very very helpful video! though the title suggests something different to what it is about.. should be "alternative/different ways of using tee", rather than "alternatives to..."
I am extremely grateful for your videos teaching us. I love how you give examples and please also explain the spelling of Thai words and silent h and stuff like that. God bless you
I realize that Thai and Vietnamese share most common sentence patterns. Providing the combination of ที่ = chỗ (noun: place/spot, preposition: particularly at/in (spoken)), and อยู่ = ở (verb: to live/stay; preposition: at/in) ที่อยู่ = chỗ ở : literally means the place where you live อยู่ที่ = ở chỗ : specify a place where an action occurs
Thank you for the lesson. This word is really useful in speaking Thai language. Noticed that Kon Thai use alot of wording like tii3, hai3, gap2, dai3, maa1, bpai and yuu in daily conversation or to connect long sentences. Noticed that you have apply many of these wording in your story session which I am really appreciated on that. Hope to see more of your sharing and will support you all the time. Thanks❤
This is soooooo useful! This is the word that I didn't really know how to use properly! Thank you so much! Hope you will teach us more grammar points 😊 Thank you!!
Jack, thanks for another wonderful video with clear and useful explanations. :) I have question about the spelling of "tee". I have seen it written as tii many times instead of tee. I thought tee had e sound as in the English word bed but with a longer eh sound. Am I mistaken?
Thai transliteration lacks a standard, and you might see variations like "ii" and "ee." In my case, I've chosen to use "ee" based on the English sound and incorporate diacritical marks to signify tones. For example, the word ที่ (têe) sounds like the English word "see," and when written, I put a mark on the "ê" to indicate a falling tone.
very very helpful video! though the title suggests something different to what it is about.. should be "alternative/different ways of using tee", rather than "alternatives to..."
I like your videos very clear explaining . Thai is very difficult but your videos give me hope
You can do it! 😁
Thank you very much Jack! You are the dream teacher of every Thai language student🙏👏
Wow. Tee can be used many ways.
Thank you very very much !!! Greetings from Germany
I'm glad you found it helpful. 🙏🙂
I am extremely grateful for your videos teaching us.
I love how you give examples and please also explain the spelling of Thai words and silent h and stuff like that.
God bless you
I realize that Thai and Vietnamese share most common sentence patterns. Providing the combination of ที่ = chỗ (noun: place/spot, preposition: particularly at/in (spoken)), and อยู่ = ở (verb: to live/stay; preposition: at/in)
ที่อยู่ = chỗ ở : literally means the place where you live
อยู่ที่ = ở chỗ : specify a place where an action occurs
Thank you for the lesson. This word is really useful in speaking Thai language. Noticed that Kon Thai use alot of wording like tii3, hai3, gap2, dai3, maa1, bpai and yuu in daily conversation or to connect long sentences. Noticed that you have apply many of these wording in your story session which I am really appreciated on that. Hope to see more of your sharing and will support you all the time. Thanks❤
Your explanation and example phrases are easy to grasp. Thank you.
Such a helpful lesson! Thank you 😊
kobkhun krub🙏
Blimey 😂 your pronunciation and knowledge of English language and grammar is outstanding 🎉 Far better than me as a native speaker.
I like the word 'Brimey.' I haven't heard this word in a while, and it reminds me of my British friends. Love it! 😆
Hi Jack.
Thank you for enriching me again!!!
Really good video lesson, thank you.
thank you.
Great video Jack
Thank you Jack, I find your videos very helpful!
Thank you 🙏😃
another really good lesson,thank you
Thank you 🙏😉
Very well explained. Thanks!
ขอบคุณครับ 🙏😃
This is soooooo useful! This is the word that I didn't really know how to use properly! Thank you so much! Hope you will teach us more grammar points 😊 Thank you!!
Nice video thanks very much
Liked นะ.
ขอบคุณค่ะ ❤
thank you, by the way is there a word for " tease " in thai? google translae is not good
สุดยอด! ขอบคุณมากครับ
ขอบคุณครับ🙏
There is also ขอบคุณที่ช่วยผม
ยินดีครับ😁
kawp khun maag.... pom yuu India.
วิธีใช้ “พอดี “หน้าประโยค
คุณทำวิดีโอแบบนี้ได้ไหมคะ
Jack, thanks for another wonderful video with clear and useful explanations. :) I have question about the spelling of "tee". I have seen it written as tii many times instead of tee. I thought tee had e sound as in the English word bed but with a longer eh sound. Am I mistaken?
Thai transliteration lacks a standard, and you might see variations like "ii" and "ee." In my case, I've chosen to use "ee" based on the English sound and incorporate diacritical marks to signify tones. For example, the word ที่ (têe) sounds like the English word "see," and when written, I put a mark on the "ê" to indicate a falling tone.
@@IgetThais Thank you very much for your response and clear explain. 😊 Have a great weekend. 🌅
Im having trouble with the difference using "bpen" and "kue". Both seem to be is/am/are but when do you know which to use?
thank you kru jack
This video is about 'bpen' and 'kue'. I hope it can help you understand them better. : th-cam.com/video/AOyq37i_A3g/w-d-xo.html
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วันนี้คือวันอังคาดที่สิบเอ็ดมิถุนายน
As an ordinal, the word
ที่ is useful for the date.