Shan language

Shan
Tai Yai
ၵႂၢမ်းတႆး (kwáam tái), လိၵ်ႈတႆး (līk tái)
Pronunciation[kwáːm táj]
[lik táj]
Native toMyanmar
RegionShan State
EthnicityShan, Dai, Kula
Native speakers
4.7 million (2017)[1]
Kra–Dai
Dialects
Mon–Burmese (Shan alphabet)
Official status
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-2shn
ISO 639-3shn
Glottologshan1277
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Shan paper manuscript bound with a patterned cotton cloth cover and a felt binding ribbon, Shan State, first half of the 20th century. British Library

Shan is the native language of the Shan people and is mostly spoken in Shan State, Myanmar. It is also spoken in pockets in other parts of Myanmar, in Northern Thailand, in Yunnan, in Laos, in Cambodia, in Vietnam and decreasingly in Assam and Meghalaya. Shan is a member of the Kra–Dai language family and is related to Thai. It has five tones, which do not correspond exactly to Thai tones, plus a sixth tone used for emphasis. The term Shan is also used for related Northwestern Tai languages, and it is called Tai Yai or Tai Long in other Tai languages. Standard Shan, which is also known as Tachileik Shan, is based on the dialect of the city of Tachileik.[citation needed]

In 2019, Ethnologue estimated there were 3.3 million Shan speakers, including 3.2 million in Myanmar.[2][1] The Mahidol University Institute for Language and Culture estimates there are gave the number of Shan speakers in Thailand as 95,000 in 2006.[citation needed] Many Shan speak local dialects as well as the language of their trading partners.

  1. ^ a b Shan at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022) Closed access icon
  2. ^ "Shan". Ethnologue. 2019. Archived from the original on 2019-06-29.

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