀ pʰəjá] ဆရာတော်‡ chara dau [sʰəjàdɔ̀] |
- † The particle ma. မ is suffixed for women.
- ‡ Typically reserved for the chief monk of a kyaung (monastery).
Kinship terms
Kinship terms vary across Burmese dialects. Upper Burmese dialects still differentiate maternal and paternal sides of a family, unlike Lower Burmese dialects:
Term | Upper Burmese | Lower Burmese | Myeik dialect |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
| ||
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 The youngest (paternal or maternal) aunt may be called ထွေးလေး [dwé lé], and the youngest paternal uncle ဘထွေး [ba̰ dwé].
In a testament to the power of media, the Yangon-based speech is gaining currency even in Upper Burma. Upper Burmese-specific usage, while historically and technically accurate, is increasingly viewed as distinctly rural or regional speech. In fact, some usages are already considered strictly regional Upper Burmese speech and are likely to die out. For example:
Term | Upper Burmese | Standard Burmese |
---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
| |
|
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In general, the male-centric names of old Burmese for familial terms have been replaced in standard Burmese with formerly female-centric terms, which are now used by both sexes. One holdover is the use of ညီ ('younger brother to a male') and မောင် ('younger brother to a female'). Terms like နောင် ('elder brother to a male') and နှမ ('younger sister to a male') now are used in standard Burmese only as part of compound words like ညီနောင် ('brothers') or မောင်နှမ ('brother and sister').
Reduplication
Reduplication is prevalent in Burmese and is used to intensify or weaken adjectives' meanings. For example, if ချော [tɕʰɔ́] "beautiful" is reduplicated, then the intensity of the adjective's meaning increases. Many Burmese words, especially adjectives with two syllables, such as လှပ [l̥a̰pa̰] "beautiful", when reduplicated (လှပ → လှလှပပ [l̥a̰l̥a̰ pa̰pa̰]) become adverbs. This is also true of some Burmese verbs and nouns (e.g. ခဏ 'a moment' → ခဏခဏ 'frequently'), which become adverbs when reduplicated.
Some nouns are also reduplicated to indicate plurality. For instance, ပြည် [pjì] ('country'), but when reduplicated to အပြည်ပြည် [əpjì pjì], it means "many countries", as in အပြည်ပြည်ဆိုင်ရာ [əpjì pjì sʰã̀ɪ̃ jà] ('international'). Another example is အမျိုး, which means "a kind", but the reduplicated form အမျိုးမျိုး means "multiple kinds".
A few measure words can also be reduplicated to indicate "one or the other":
- ယောက် (measure word for people) → တစ်ယောက်ယောက် ('someone')
- ခု (measure word for things) → တစ်ခုခု ('something')
Numerals
Burmese digits are traditionally written using a set of numerals unique to the Mon–Burmese script, although Arabic numerals are also used in informal contexts. The cardinal forms of Burmese numerals are primarily inherited from the Proto-Sino-Tibetan language, with cognates with modern-day Sino-Tibetan languages, including the Chinese and Tibetan. Numerals beyond 'ten million' are borrowed from Indic languages like Sanskrit or Pali. Similarly, the ordinal forms of primary Burmese numerals (i.e., from first to tenth) are directly borrowed from Pali. Ordinal numbers beyond ten are suffixed မြောက် (lit. 'to raise').
Burmese numerals follow the nouns they modify, with the exception of round numbers, which precede the nouns they modify. Moreover, numerals are subject to several tone sandhi and voicing rules that involve tone changes (low tone → creaky tone) and voicing shifts depending on the pronunciation of surrounding words. A more thorough explanation is found on Burmese numerals.
Romanization and transcription
There is no official romanization system for Burmese.[citation needed] There have been attempts to make one, but none have been successful. Replicating Burmese sounds in the Latin script is complicated. There is a Pali-based transcription system in existence, MLC Transcription System which was devised by the Myanmar Language Commission (MLC). However, it only transcribes sounds in formal Burmese and is based on the Burmese alphabet rather than the phonology.
Several colloquial transcription systems have been proposed, but none is overwhelmingly preferred over others.
Transcription of Burmese is not standardized, as seen in the varying English transcriptions of Burmese names. For instance, a Burmese personal name like ဝင်း [wɪ̃́] may be variously romanized as Win, Winn, Wyn, or Wynn, while ခိုင် [kʰã̀ɪ̃] may be romanized as Khaing, Khine, or Khain.
Computer fonts and standard keyboard layout

The Burmese alphabet can be entered from a standard QWERTY keyboard and is supported within the Unicode standard, meaning it can be read and written from most modern computers and smartphones.
Burmese has complex character rendering requirements, where tone markings and vowel modifications are noted using diacritics. These can be placed before consonants (as with ေ), above them (as with ိ) or even around them (as with ြ). These character clusters are built using multiple keystrokes. In particular, the inconsistent placement of diacritics as a feature of the language presents a conflict between an intuitive WYSIWYG typing approach, and a logical consonant-first storage approach.[clarification needed]
Since its introduction in 2007, the most popular Burmese font, Zawgyi, has been near-ubiquitous in Myanmar. Linguist Justin Watkins argues that the ubiquitous use of Zawgyi harms Myanmar languages, including Burmese, by preventing efficient sorting, searching, processing and analyzing Myanmar text through flexible diacritic ordering.
Zawgyi is not Unicode-compliant, but occupies the same code space as Unicode Myanmar font. As it is not defined as a standard character encoding, Zawgyi is not built in to any major operating systems as standard. However, allow for its position as the de facto (but largely undocumented) standard within the country, telcos and major smartphone distributors (such as Huawei and Samsung) ship phones with Zawgyi font overwriting standard Unicode-compliant fonts, which are installed on most internationally distributed hardware. Facebook also supports Zawgyi as an additional language encoding for their app and website. As a result, almost all SMS alerts (including those from telcos to their customers), social media posts and other web resources may be incomprehensible on these devices without the custom Zawgyi font installed at the operating system level. These may include devices purchased overseas, or distributed by companies who do not customize software for the local market.
Keyboards which have a Zawgyi keyboard layout printed on them are the most commonly available for purchase domestically.
Until recently,[when?] Unicode compliant fonts have been more difficult to type than Zawgyi, as they have a stricter, less forgiving and arguably less intuitive method for ordering diacritics. However, intelligent input software such as Keymagic and recent[when?] versions of smartphone soft-keyboards including Gboard and ttKeyboard allow for more forgiving input sequences and Zawgyi keyboard layouts which produce Unicode-compliant text.
A number of Unicode-compliant Burmese fonts exist. The national standard keyboard layout is known as the Myanmar3 layout, and it was published along with the Myanmar3 Unicode font. The layout, developed by the , has a smart input system to cover the complex structures of Burmese and related scripts.
In addition to the development of computer fonts and standard keyboard layout, there is still a lot of scope of research for the Burmese language, specifically for Natural Language Processing (NLP) areas like WordNet, Search Engine, development of parallel corpus for Burmese language as well as development of a formally standardized and dense domain-specific corpus of the Burmese language.
The Myanmar government has designated 1 October 2019 as "U-Day" to officially switch to Unicode. The full transition is estimated to take two years.
Example text
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Burmese:
လူတိုင်းသည် တူညီ လွတ်လပ်သော ဂုဏ်သိက္ခာဖြင့် လည်းကောင်း၊ တူညီလွတ်လပ်သော အခွင့်အရေးများဖြင့် လည်းကောင်း၊ မွေးဖွားလာသူများ ဖြစ်သည်။ ထိုသူတို့၌ ပိုင်းခြား ဝေဖန်တတ်သော ဉာဏ်နှင့် ကျင့်ဝတ် သိတတ်သော စိတ်တို့ရှိကြ၍ ထိုသူတို့သည် အချင်းချင်း မေတ္တာထား၍ ဆက်ဆံကျင့်သုံးသင့်၏။
The romanization of the text into the Latin alphabet:
lutuing:sany tu-nyi lwatlapsau: gun.sikhka.hprang. lany:kaung:| tu-nyi-lwatlapsau: ahkwang.-are:mya:hprang. lany:kaung:| mwe:hpwa:la.su-mya: hpracsany|| htuisutui.hnai puing:hkra: wehpantatsau: nyanhnang. kyang.wat si.tatsau: cittui.hri.kra.rwe htuisutui.sany ahkyang:hkyang: mettahta:rwe hcakhcamkyang.sum:sang.e||
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in English:
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
See also
Myanmar portal
Notes
- Burmese at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)
Myanmar at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)
Intha at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)
Taungyo at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)
Rakhine at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)
Marma at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)
Tavoyan dialects at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024) - Burmese at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)
- Constitution of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar (2008), Chapter XV, Provision 450
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- "Burmese". Ethnologue: Languages of the World. 2019. Archived from the original on 2019-08-20.
- "Myanmar Subnational Phone Surveys (MSPS) of the World Bank: Coverage, Reliability and Representativeness" (PDF). World Bank. April 2023.
The share of population that speaks Burmese as the most common language with other members of households is about 10 percentage points higher than independent estimates of Burmese languages speakers in Myanmar. However, these independent estimates of the share of Burmese speakers are dated as language information was not collected in the last census.
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- Aung-Thwin 2005, p. [page needed].
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- Bradley 2019.
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- Aung Bala 1981, pp. 81–99.
- Aung Zaw 2010, p. 2.
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- Taw Sein Ko 1924, pp. 68–70.
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- Houtman 1990, pp. 135–136.
- Wheatley & Tun 1999, p. 64.
- Unicode Consortium 2012, p. 370.
- Wheatley & Tun 1999, p. 65.
- lit. 'flying air vehicle'; the 1st (လေ) and 3rd (ပျံ) elements are native Burmese words.
- A calque of native Burmese and Pali words for 'name,' the 2nd element is from Burmese အမည်.
- Wheatley & Tun 1999.
- Wheatley & Tun 1999, p. 81.
- Wheatley & Tun 1999, p. 67.
- Wheatley & Tun 1999, p. 94.
- Wheatley & Tun 1999, p. 68.
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- Jones 1986, pp. 135–136.
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- Benedict 1948, pp. 184–191.
- Bradley, David (2021-08-23), Sidwell, Paul; Jenny, Mathias (eds.), "17 Typological profile of Burmic languages", The Languages and Linguistics of Mainland Southeast Asia: A comprehensive guide, De Gruyter Mouton, pp. 299–336, doi:10.1515/9783110558142-017, ISBN 978-3-11-055814-2, retrieved 2024-12-06
- Khin Min 1987.
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- "Chapter Politeness Distinctions in Pronouns". WALS Online. Retrieved 2024-12-07.
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- Müller, André; Weymuth, Rachel (2017-03-01). "How Society Shapes Language: Personal Pronouns in the Greater Burma Zone". Asiatische Studien - Études Asiatiques. 71 (1): 409–432. doi:10.1515/asia-2016-0021. ISSN 2235-5871.
- Müller, André; Weymuth, Rachel (2017-03-01). "How Society Shapes Language: Personal Pronouns in the Greater Burma Zone". Asiatische Studien - Études Asiatiques. 71 (1): 409–432. doi:10.1515/asia-2016-0021. ISSN 2235-5871.
- From Burmese သခင်ဘုရား, lit. "lord master"
- Müller, André; Weymuth, Rachel (2017-03-01). "How Society Shapes Language: Personal Pronouns in the Greater Burma Zone". Asiatische Studien - Études Asiatiques. 71 (1): 409–432. doi:10.1515/asia-2016-0021. ISSN 2235-5871.
- Bradley 1993, p. 157–160.
- Bradley 1993.
- Okell, John (2002). Burmese By Ear (PDF). The School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. ISBN 186013758X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-04-20. Retrieved 2013-10-20.
- Watkins, Justin. "Why we should stop Zawgyi in its tracks. It harms others and ourselves. Use Unicode!" (PDF).
- Hotchkiss, Griffin (23 March 2016). "Battle of the fonts". Frontier.
- "Facebook nods to Zawgyi and Unicode".
- "Keymagic Unicode Keyboard Input Customizer".
- "TTKeyboard – Myanmar Keyboard".
- Saini 2016, p. 8.
- "Unicode in, Zawgyi out: Modernity finally catches up in Myanmar's digital world". The Japan Times. Sep 27, 2019. Archived from the original on 2019-09-30. Retrieved 24 December 2019.
Oct. 1 is "U-Day," when Myanmar officially will adopt the new system. ... Microsoft and Apple helped other countries standardize years ago, but Western sanctions meant Myanmar lost out.
- Saw Yi Nanda (21 Nov 2019). "Myanmar switch to Unicode to take two years: app developer". The Myanmar Times. Archived from the original on 24 December 2019. Retrieved 24 December 2019.
- "Universal Declaration of Human Rights - Burmese/Myanmar". Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. Archived from the original on Dec 7, 2023.
- "Universal Declaration of Human Rights". United Nations. Archived from the original on Dec 13, 2023.
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{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Green, Antony D. (2005). "Word, foot, and syllable structure in Burmese". In J. Watkins (ed.). Studies in Burmese linguistics. Canberra: Pacific Linguistics. pp. 1–25. ISBN 978-0-85883-559-7.
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- Roop, D. Haigh (1972). An introduction to the Burmese writing system. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-01528-7.
- Taw Sein Ko (1924). Elementary handbook of the Burmese language. Rangoon: American Baptist Mission Press.
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External links




- Omniglot: Burmese Language
- Learn Burmese online
- Online Burmese lessons
- Burmese language resources (Archived 2009-09-01 at the Wayback Machine) – SOAS
- "E-books for children with narration in Burmese". Unite for Literacy library. Retrieved 2014-06-21.
- Myanmar Unicode and NLP Research Center Archived 2022-01-26 at the Wayback Machine
- Myanmar 3 font and keyboard
- Burmese online dictionary (Unicode)
- Ayar Myanmar online dictionary
- Ethnologue Map Main Spoken Languages of Myanmar Neighbor
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Burmese Burmese မ န မ ဘ သ MLCTS Mranma bhasa pronounced mjema ba8a is a Tibeto Burman language spoken in Myanmar where it is the official language lingua franca and the native language of the Bamar the country s largest ethnic group Burmese is also spoken by the indigenous tribes in Bangladesh s Chittagong Hill Tracts India s Mizoram Manipur Tripura states and the Burmese diaspora The Constitution of Myanmar officially refers to it as the Myanmar language in English though most English speakers continue to refer to the language as Burmese after Burma a name with co official status until 1989 see Names of Myanmar Burmese is the most widely spoken language in the country where it serves as the lingua franca In 2019 Burmese was spoken by 42 9 million people globally including by 32 9 million speakers as a first language and an additional 10 million speakers as a second language A 2023 World Bank survey found that 80 of the country s population speaks Burmese BurmeseMyanmar languageမ န မ ဘ သ Mranma bhasaPronunciation mjema ba8a Native toMyanmarThailandChina Dehong India Mizoram Manipur and Tripura Bangladesh Chittagong SpeakersL1 33 million 2007 L2 10 million no date Language familySino Tibetan Tibeto BurmanLolo BurmeseBurmishBurmeseEarly formsOld Burmese Middle BurmeseWriting systemMon Burmese script Burmese alphabet Burmese BrailleOfficial statusOfficial language in MyanmarRegulated byMyanmar Language CommissionLanguage codesISO 639 1 span class plainlinks my span ISO 639 2 span class plainlinks bur span a href wiki ISO 639 2 B class mw redirect title ISO 639 2 B B a span class plainlinks mya span a href wiki ISO 639 2 T class mw redirect title ISO 639 2 T T a ISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code mya class extiw title iso639 3 mya mya a inclusive code Individual codes a href https iso639 3 sil org code mya class extiw title iso639 3 mya mya a Myanmar a href https iso639 3 sil org code int class extiw title iso639 3 int int a Intha a href https iso639 3 sil org code tco class extiw title iso639 3 tco tco a Taungyo a href https iso639 3 sil org code rki class extiw title iso639 3 rki rki a Rakhine a href https iso639 3 sil org code rmz class extiw title iso639 3 rmz rmz a Marma a href https iso639 3 sil org code Tay class extiw title iso639 3 Tay Tay a Tavoyan dialectsGlottologmran1234Linguasphere77 AAA aAreas where Burmese is spoken dark blue signifies areas where it is more widely spoken This map does not indicate whether the language is a majority or minority This article contains Burmese script Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Burmese script source source source source source source source A Burmese speaker recorded in Taiwan Burmese is a tonal pitch register and syllable timed language largely monosyllabic and agglutinative with a subject object verb word order Burmese is distinguished from other major Southeast Asian languages by its extensive case marking system and rich morphological inventory It is a member of the Lolo Burmese grouping of the Sino Tibetan language family The Burmese alphabet is ultimately descended from a Brahmic script either the Kadamba or Pallava alphabets ClassificationBurmese belongs to the Southern Burmish branch of the Sino Tibetan languages Burmese is the most widely spoken of the non Sinitic Sino Tibetan languages Burmese was the fifth of the Sino Tibetan languages to develop a writing system after Classical Chinese Pyu Old Tibetan and Tangut Dialects The majority of Burmese speakers who live throughout the Irrawaddy River Valley use variants of standard Burmese while a minority speak non standard dialects found in the peripheral areas of the country These dialects include Tanintharyi Region Merguese Myeik Beik Tavoyan Dawei and Palaw Magway Region Yaw Shan State Intha Taungyo and Danu Arakanese in Rakhine State and Marma in Bangladesh are also sometimes considered dialects of Burmese and sometimes as separate languages Burmese dialects mostly share a common set of tones consonant clusters and written script Several Burmese dialects differ substantially from standard Burmese with respect to vocabulary lexical particles and rhymes Below is a summary of lexical similarity between major Burmese dialects Dialects Burmese Danu Intha Rakhine Taungyo Burmese 100 93 95 91 89 Danu 93 100 93 85 94 91 Intha 95 93 100 90 89 Rakhine 91 85 94 90 100 84 92 Taungyo 89 N A 89 84 92 100 Marma N A N A N A 85 N A Irrawaddy River valley Spoken Burmese is remarkably uniform among Burmese speakers particularly those living in the Irrawaddy valley all of whom use variants of Standard Burmese The standard dialect of Burmese the Mandalay Yangon dialect continuum originates from the Irrawaddy River valley Regional differences between speakers from Upper Burma e g Mandalay dialect called anya tha အည သ and speakers from Lower Burma e g Yangon dialect called auk tha အ က သ largely occur in vocabulary choice not in pronunciation Minor lexical and rhyme differences exist throughout the Irrawaddy River valley For instance for the term ဆ မ food offering to a monk Lower Burmese speakers use sʰʊ ɰ instead of sʰwaɰ which is the pronunciation used in Upper Burma The standard dialect is typified by the Yangon dialect because of the modern city s media influence and economic clout In the past the Mandalay dialect represented standard Burmese The most noticeable feature of the Mandalay dialect is its continued use of the first person pronoun က န တ kya nau tɕenɔ by both men and women In Yangon only male speakers use the same pronoun while female speakers use က န မ kya ma tɕema Moreover with regard to kinship terminology Upper Burmese speakers differentiate the maternal and paternal sides of a family whereas Lower Burmese speakers do not Mon has also influenced subtle grammatical differences between the varieties of Burmese spoken in Lower and Upper Burma In Lower Burmese varieties the verb ပ to give is colloquially used as a permissive causative marker similar to other Southeast Asian languages but unlike in most Tibeto Burman languages This usage is hardly used in Upper Burmese varieties and is considered a sub standard construct Outside the Irrawaddy basin More distinctive non standard varieties of Burmese emerge as one moves farther away from the Irrawaddy River valley toward peripheral areas of the country These varieties include the Yaw Palaw Myeik Merguese Tavoyan and Intha dialects Despite substantial vocabulary and pronunciation differences there is mutual intelligibility among most Burmese dialects especially with language convergence Dialects in Tanintharyi Region including Palaw Merguese and Tavoyan are especially conservative in comparison to Standard Burmese The Tavoyan and Intha dialects have preserved the l medial which is only found in Old Burmese inscriptions These dialects also often reduce the intensity of the glottal stop Beik has 250 000 speakers while Tavoyan has 400 000 The grammatical constructs of Burmese dialects in Southern Myanmar show greater Mon influence than Standard Burmese The most pronounced feature of the Arakanese language of Rakhine State is its retention of the ɹ sound which has become j in standard Burmese Moreover Arakanese features a variety of vowel differences including the merger of the ဧ e and ဣ i vowels Hence a word like blood သ is pronounced 8we in standard Burmese and 8wi in Arakanese HistoryThe Burmese language s early forms include Old Burmese and Middle Burmese Old Burmese dates from the 11th to the 16th century Pagan to Ava dynasties Middle Burmese from the 16th to the 18th century Toungoo to early Konbaung dynasties modern Burmese from the mid 18th century to the present While Burmese phonology has evolved significantly word order grammatical structure and vocabulary have remained markedly stable well into Modern Burmese with the exception of lexical content e g function words Old Burmese The Myazedi inscription dated to AD 1113 is the oldest surviving stone inscription of the Burmese language The earliest attested form of the Burmese language is called Old Burmese dating to the 11th and 12th century stone inscriptions of Pagan The earliest evidence of the Burmese alphabet is dated to 1035 while a casting made in the 18th century of an old stone inscription points to 984 19 Owing to the linguistic prestige of Old Pyu in the Pagan Kingdom era Old Burmese borrowed a substantial corpus of vocabulary from Pali via the Pyu language These indirect borrowings can be traced back to orthographic idiosyncrasies in these loanwords such as the Burmese word to worship which is spelt ပ ဇ pujo instead of ပ ဇ puja as would be expected by the original Pali orthography In the mid 15th century bilingual Pali Burmese texts called nissaya န ဿယ emerged These texts played a significant role in shaping the standard language leading Burmese postpositional markers to be reinterpreted as equivalents of Pali inflections giving them new grammatical roles that were compatible with their original use but not inherent to them Over time these markers became integral to the morphological structure of Burmese and were seen as more obligatory in literary Burmese and to a lesser extent colloquial Burmese Middle Burmese The transition to Middle Burmese occurred in the 16th century The transition to Middle Burmese included phonological changes e g mergers of sound pairs that were distinct in Old Burmese as well as accompanying changes in the underlying orthography From the 1500s onward Burmese kingdoms saw substantial gains in the populace s literacy rate which manifested itself in greater participation of laymen in scribing and composing legal and historical documents domains that were traditionally the domain of Buddhist monks and drove the ensuing proliferation of Burmese literature both in terms of genres and works 20 During this period the Burmese alphabet began employing cursive style circular letters typically used in palm leaf manuscripts as opposed to the traditional square block form letters used in earlier periods 20 The orthographic conventions used in written Burmese today can largely be traced back to Middle Burmese Modern Burmese Modern Burmese emerged in the mid 18th century By this time male literacy in Burma stood at nearly 50 which enabled the wide circulation of legal texts royal chronicles and religious texts 20 A major reason for the uniformity of the Burmese language was the near universal presence of Buddhist monasteries called kyaung in Burmese villages These kyaung served as the foundation of the pre colonial monastic education system which fostered uniformity of the language throughout the Upper Irrawaddy valley the traditional homeland of Burmese speakers The 1891 Census of India conducted five years after the annexation of the entire Konbaung Kingdom found that the former kingdom had an unusually high male literacy rate of 62 5 for Upper Burmans aged 25 and above For all of British Burma the literacy rate was 49 for men and 5 5 for women by contrast British India more broadly had a male literacy rate of 8 44 The expansion of the Burmese language into Lower Burma also coincided with the emergence of Modern Burmese As late as the mid 1700s Mon an Austroasiatic language was the principal language of Lower Burma employed by the Mon people who inhabited the region Lower Burma s shift from Mon to Burmese was accelerated by the Burmese speaking Konbaung Dynasty s victory over the Mon speaking Restored Hanthawaddy Kingdom in 1757 By 1830 an estimated 90 of the population in Lower Burma self identified as Burmese speaking Bamars huge swaths of former Mon speaking territory from the Irrawaddy Delta to upriver in the north spanning Bassein now Pathein and Rangoon now Yangon to Tharrawaddy Toungoo Prome now Pyay and Henzada now Hinthada were now Burmese speaking 20 The language shift has been ascribed to a combination of population displacement intermarriage and voluntary changes in self identification among increasingly Mon Burmese bilingual populations in the region 20 Standardized tone marking in written Burmese was not achieved until the 18th century From the 19th century onward orthographers created spellers to reform Burmese spelling because of ambiguities that arose over transcribing sounds that had been merged British rule saw continued efforts to standardize Burmese spelling through dictionaries and spellers Britain s gradual annexation of Burma throughout the 19th century in addition to concomitant economic and political instability in Upper Burma e g increased tax burdens from the Burmese crown British rice production incentives etc also accelerated the migration of Burmese speakers from Upper Burma into Lower Burma British rule in Burma eroded the strategic and economic importance of the Burmese language Burmese was effectively subordinated to the English language in the colonial educational system especially in higher education In the 1930s the Burmese language saw a linguistic revival precipitated by the establishment of an independent University of Rangoon in 1920 and the inception of a Burmese language major at the university by Pe Maung Tin modeled on Anglo Saxon language studies at the University of Oxford Student protests in December of that year triggered by the introduction of English into matriculation examinations fueled growing demand for Burmese to become the medium of education in British Burma a short lived but symbolic parallel system of national schools that taught in Burmese was subsequently launched The role and prominence of the Burmese language in public life and institutions was championed by Burmese nationalists intertwined with their demands for greater autonomy and independence from the British in the lead up to the independence of Burma in 1948 The 1948 Constitution of Burma prescribed Burmese as the official language of the newly independent nation The Burma Translation Society and Rangoon University s Department of Translation and Publication were established in 1947 and 1948 respectively with the joint goal of modernizing the Burmese language in order to replace English across all disciplines Anti colonial sentiment throughout the early post independence era led to a reactionary switch from English to Burmese as the national medium of education a process that was accelerated by the Burmese Way to Socialism In August 1963 the socialist Union Revolutionary Government established the Literary and Translation Commission the immediate precursor of the Myanmar Language Commission to standardize Burmese spelling diction composition and terminology The latest spelling authority named the Myanma Salonpaung Thatpon Kyan မ န မ စ လ ပ င သတ ပ က မ was compiled in 1978 by the commission RegistersDiglossia Burmese is a diglossic language with two distinguishable registers or diglossic varieties Literary High H form မ န မ စ mranma ca the high variety formal and written used in literature formal writing newspapers radio broadcasts and formal speeches Spoken Low L form မ န မ စက mranma ca ka the low variety informal and spoken used in daily conversation television comics and literature informal writing The literary form of Burmese retains archaic and conservative grammatical structures and modifiers including affixes and pronouns no longer used in the colloquial form Most verbs and some nouns also have longer forms in literary Burmese Literary Burmese which has not changed significantly since the 13th century is the register of Burmese taught in schools Case marking is highly developed and consistently used in literary Burmese covering markers for subjects direct objects indirect objects the ablative and locative Spoken Burmese also uses case markers but does so less consistently particularly for subjects and direct object marking The equivalent affixes used in Literary and Spoken Burmese are totally unrelated to each other Examples of this phenomenon include the following lexical terms Gloss Literary HIGH Spoken LOW this pronoun ဤ i ဒ di that pronoun ထ htui ဟ hui at case hnai n aɪʔ မ hma m a plural suffix မ mya တ twe possessive case i ရ re and conjunction န င hnang LOW န ne if conjunction လ င hlyang ရင rang Historically the literary register was preferred for written Burmese on the grounds that the spoken style lacks gravity authority dignity In the mid 1960s some Burmese writers attempted to abandon the literary form in favour of the spoken vernacular form Some Burmese linguists such as Minn Latt a Czech academic proposed moving away from the high form of Burmese altogether Although the literary form is heavily used in written and official contexts literary and scholarly works radio news broadcasts and novels the recent trend has been to accommodate the spoken form in informal written contexts Nowadays television news broadcasts comics and commercial publications use the spoken form or a combination of the spoken and simpler less ornate formal forms Burmese uses also distinct spoken and written forms for question pronouns The following examples demonstrate significant differences in the pronouns verbs and other markers used between the literary and spoken forms contrasts in bold Literary Spoken Gloss မည သ ဘယ သ whoမ တ PLက TOPမ မ က ယ my ရ POSအသက လမ က င lifelineဆက လက ဆက continueပ giveန CONTသည တ POSခလ တ plugက OBJဖ တ ခ ဖ တ pullက PLမည မယ FUTနည လ Q Literary မည သ မ က မ မ အသက လမ က င ဆက လက ပ န သည ခလ တ က ဖ တ ခ က မည နည Spoken ဘယ သ တ က ယ ရ ဆက တ ဖ တ မယ လ Gloss who PL TOP my POS lifeline continue give CONT POS plug OBJ pull PL FUT Q Who will discontinue my life support Literary Spoken Gloss ရ စ လ လ အရ အခင 8888 Uprisingဖ စ occurသ အခ က တ က whenလ peopleဦ ရ အယ က MW၃၀၀၀ 3 000မ လ က approximatelyသ ဆ သ die Vခ PASTက PLသည တယ FP Literary ရ စ လ လ အရ အခင ဖ စ သ အခ က လ ဦ ရ ၃၀၀၀ မ သ ဆ ခ က သည Spoken တ က အယ က လ က သ တယ Gloss 8888 Uprising occur when people MW 3 000 approximately die V PAST PL FP When the 8888 Uprising took place approximately 3 000 people died Honorific terms Burmese has politeness levels and honorifics that take into account the speaker s status and age in relation to the audience The suffix ပ pa is frequently used after a verb to express politeness Moreover Burmese pronouns relay varying degrees of deference or respect Polite speech e g addressing teachers officials or elders employs feudal era third person pronouns or kinship terms in lieu of first and second person pronouns Honorific vocabulary is used in Burmese to distinguish Buddhist clergy from the laity householders especially when speaking to or about bhikkhus monks Distinct honorific vocabulary often euphemistic in nature is also employed to distinguish commoners from royals The honorific markers တ daw and တ မ dawmu are suffixed to nouns and verbs respectively in relation to Buddhist clergy and royals Lexical items from standard Burmese royal vocabulary and clerical vocabulary are shown side by side in the table below Gloss Standard Polite Religious Royal eat verb စ ca သ ဆ င sum hcaung ဘ ဉ ပ bhuny pe ပ တ တယ pwai dau te sleep verb အ ပ ip က န kyin စက တ ခ cak tau khau die verb သ se က ယ လ န kwe lwan ပ တ မ pyam tau mu နတ ရ စ nat rwa cam father အဖ a hpe ဖခင hpa hkang ခမည တ hka many tau live dwell verb န ne န ထ င ne htuing က န kin စ camVocabularyBurmese has primarily inherited its monosyllabic vocabulary from Sino Tibetan stock The language has also adopted polysyllabic loanwords from Indo European languages like Pali and English as well as sesquisyllabic words from Mon an Austroasiatic language Burmese loanwords are overwhelmingly in the form of nouns Of the Indo European languages Pali the liturgical language of Theravada Buddhism had the most profound influence on enriching the Burmese vocabulary Burmese has readily adopted words of Pali origin this may be due to phonotactic similarities between the two languages and the Burmese script s inherent ability to reproduce Pali spellings with complete accuracy Pali loanwords are often related to religion government arts and science non primary source needed Burmese loanwords from Pali primarily take four forms Direct loan direct import of Pali words with no alteration in orthography Abbreviated loan import of Pali words with accompanied syllable reduction and alteration in orthography usually by means of a placing a diacritic called athat အသတ llit nonexistence atop the last letter in the syllable to suppress the consonant s inherent vowel Double loan adoption of two different terms derived from the same Pali word Hybrid loan e g neologisms or calques construction of compounds combining native Burmese words with Pali or combine Pali words Category Gloss Burmese Pali Direct loan life ဇ ဝ jiva ဇ ဝ jiva life ဘဝ bhava ဘဝ bhava music ဂ တ gita ဘဝ gita Abbreviated loan karma က kam ကမ မ kamma dawn အရ ဏ aruṇ အရ ဏ aruṇa merit က သ လ kusuil က သလ kusala Double loan arrogance မ န mana မ န mana pride မ န man strength ဗလ bala ဗလ bala leader ဗ လ buil Hybrid loan airplane လ ယ ဉ ပ leyanpyaṃ ယ ဉ from yana vehicle name န မည namann န မ from nama name Burmese has also adapted numerous words from Mon traditionally spoken by the Mon people of Lower Burma Most Mon loanwords are so well assimilated that they are not distinguished as loanwords as Burmese and Mon were used interchangeably for several centuries in pre colonial Burma Mon loans are often related to flora fauna administration textiles foods boats crafts architecture and music As a natural consequence of British rule in Burma English has been another major source of vocabulary especially with regard to technology measurements and modern institutions English loanwords tend to take one of three forms Direct loan adoption of an English word adapted to the Burmese phonology democracy English democracy Burmese ဒ မ ကရ စ Neologism or calque translation of an English word using native Burmese constituent words human rights English human rights Burmese လ အခ င အရ လ human အခ င အရ rights Hybrid loan construction of compound words by joining native Burmese words to English words to sign ဆ င ထ sʰa ɪ tʰo ဆ င English sign ထ native Burmese inscribe To a lesser extent Burmese has also imported words from Sanskrit religion Hindi food administration and shipping and Chinese games and food Burmese has also imported a handful of words from other European languages such as Portuguese Here is a sample of loan words found in Burmese Gloss Burmese Source suffering ဒ က ခ dowʔkʰa Pali dukkha radio ရ ဒ ယ ɹedijo English radio crab ကဏန ɡenaɴ Mon ဂတ flatter ဖ လ ဖ pʰɔ laɴpʰa Hokkien 扶𡳞脬 pho lan pha wife ဇန zeni Sanskrit जन jani noodle ခ က ဆ kʰaʊʔ sʰwɛ Shan ၶဝ သ kʰau sʰɔi foot unit ပ pe Portuguese pe flag အလ ela Arabic علم ʿalam storeroom ဂ ဒ င ɡoda ʊ Malay gudang Since the end of British rule the Burmese government has attempted to limit usage of Western loans especially from English by coining new words neologisms For instance for the word television Burmese publications are mandated to use the term ရ ပ မ င သ က lit see picture hear sound in lieu of တယ လ ဗ ရ င a direct English transliteration Another example is the word vehicle which is officially ယ ဉ jɪ derived from Pali but က ka from English car in spoken Burmese Some previously common English loanwords have fallen out of use with the adoption of indigenous neologisms An example is the word university formerly ယ န ဗ စတ junibaseti from English university now တက ကသ လ tɛʔket o a Pali derived neologism recently created by the Burmese government and derived from the Pali spelling of Taxila တက ကသ လ Takkasila an ancient university town in modern day Pakistan Some words in Burmese may have many synonyms each having certain usages such as formal literary colloquial and poetic One example is the word moon which can be လ la native Tibeto Burman စန ဒ စန sanda sa derivatives of Pali canda moon or သ တ t ɔ da Sanskrit PhonologyConsonants The consonants of Burmese are as follows Consonant phonemes Bilabial Dental Alveolar Post al Palatal Velar Laryngeal Nasal voiced m n ɲ ŋ voiceless m n ɲ ŋ Stop Affricate voiced b d dʒ ɡ voiceless p t tʃ k ʔ aspirated pʰ tʰ tʃʰ kʰ Fricative voiced d d d d z voiceless 8 t 8 t s ʃ aspirated sʰ h Approximant voiced l j w voiceless l ʍ According to Jenny amp San San Hnin Tun 2016 15 contrary to their use of symbols 8 and d consonants of သ are dental stops t d rather than fricatives 8 d or affricates These phonemes alongside sʰ are prone to merger with t d s An alveolar ɹ can occur as an alternate of j in some loanwords The final nasal ɰ is the value of the four native final nasals မ m န n ဉ ɲ င ŋ as well as the retroflex ဏ ɳ used in Pali loans and nasalisation mark anusvara demonstrated here above ka က က which most often stands in for a homorganic nasal word medially as in တ ခ tankha door and တ တ tanta bridge or else replaces final m မ in both Pali and native vocabulary especially after the OB vowel u e g င ngam salty သ thoum three use and ဆ soum end It does not however apply to ည which is never realised as a nasal but rather as an open front vowel iː eː or ɛː The final nasal is usually realised as nasalisation of the vowel It may also allophonically appear as a homorganic nasal before stops For example in moʊɰ daɪɰ storm which is pronounced mo ũnda ĩ Vowels The vowels of Burmese are Vowel phonemes Monophthongs Diphthongs Front Central Back Front offglide Back offglide Close i u Close mid e e o ei ou Open mid ɛ ɔ Open a ai au The monophthongs e o e ɛ and ɔ occur only in open syllables those without a syllable coda the diphthongs ei ou ai and au occur only in closed syllables those with a syllable coda e only occurs in a minor syllable and is the only vowel that is permitted in a minor syllable see below The close vowels i and u and the close portions of the diphthongs are somewhat mid centralized ɪ ʊ in closed syllables i e before ɰ and ʔ Thus န စ n iʔ two is phonetically n ɪʔ and က င tɕaũ cat is phonetically tɕaʊ Tones Burmese is a tonal language which means phonemic contrasts can be made on the basis of the tone of a vowel In Burmese these contrasts involve not only pitch but also phonation intensity loudness duration and vowel quality However some linguists consider Burmese a pitch register language like Shanghainese Spoken Burmese exhibits tone sandhi in the form of a shift from a low to an induced creaky tone to indicate possession There are four contrastive tones in Burmese In the following table the tones are shown marked on the vowel a as an example Tone Burmese IPA shown on a Symbol shown on a Phonation Duration Intensity Pitch Low န မ သ aː a modal medium low low often slightly rising High တက သ aː a sometimes slightly breathy long high high often with a fall before a pause Creaky သက သ aˀ a tense or creaky sometimes with lax glottal stop medium high high often slightly falling Checked တ င သ ăʔ aʔ centralized vowel quality final glottal stop short high high in citation can vary in context For example the following words are distinguished from each other only on the basis of tone Low ခ kʰa shake High ခ kʰa be bitter Creaky ခ kʰa to wait upon to attend on Checked ခတ kʰaʔ to beat to strike In syllables ending with ɰ the checked tone is excluded Low ခ kʰaɰ undergo High ခန kʰaɰ dry up usually a river Creaky ခန kʰa ɰ appoint In spoken Burmese some linguists classify two real tones there are four nominal tones transcribed in written Burmese high applied to words that terminate with a stop or check high rising pitch and ordinary unchecked and non glottal words with falling or lower pitch with those tones encompassing a variety of pitches The ordinary tone consists of a range of pitches Linguist L F Taylor concluded that conversational rhythm and euphonic intonation possess importance not found in related tonal languages and that its tonal system is now in an advanced state of decay Spoken Burmese exhibits tone sandhi in the form of a shift from a low to an induced creaky tone to indicate possession and to pronounce low toned numerals in conjunction with other digits For the former this does not occur in literary Burmese which uses ḭ as postpositional marker for possessive case instead of ရ jɛ Examples include the following င ŋa gt gt င ŋa င gt င ŋa gt ŋa me gt my အမ ʔeme gt gt အမ ʔemḛ အမ gt အမ ʔeme gt ʔemḛ mother gt mother s ဆယ sʰɛ gt gt ဆယ တစ sʰɛ tɪʔ ဆယ gt ဆယ တစ sʰɛ gt sʰɛ tɪʔ ten gt eleven Syllable structure The syllable structure of Burmese is C G V V C which is to say the onset consists of a consonant optionally followed by a glide and the rime consists of a monophthong alone a monophthong with a consonant or a diphthong with a consonant The only consonants that can stand in the coda are ʔ and ɰ Some representative words are Structure Example IPA Meaning CV မယ mɛ title for young women CVC မက mɛʔ to crave CGV မ mje earth CGVC မ က mjɛʔ eye CVVC မ င maʊɰ term of address for young men CGVVC မ င mjaʊɰ ditch A minor syllable has some restrictions It contains e as its only vowel It must be an open syllable no coda consonant It cannot bear tone It has only a simple C onset no glide after the consonant It must not be the final syllable of the word The Mon language is attributed with the development of frequent sesquisyllabic reduction in Burmese words a pattern that does not appear in other Burmic languages Some examples of words containing minor syllables ခလ တ kʰe loʊʔ switch button ပလ pe lwe flute သရ 8e jɔ mock ကလက ke lɛʔ be wanton ထမင ရည tʰe me je rice water Writing systemSampling of various Burmese script styles The Burmese alphabet consists of 33 letters and 12 vowels and is written from left to right It requires no spaces between words although modern writing usually contains spaces after each clause to enhance readability Characterized by its circular letters and diacritics the script is an abugida with all letters having an inherent vowel အ a a or e The consonants are arranged into six consonant groups called ဝဂ vag based on articulation like other Brahmi scripts Tone markings and vowel modifications are written as diacritics placed to the left right top and bottom of letters Orthographic changes subsequent to shifts in phonology such as the merging of the l and ɹ medials rather than transformations in Burmese grammatical structure and phonology which by contrast has remained stable between Old Burmese and modern Burmese clarification needed For example during the Pagan era the medial l လ was transcribed in writing which has been replaced by medials j and ɹ in modern Burmese e g school in old Burmese က လ င klɔŋ က င tɕa ʊ in modern Burmese Likewise written Burmese has preserved all nasalized finals n m ŋ which have merged to ɰ in spoken Burmese The exception is ɲ which in spoken Burmese can be one of many open vowels i e ɛ Similarly other consonantal finals s p t k have been reduced to ʔ Similar mergers are seen in other Sino Tibetan languages like Shanghainese and to a lesser extent Cantonese Written Burmese dates to the early Pagan period Burmese orthography originally followed a square block format but the cursive format took hold from the 17th century when increased literacy and the resulting explosion of Burmese literature led to the wider use of palm leaves and folded paper known as parabaiks ပ ရပ က GrammarThe basic word order of the Burmese language in syntactic construction is subject object verb Pronouns in Burmese vary according to the gender and status of the audience although pronouns are often omitted Affixes are used to convey information Verbs are almost always suffixed and nouns declined Case affixes Burmese is an agglutinative language with an extensive case system in which nouns are suffixed to determine their syntactic function in a sentence or clause Sometimes the case markers are different between the two registers The case markers are High register Low register Subject thi သည ka က hma မ ha ဟ ka က Object ko က ko က Recipient a အ Allative tho သ Ablative hma မ ka က ka က Locative hnai hma မ twin တ င hma မ Comitative hnin န င ne န Instrumental hpyin ဖ င hnin န င Possessive i ye ရ Adjectives Burmese does not have adjectives per se Rather it has verbs that carry the meaning to be X where X is an English adjective These verbs can modify a noun by means of the suffix တ tai dɛ in colloquial Burmese literary form သ sau t ɔ which is suffixed as follows Literary Spoken Gloss ခ ခ beautifulသ တ POSလ လ person Literary ခ သ လ Spoken ခ တ လ Gloss beautiful POS person beautiful person Adjectives may also form a compound with the noun e g လ ခ lu hkyau lu tɕʰɔ person be beautiful Comparatives are usually ordered X ထက ပ htak pui tʰɛʔ po adjective where X is the object being compared to Superlatives are indicated with the prefix အ a ʔe adjective ဆ hcum zṍʊ Verbs The roots of Burmese verbs almost always have affixes which convey information like tense aspect intention politeness mood etc Many of these affixes also have formal literary and colloquial equivalents In fact the only time in which no suffix is attached to a verb is in imperative commands The most commonly used verb affixes and their usage are shown below with an example verb root စ ca sa to eat Alone the statement စ is imperative The affix တယ tai dɛ literary form သည sany d i can be viewed as an affix marking the present tense and or a factual statement စ ca saတယ tai dɛ စ တယ ca tai sa dɛ I eat The affix ခ hkai ɡɛ denotes that the action took place in the past However this affix is not always necessary to indicate the past tense such that it can convey the same information without it But to emphasize that the action happened before another event that is also currently being discussed the affix becomes imperative The affix တယ tai dɛ in this case denotes a factual statement rather than the present tense စ ca saခ hkai ɡɛ တယ tai dɛ စ ခ တယ ca hkai tai sa ɡɛ dɛ I ate The affix န ne ne is used to denote an action in progression It is equivalent to the English ing စ ca saန ne neတယ tai dɛ စ န တယ ca ne tai sa ne dɛ I am eating This affix ပ pri bji which is used when an action that had been expected to be performed by the subject is now finally being performed has no equivalent in English So in the above example if someone had been expecting the subject to eat and the subject has finally started eating the affix ပ is used as follows စ ca se စ ca saပ pri bji စ စ ပ ca ca pri se sa bji I am now eating The affix မယ mai mɛ literary form မည many mji is used to indicate the future tense or an action which is yet to be performed စ ca saမယ mai mɛ စ မယ ca mai sa mɛ I will eat The affix တ tau dɔ is used when the action is about to be performed immediately when used in conjunction with မယ Therefore it could be termed as the immediate future tense suffix စ ca saတ tau dɔ မယ mai mɛ စ တ မယ ca tau mai sa dɔ mɛ I m going to eat right away When တ is used alone however it is imperative စ ca saတ tau dɔ စ တ ca tau sa dɔ eat now Verbs are negated by the prefix မ ma me Generally speaking there are other suffixes on verb along with မ The verb suffix န nai nɛ literary form န င hnang n ɪ indicates a command မစ ma ca mesaန nai nɛ မစ န ma ca nai mesa nɛ don t eat The verb suffix ဘ bhu bu indicates a statement မစ ma ca mesaဘ bhu bu မစ ဘ ma ca bhu mesa bu I don t eat Nouns Nouns in Burmese are pluralized by suffixing တ twe dwe or twe if the word ends in a glottal stop in colloquial Burmese or မ mya mja in formal Burmese The suffix တ tou to which indicates a group of persons or things is also suffixed to the modified noun An example is below Literary Spoken Both Gloss မ စ မ စ မ စ riverမ တ တ PL Literary မ စ မ Spoken မ စ တ Both မ စ တ Gloss river PL rivers Plural suffixes are not used when the noun is quantified with a number ကလ hka le kʰele child၅ nga ŋa fiveယ က yauk jaʊʔ CL ကလ ၅ ယ က hka le nga yauk kʰele ŋa jaʊʔ child five CL five children Although Burmese does not have grammatical gender e g masculine or feminine nouns a distinction is made between the sexes especially in animals and plants by means of suffix particles Nouns are masculinized with the following suffixes ထ hti tʰi ဖ hpa pʰa or ဖ hpui pʰo depending on the noun and feminized with the suffix မ ma ma Examples of usage are below က င ထ kraung hti tɕa ʊ tʰi male cat က င မ kraung ma tɕa ʊ ma female cat က က ဖ krak hpa tɕɛʔ pʰa rooster cock ထန ဖ htan hpui tʰa pʰo male toddy palm plant Numerical classifiers Burmese uses numerical classifiers also called measure words when nouns are counted or quantified This is similar to neighbouring languages like Thai Bengali and Chinese This approximately equates to English expressions such as two slices of bread or a cup of coffee Classifiers are required when counting nouns so ကလ ၅ hka le nga kʰele ŋa lit child five is incorrect since the measure word for people ယ က yauk jaʊʔ is missing it needs to suffix the numeral The standard word order of quantified words is quantified noun numeral adjective classifier except in round numbers numbers that end in zero in which the word order is flipped where the quantified noun precedes the classifier quantified noun classifier numeral adjective The only exception to this rule is the number 10 which follows the standard word order Measurements of time such as hour န ရ day ရက or month လ do not require classifiers Below are some of the most commonly used classifiers in Burmese Burmese MLC IPA Usage Remarks ယ က yauk jaʊʔ for people Used in informal context ဦ u ʔu for people Used in formal context and also used for monks and nuns ပ pa ba for people Used exclusively for monks and nuns of the Buddhist order က င kaung ka ʊ for animals ခ hku kʰṵ general classifier Used with almost all nouns except for animate objects လ lum lṍʊ for round objects ပ pra pja for flat objects စ cu sṵ for groups Can be zṵ Affixes The Burmese language makes prominent usage of affixes called ပစ စည in Burmese which are untranslatable words that are suffixed or prefixed to words to indicate tense aspect case formality etc For example စမ sa is a suffix used to indicate the imperative mood While လ ပ ပ work suffix indicating politeness does not indicate the imperative လ ပ စမ ပ work suffix indicating imperative mood suffix indicating politeness does Affixes are often stacked next to each other Some affixes modify the word s part of speech Among the most prominent of these is the prefix အ e which is prefixed to verbs and adjectives to form nouns or adverbs For instance the word ဝင means to enter but combined with အ it means entrance အဝင Moreover in colloquial Burmese there is a tendency to omit the second အ in words that follow the pattern အ noun adverb အ noun adverb like အဆ က အအ which is pronounced esʰaʊʔ u and formally pronounced esʰaʊʔ eo ʊ Pronouns Burmese exhibits pronoun avoidance where pronouns are avoided for politeness In Burmese speakers account for social distinctions linguistically reflecting gender relative age kinship social status and intimacy Burmese uses negative politeness whereby speakers avoid directly addressing people Instead Burmese relies on status and kinship terms titles personal names and other terms of address rather than regular pronouns Burmese kinship terms are commonly substituted as pronouns For example an older person may use ဒ လ dau le dɔ le aunt or ဦ လ u lei ʔu le uncle to refer to himself while a younger person may use either သ sa t a son or သမ sa mi t emi daughter Burmese has developed an elaborate hierarchical system of pronouns that are grammatically underspecified but highly marked for the complex relation between speaker and addressee according to their relative position in the society In Burmese the polite forms of first person pronouns က န တ kya nau tɕenɔ lit royal slave for males and က န မ kya ma tɕema lit female slave for females humble the speaker while the polite forms of second person pronouns မင min mɪ ɴ lit lordship ခင ဗ khang bya kʰemja lit master lord or ရ င hrang ʃɪ ɴ lit ruler master elevate the addressee The original pronouns င nga ŋa I me and နင nang nɪ you have been relegated to use with people of higher or equivalent status although most speakers prefer to use third person pronouns Burmese also uses case markers to mark subject pronouns က ɡa in colloquial သည t i in formal and object pronouns က ɡo in colloquial အ a in formal although these are generally dropped in spoken Burmese The basic pronouns are Person Singular Plural Informal Formal Informal Formal First person င nga ŋa က န တ kywan to tɕenɔ က န မ kywan ma tɕema င ဒ nga tui ŋa do က န တ တ kywan to tui tɕenɔ do က န မတ kywan ma tui tɕema do Second person နင nang nɪ မင mang mɪ ခင ဗ khang bya kʰemja ရ င hrang ʃɪ နင ဒ nang tui nɪ n do ခင ဗ တ khang bya tui kʰemja do ရ င တ hrang tui ʃɪ n do Third person သ su t u အ သင a sang ʔe t ɪ သ ဒ su tui t u do သင တ sang tui t ɪ do The basic particle to indicate plurality is တ tui colloquial ဒ dui Used by male speakers Used by female speakers Other pronouns are reserved for speaking with bhikkhus Buddhist monks When speaking to a bhikkhu pronouns like ဘ န ဘ န bhun bhun from ဘ န က phun kri monk ဆရ တ chara dau sʰejadɔ royal teacher and အရ င ဘ ရ a hrang bhu ra ʔeʃɪ pʰeja your lordship are used depending on their status ဝ When referring to oneself terms like တပည တ ta pany tau royal disciple or ဒက da ka deɡa donor are used When speaking to a monk the following pronouns are used Person Singular Informal Formal First person တပည တ ta paey tau ဒက da ka deɡa Second person ဘ န ဘ န bhun bhun pʰṍʊ pʰṍʊ ဦ ပဉ စင u pasang ʔu bezin အရ င ဘ ရ a hrang bhu ra ʔeʃɪ pʰeja ဆရ တ chara dau sʰejadɔ The particle ma မ is suffixed for women Typically reserved for the chief monk of a kyaung monastery Kinship terms Kinship terms vary across Burmese dialects Upper Burmese dialects still differentiate maternal and paternal sides of a family unlike Lower Burmese dialects Term Upper Burmese Lower Burmese Myeik dialect Paternal aunt older Paternal aunt younger အရ က ʔeji dʑi or ji dʑi အရ လ ʔeji le or ji le ဒ က dɔ dʑi or tɕi tɕi ဒ လ dɔ le မ က mḭ dʑi မ ငယ mḭ ŋɛ Maternal aunt older Maternal aunt younger ဒ က dɔ dʑi or tɕi tɕi ဒ လ dɔ le Paternal uncle older Paternal uncle younger ဘက ba dʑi ဘလ ba le 1 ဘက ba dʑi ဦ လ ʔu le ဖက pʰa dʑi ဖငယ pʰa ŋɛ Maternal uncle older Maternal uncle younger ဦ က ʔu dʑi ဦ လ ʔu le 1 The youngest paternal or maternal aunt may be called ထ လ dwe le and the youngest paternal uncle ဘထ ba dwe In a testament to the power of media the Yangon based speech is gaining currency even in Upper Burma Upper Burmese specific usage while historically and technically accurate is increasingly viewed as distinctly rural or regional speech In fact some usages are already considered strictly regional Upper Burmese speech and are likely to die out For example Term Upper Burmese Standard Burmese Elder brother to a male Elder brother to a female န င na ʊ အစ က ʔeko အစ က ʔeko Younger brother to a male Younger brother to a female ည ɲi မ င ma ʊ Elder sister to a male Elder sister to a female အစ မ ʔema Younger sister to a male Younger sister to a female န မ n ema ည မ ɲi ma ည မ ɲi ma In general the male centric names of old Burmese for familial terms have been replaced in standard Burmese with formerly female centric terms which are now used by both sexes One holdover is the use of ည younger brother to a male and မ င younger brother to a female Terms like န င elder brother to a male and န မ younger sister to a male now are used in standard Burmese only as part of compound words like ည န င brothers or မ င န မ brother and sister Reduplication Reduplication is prevalent in Burmese and is used to intensify or weaken adjectives meanings For example if ခ tɕʰɔ beautiful is reduplicated then the intensity of the adjective s meaning increases Many Burmese words especially adjectives with two syllables such as လ ပ l a pa beautiful when reduplicated လ ပ လ လ ပပ l a l a pa pa become adverbs This is also true of some Burmese verbs and nouns e g ခဏ a moment ခဏခဏ frequently which become adverbs when reduplicated Some nouns are also reduplicated to indicate plurality For instance ပ ည pji country but when reduplicated to အပ ည ပ ည epji pji it means many countries as in အပ ည ပ ည ဆ င ရ epji pji sʰa ɪ ja international Another example is အမ which means a kind but the reduplicated form အမ မ means multiple kinds A few measure words can also be reduplicated to indicate one or the other ယ က measure word for people တစ ယ က ယ က someone ခ measure word for things တစ ခ ခ something NumeralsBurmese digits are traditionally written using a set of numerals unique to the Mon Burmese script although Arabic numerals are also used in informal contexts The cardinal forms of Burmese numerals are primarily inherited from the Proto Sino Tibetan language with cognates with modern day Sino Tibetan languages including the Chinese and Tibetan Numerals beyond ten million are borrowed from Indic languages like Sanskrit or Pali Similarly the ordinal forms of primary Burmese numerals i e from first to tenth are directly borrowed from Pali Ordinal numbers beyond ten are suffixed မ က lit to raise Burmese numerals follow the nouns they modify with the exception of round numbers which precede the nouns they modify Moreover numerals are subject to several tone sandhi and voicing rules that involve tone changes low tone creaky tone and voicing shifts depending on the pronunciation of surrounding words A more thorough explanation is found on Burmese numerals Romanization and transcriptionThere is no official romanization system for Burmese citation needed There have been attempts to make one but none have been successful Replicating Burmese sounds in the Latin script is complicated There is a Pali based transcription system in existence MLC Transcription System which was devised by the Myanmar Language Commission MLC However it only transcribes sounds in formal Burmese and is based on the Burmese alphabet rather than the phonology Several colloquial transcription systems have been proposed but none is overwhelmingly preferred over others Transcription of Burmese is not standardized as seen in the varying English transcriptions of Burmese names For instance a Burmese personal name like ဝင wɪ may be variously romanized as Win Winn Wyn or Wynn while ခ င kʰa ɪ may be romanized as Khaing Khine or Khain Computer fonts and standard keyboard layoutMyanmar3 the de jure standard Burmese keyboard layout The Burmese alphabet can be entered from a standard QWERTY keyboard and is supported within the Unicode standard meaning it can be read and written from most modern computers and smartphones Burmese has complex character rendering requirements where tone markings and vowel modifications are noted using diacritics These can be placed before consonants as with above them as with or even around them as with These character clusters are built using multiple keystrokes In particular the inconsistent placement of diacritics as a feature of the language presents a conflict between an intuitive WYSIWYG typing approach and a logical consonant first storage approach clarification needed Since its introduction in 2007 the most popular Burmese font Zawgyi has been near ubiquitous in Myanmar Linguist Justin Watkins argues that the ubiquitous use of Zawgyi harms Myanmar languages including Burmese by preventing efficient sorting searching processing and analyzing Myanmar text through flexible diacritic ordering Zawgyi is not Unicode compliant but occupies the same code space as Unicode Myanmar font As it is not defined as a standard character encoding Zawgyi is not built in to any major operating systems as standard However allow for its position as the de facto but largely undocumented standard within the country telcos and major smartphone distributors such as Huawei and Samsung ship phones with Zawgyi font overwriting standard Unicode compliant fonts which are installed on most internationally distributed hardware Facebook also supports Zawgyi as an additional language encoding for their app and website As a result almost all SMS alerts including those from telcos to their customers social media posts and other web resources may be incomprehensible on these devices without the custom Zawgyi font installed at the operating system level These may include devices purchased overseas or distributed by companies who do not customize software for the local market Keyboards which have a Zawgyi keyboard layout printed on them are the most commonly available for purchase domestically Until recently when Unicode compliant fonts have been more difficult to type than Zawgyi as they have a stricter less forgiving and arguably less intuitive method for ordering diacritics However intelligent input software such as Keymagic and recent when versions of smartphone soft keyboards including Gboard and ttKeyboard allow for more forgiving input sequences and Zawgyi keyboard layouts which produce Unicode compliant text A number of Unicode compliant Burmese fonts exist The national standard keyboard layout is known as the Myanmar3 layout and it was published along with the Myanmar3 Unicode font The layout developed by the has a smart input system to cover the complex structures of Burmese and related scripts In addition to the development of computer fonts and standard keyboard layout there is still a lot of scope of research for the Burmese language specifically for Natural Language Processing NLP areas like WordNet Search Engine development of parallel corpus for Burmese language as well as development of a formally standardized and dense domain specific corpus of the Burmese language The Myanmar government has designated 1 October 2019 as U Day to officially switch to Unicode The full transition is estimated to take two years Example textArticle 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Burmese လ တ င သည တ ည လ တ လပ သ ဂ ဏ သ က ခ ဖ င လည က င တ ည လ တ လပ သ အခ င အရ မ ဖ င လည က င မ ဖ လ သ မ ဖ စ သည ထ သ တ ပ င ခ ဝ ဖန တတ သ ဉ ဏ န င က င ဝတ သ တတ သ စ တ တ ရ က ထ သ တ သည အခ င ခ င မ တ တ ထ ဆက ဆ က င သ သင The romanization of the text into the Latin alphabet lutuing sany tu nyi lwatlapsau gun sikhka hprang lany kaung tu nyi lwatlapsau ahkwang are mya hprang lany kaung mwe hpwa la su mya hpracsany htuisutui hnai puing hkra wehpantatsau nyanhnang kyang wat si tatsau cittui hri kra rwe htuisutui sany ahkyang hkyang mettahta rwe hcakhcamkyang sum sang e Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in English All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood See alsoLanguage portal Myanmar portalNotesBurmese at Ethnologue 27th ed 2024 Myanmar at Ethnologue 27th ed 2024 Intha at Ethnologue 27th ed 2024 Taungyo at Ethnologue 27th ed 2024 Rakhine at Ethnologue 27th ed 2024 Marma at Ethnologue 27th ed 2024 Tavoyan dialects at Ethnologue 27th ed 2024 Burmese at Ethnologue 27th ed 2024 Constitution of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar 2008 Chapter XV Provision 450 Bradley 1996 Burmese Ethnologue Languages of the World 2019 Archived from the original on 2019 08 20 Myanmar Subnational Phone Surveys MSPS of the World Bank Coverage Reliability and Representativeness PDF World Bank April 2023 The share of population that speaks Burmese as the most common language with other members of households is about 10 percentage points higher than independent estimates of Burmese languages speakers in Myanmar However these independent estimates of the share of Burmese speakers are dated as language information was not collected in the last census Chang 2003 Language Burmese WALS Online Retrieved 2024 12 10 Jenny Mathias 2021 08 23 Sidwell Paul Jenny Mathias eds 25 The national languages of MSEA Burmese Thai Lao Khmer Vietnamese The Languages and Linguistics of Mainland Southeast Asia A comprehensive guide De Gruyter Mouton pp 599 622 doi 10 1515 9783110558142 025 ISBN 978 3 11 055814 2 retrieved 2024 12 06 Bradley 1993 p 147 Myanmar Ethnologue Languages of the World 2016 Archived from the original on 2016 10 10 Barron et al 2007 pp 16 17 Allott 1983 Jenny 2013 Bradley D 2007a East and Southeast Asia In C Moseley ed Encyclopedia of the world s endangered languages pp 349 424 London Routledge Herbert amp Milner 1989 p 5 Wheatley 2013 Bradley David 2021 08 23 Sidwell Paul Jenny Mathias eds 17 Typological profile of Burmic languages The Languages and Linguistics of Mainland Southeast Asia A comprehensive guide De Gruyter Mouton pp 299 336 doi 10 1515 9783110558142 017 ISBN 978 3 11 055814 2 retrieved 2024 12 06 Aung Thwin 2005 p page needed Lieberman 2018 p page needed Lieberman 2003 p 189 Lieberman 2003 pp 202 206 Herbert amp Milner 1989 Adas 2011 pp 67 77 Bradley 2010 p 99 Bradley 1995 p 140 Bradley David 2021 08 23 Sidwell Paul Jenny Mathias eds 17 Typological profile of Burmic languages The Languages and Linguistics of Mainland Southeast Asia A comprehensive guide De Gruyter Mouton pp 299 336 doi 10 1515 9783110558142 017 ISBN 978 3 11 055814 2 retrieved 2024 12 06 Bradley 2019 Bradley 1996 p 746 Herbert amp Milner 1989 pp 5 21 Aung Bala 1981 pp 81 99 Aung Zaw 2010 p 2 San San Hnin Tun 2001 p 39 Taw Sein Ko 1924 pp 68 70 San San Hnin Tun 2001 pp 48 49 San San Hnin Tun 2001 p 26 Houtman 1990 pp 135 136 Wheatley amp Tun 1999 p 64 Unicode Consortium 2012 p 370 Wheatley amp Tun 1999 p 65 lit flying air vehicle the 1st လ and 3rd ပ elements are native Burmese words A calque of native Burmese and Pali words for name the 2nd element is from Burmese အမည Wheatley amp Tun 1999 Wheatley amp Tun 1999 p 81 Wheatley amp Tun 1999 p 67 Wheatley amp Tun 1999 p 94 Wheatley amp Tun 1999 p 68 MLC 1993 Chang 2003 p 63 Watkins 2001 Jenny amp San San Hnin Tun 2016 p 15 Jenny amp San San Hnin Tun 2016 p 30 Jones 1986 pp 135 136 Wheatley 1987 Taylor 1920 pp 91 106 Taylor 1920 Benedict 1948 pp 184 191 Bradley David 2021 08 23 Sidwell Paul Jenny Mathias eds 17 Typological profile of Burmic languages The Languages and Linguistics of Mainland Southeast Asia A comprehensive guide De Gruyter Mouton pp 299 336 doi 10 1515 9783110558142 017 ISBN 978 3 11 055814 2 retrieved 2024 12 06 Khin Min 1987 Lieberman 2003 p 136 Jenny Mathias 26 August 2009 DIFFERENTIAL OBJECT MARKING IN BURMESE PDF Chapter Politeness Distinctions in Pronouns WALS Online Retrieved 2024 12 07 Chapter Politeness Distinctions in Pronouns WALS Online Retrieved 2024 12 07 Muller Andre Weymuth Rachel 2017 03 01 How Society Shapes Language Personal Pronouns in the Greater Burma Zone Asiatische Studien Etudes Asiatiques 71 1 409 432 doi 10 1515 asia 2016 0021 ISSN 2235 5871 Muller Andre Weymuth Rachel 2017 03 01 How Society Shapes Language Personal Pronouns in the Greater Burma Zone Asiatische Studien Etudes Asiatiques 71 1 409 432 doi 10 1515 asia 2016 0021 ISSN 2235 5871 From Burmese သခင ဘ ရ lit lord master Muller Andre Weymuth Rachel 2017 03 01 How Society Shapes Language Personal Pronouns in the Greater Burma Zone Asiatische Studien Etudes Asiatiques 71 1 409 432 doi 10 1515 asia 2016 0021 ISSN 2235 5871 Bradley 1993 p 157 160 Bradley 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Bibliography of NLP Tasks in the Burmese Language of Myanmar Revista InforComp INFOCOMP Journal of Computer Science 15 1 1 11 San San Hnin Tun 2001 Burmese Phrasebook Vicky Bowman Lonely Planet ISBN 978 1 74059 048 8 San San Hnin Tun 2006 Discourse Marking in Burmese and English A Corpus Based Approach PDF Thesis University of Nottingham Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 21 Retrieved 2013 10 20 Taw Sein Ko 1924 Elementary Handbook of the Burmese Language Rangoon American Baptist Mission Press Taylor L F 1920 On the tones of certain languages of Burma Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies 1 4 91 106 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00101685 JSTOR 607065 S2CID 179005822 Unicode Consortium April 2012 11 Southeast Asian Scripts PDF In Julie D Allen et al eds The Unicode Standard Version 6 1 Core Specification Mountain View CA The Unicode Consortium pp 368 373 ISBN 978 1 936213 02 3 Watkins Justin W 2001 Illustrations of the IPA Burmese PDF Journal of the International Phonetic Association 31 2 291 295 doi 10 1017 S0025100301002122 S2CID 232344700 Wheatley Julian Tun San San Hnin 1999 Languages in contact The case of English and Burmese The Journal of Burma Studies 4 61 99 doi 10 1353 jbs 1999 0001 S2CID 60685584 Wheatley Julian 2013 12 Burmese In Randy J LaPolla Graham Thurgood eds Sino Tibetan Languages Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 79717 1 Wheatley Julian K 1987 Burmese In B Comrie ed Handbook of the world s major languages Oxford Oxford University Press pp 834 54 ISBN 978 0 19 520521 3 Yanson Rudolf A 2012 Nathan Hill ed Aspiration in the Burmese Phonological System A Diachronic Account Medieval Tibeto Burman Languages IV BRILL pp 17 29 ISBN 978 90 04 23202 0 Yanson Rudolf 1994 Chapter 3 Language In Uta Gartner Jens Lorenz eds Tradition and Modernity in Myanmar LIT Verlag Munster pp 366 426 ISBN 978 3 8258 2186 9 Bibliography Becker Alton L 1984 Biography of a sentence A Burmese proverb In E M Bruner ed Text play and story The construction and reconstruction of self and society Washington D C American Ethnological Society pp 135 55 ISBN 9780942976052 Bernot Denise 1980 Le predicat en birman parle in French Paris SELAF ISBN 978 2 85297 072 4 Cornyn William Stewart 1944 Outline of Burmese grammar Baltimore Linguistic Society of America Cornyn William Stewart D Haigh Roop 1968 Beginning Burmese New Haven Yale University Press Cooper Lisa Beau Cooper Sigrid Lew 2012 A phonetic description of Burmese obstruents 45th International Conference on Sino Tibetan Languages and Linguistics Nanyang Technological University Singapore a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Green Antony D 2005 Word foot and syllable structure in Burmese In J Watkins ed Studies in Burmese linguistics Canberra Pacific Linguistics pp 1 25 ISBN 978 0 85883 559 7 Okell John 1969 A reference grammar of colloquial Burmese London Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 7007 1136 9 Roop D Haigh 1972 An introduction to the Burmese writing system New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 01528 7 Taw Sein Ko 1924 Elementary handbook of the Burmese language Rangoon American Baptist Mission Press Waxman Nathan Aung Soe Tun 2014 The Naturalization of Indic Loan Words into Burmese Adoption and Lexical Transformation Journal of Burma Studies 18 2 259 290 doi 10 1353 jbs 2014 0016 S2CID 110774660 External linksBurmese edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia For a list of words relating to Burmese language see the Burmese language category of words in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Tibeto Burman Languages Wikivoyage has a phrasebook for Burmese Omniglot Burmese Language Learn Burmese online Online Burmese lessons Burmese language resources Archived 2009 09 01 at the Wayback Machine SOAS E books for children with narration in Burmese Unite for Literacy library Retrieved 2014 06 21 Myanmar Unicode and NLP Research Center Archived 2022 01 26 at the Wayback Machine Myanmar 3 font and keyboard Burmese online dictionary Unicode Ayar Myanmar online dictionary Ethnologue Map Main Spoken Languages of Myanmar Neighbor Download KaNaungConverter Window Build200508 zip from the Kanaung project page and Unzip Ka Naung Converter Engine