Great! My advice: learn to read/speak 2 letters per day. Also, learn to write them at the same time. Do a recap after 10 letters and then continue with the next ten. Don't worry if you forget a few, just keep on repeating and they will get stuck in your mind. Then try to read some small Thai words and separate them into letters, one by one. In the end, it's all about consistency and commitment, in small sizable steps. Good luck! 🇹🇭🙏
I dunno if you’re still learning but one advice I never see mentioned but made it easier for me is concentrate on the most common ones first. ม น ง ร ล ( those are just a few examples) spend less time on the really rare ones and don’t bother with the obsolete ones at all. Knowing 70% of the consonants is enough to read about 95 % of thai words that you see in everyday life. Obviously you can focus on all of them eventually but definitely prioritise
@@JamesColemanChesshow long did it take u? i just started learning and its so hard😭😭 everything kinda sounds the same to me…how did u get used to the pronunciation?
@@paperpuddingTVI didn’t track the time spent but I would say it took about 40 study hours to get to a point where I can read any word slowly and know the sound it makes - (that doesn’t necessarily mean I could understand the word if it’s not a word I know), I feel like with learning to read there’s a lot fewer shortcuts and it just needs a lot of time and repetition - as you say, it’s confusing at first but it can definitely be done. Once you can do that then the next step is to start reading things like children’s books which start with simple words with bigger letters etc
@ ohhh i see…. its just hard to understand because there’s multiple characters with the same letters (in terms of writing and im still trying to hear the difference in pronunciation too)
ก gaw=กอ gai=ไก(galinha) O que voce fala antes disso?kohai? Voce sempre fala uma coisa junto com os nomes, mas não sei o que é Em ข voce disse yumeiláo depois do nome, o que são essas coisas que você fala em todas as letras??
👋 Thank you for your message. The first part is the actual letter ก gaw, and the second part is an example word starting with that letter. It's like a tool to memorise it easier. Just like in English you would say: k key, l lion, m man, ... Hope that helps 🙏
@thailanguagenetwork Oh obrigado, na verdade eu estava perguntando sobre as outras partes, mas depois de uma pesquisa eu entendi, é como "Ko Kai, que bota ovo" "buffalo, que entra no arrozal" Mas obrigado, agora entendo todas as partes😊
Press play and then run away from the speaker. It should slow down the speed of which the sound hits your ears. Tip! Don't run faster than the speed of sound!
Subscribe to the channel so you don't miss out on the next videos.
Drop a like if you appreciate my work. ขอบคุณมาก 🙏
Iv been watching this video daily but i was wondering if there was any tips (free 555 ) to learn the alphabet
Great! My advice: learn to read/speak 2 letters per day. Also, learn to write them at the same time. Do a recap after 10 letters and then continue with the next ten. Don't worry if you forget a few, just keep on repeating and they will get stuck in your mind. Then try to read some small Thai words and separate them into letters, one by one. In the end, it's all about consistency and commitment, in small sizable steps. Good luck! 🇹🇭🙏
I dunno if you’re still learning but one advice I never see mentioned but made it easier for me is concentrate on the most common ones first. ม น ง ร ล ( those are just a few examples) spend less time on the really rare ones and don’t bother with the obsolete ones at all. Knowing 70% of the consonants is enough to read about 95 % of thai words that you see in everyday life. Obviously you can focus on all of them eventually but definitely prioritise
@@JamesColemanChesshow long did it take u? i just started learning and its so hard😭😭 everything kinda sounds the same to me…how did u get used to the pronunciation?
@@paperpuddingTVI didn’t track the time spent but I would say it took about 40 study hours to get to a point where I can read any word slowly and know the sound it makes - (that doesn’t necessarily mean I could understand the word if it’s not a word I know), I feel like with learning to read there’s a lot fewer shortcuts and it just needs a lot of time and repetition - as you say, it’s confusing at first but it can definitely be done.
Once you can do that then the next step is to start reading things like children’s books which start with simple words with bigger letters etc
@ ohhh i see…. its just hard to understand because there’s multiple characters with the same letters (in terms of writing and im still trying to hear the difference in pronunciation too)
ก gaw=กอ gai=ไก(galinha)
O que voce fala antes disso?kohai?
Voce sempre fala uma coisa junto com os nomes, mas não sei o que é
Em ข voce disse yumeiláo depois do nome, o que são essas coisas que você fala em todas as letras??
👋 Thank you for your message.
The first part is the actual letter ก gaw, and the second part is an example word starting with that letter. It's like a tool to memorise it easier. Just like in English you would say: k key, l lion, m man, ...
Hope that helps 🙏
@thailanguagenetwork Oh obrigado, na verdade eu estava perguntando sobre as outras partes, mas depois de uma pesquisa eu entendi, é como "Ko Kai, que bota ovo" "buffalo, que entra no arrozal"
Mas obrigado, agora entendo todas as partes😊
Do you have a slow version
Hi there 👋. Not really 😅, maybe you can try to play it at 0.5x speed on TH-cam? 🙏🇹🇭
@@thailanguagenetworkthat's ok thank you ❤
Press play and then run away from the speaker. It should slow down the speed of which the sound hits your ears. Tip! Don't run faster than the speed of sound!