Khamti Shan, a Tai language spoken in Kachin State, Myanmar, is a northern dialect of Shan spoken in Shan State. Shan and Khamti Shan have adapted the Myanmar (Burmese) writing system for their own use. The Khamti Shan orthography was revised in 2006, fully integrated with current literacy applications and adapting a portion of the Myanmar Unicode set of characters along with an extended set of characters specific to Shan. Khamti Shan in Myanmar differs from the Northeast India variety (Tai Khamti) by distinguishing a palatal nasal and a rhotic. Described are the Khamti Shan phoneme-grapheme correspondences, engendering the segmental, suprasegmental and syllabic features of the orthography, along with a Latin-based transliteration guide for...
The first edition of this technical note addressed the issue of how Myanmar text was encoded using t...
Speakers of the various Kachin languages often use the expression ‘Kachin’ or ‘Kachin language’ when...
This paper explores the differences between the writing of the Tai Dam, Tai Don, and Jinping Dai lan...
Abstract Khamti Shan, a Tai language spoken in Kachin State, Myanmar, is a northern dialect of Shan ...
This article provides a description and linguistic analysis of the Tai Tham script-based orthography...
A number of Myanmar letters used in Buddhist contexts in Shan State in the Union of Myanmar have rec...
Executive Summary This proposal is to disunify the Khamti and Aiton and Phake style Myanmar consonan...
This paper is a study on the Myanmar language as used by the Shan, Kachin, Chin and Rakhine among t...
We propose a transcription system for Chineseinto Burmese script. We design the system based on thep...
There are a total of 111 languages spoken by the people living in Myanmar. Among them, the top langu...
Tiddim Chin (ISO693-3: tdm) is a Tibeto-Burman language (Kuki-Chin branch) spoken in northwest Myanm...
This paper presents a possible canonical ordering for the Unicode representation of Myanmar script. ...
This paper presents the sociolinguistic background and phoneme inventory of Para Naga, ethnonym Jeja...
Burmese has a documented history of one thousand years, and from the very first texts shows influenc...
This is a corpus of modern Burmese compiled by John Okell in the 1990s and converted into Unicode mo...
The first edition of this technical note addressed the issue of how Myanmar text was encoded using t...
Speakers of the various Kachin languages often use the expression ‘Kachin’ or ‘Kachin language’ when...
This paper explores the differences between the writing of the Tai Dam, Tai Don, and Jinping Dai lan...
Abstract Khamti Shan, a Tai language spoken in Kachin State, Myanmar, is a northern dialect of Shan ...
This article provides a description and linguistic analysis of the Tai Tham script-based orthography...
A number of Myanmar letters used in Buddhist contexts in Shan State in the Union of Myanmar have rec...
Executive Summary This proposal is to disunify the Khamti and Aiton and Phake style Myanmar consonan...
This paper is a study on the Myanmar language as used by the Shan, Kachin, Chin and Rakhine among t...
We propose a transcription system for Chineseinto Burmese script. We design the system based on thep...
There are a total of 111 languages spoken by the people living in Myanmar. Among them, the top langu...
Tiddim Chin (ISO693-3: tdm) is a Tibeto-Burman language (Kuki-Chin branch) spoken in northwest Myanm...
This paper presents a possible canonical ordering for the Unicode representation of Myanmar script. ...
This paper presents the sociolinguistic background and phoneme inventory of Para Naga, ethnonym Jeja...
Burmese has a documented history of one thousand years, and from the very first texts shows influenc...
This is a corpus of modern Burmese compiled by John Okell in the 1990s and converted into Unicode mo...
The first edition of this technical note addressed the issue of how Myanmar text was encoded using t...
Speakers of the various Kachin languages often use the expression ‘Kachin’ or ‘Kachin language’ when...
This paper explores the differences between the writing of the Tai Dam, Tai Don, and Jinping Dai lan...