ดัง

See also: ดง and ดึง

Isan

Etymology

From Proto-Tai *ɗaŋᴬ (nose).[1]

In Southwestern Tai, cognate with Northern Thai ᨯᩢ᩠ᨦ, Lao ດັງ (dang), ᦡᧂ (ḋang), Shan လင်/ၼင် (lǎng/nǎng) as in ၶူႈလင်/ၶူႈၼင် (khūu lǎng/khūu nǎng), Tai Nüa ᥘᥒ (lang), Aiton ဒင် (daṅ) or ꩫင် (naṅ), Ahom 𑜓𑜂𑜫 (daṅ) or 𑜃𑜂𑜫 (naṅ)

In Northern Tai, cognate with Zhuang ndaeng, Bouyei ndangl.

Possibly cognate with Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *ijuŋ (nose).[2]

Noun

ดัง (transliteration needed)

  1. nose

References

  1. ^ Pittayaporn, Pittayawat (2009) The Phonology of Proto-Tai (Doctoral dissertation)‎[1], Department of Linguistics, Cornell University , page 323
  2. ^ Ostapirat, Weera (2005) "Kra-dai and Austronesian: notes on phonological correspondences and vocabulary distribution" In Sagart, Laurent; et al. (eds.) The Peopling of East Asia, London; New York: RoutledgeCurzon, pages 111, 119, 122

Thai

Pronunciation

Orthographic/Phonemicดัง
ɗ ạ ŋ
RomanizationPaiboondang
Royal Institutedang
(standard) IPA(key)/daŋ˧/(R)

Etymology 1

From Proto-Tai *ɗaŋᴬ (to make noise).[1]

Cognte with Zhuang ndaengz (roll of thunder) (dialectal).

Adjective

ดัง • (dang) (abstract noun ความดัง)

  1. loud; noisy.
  2. (colloquial) famous; popular.
Derived terms

Etymology 2

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Alternative forms

Preposition

ดัง • (dang)

  1. like; as.
Derived terms

Etymology 3

Inherited from Proto-Tai *ɗaŋᴬ (nose).[2]

In Southwestern Tai, cognate with Isan ดัง, Lao ດັງ (dang), Northern Thai ᨯᩢ᩠ᨦ (daŋ⁴), Khün ᨯᩢ᩠ᨦ (daŋ⁴), ᦡᧂ (ḋang), Tai Dam ꪒꪰꪉ (đăng), Shan လင်/ၼင် (lǎng/nǎng) as in ၶူႈလင်/ၶူႈၼင် (khūu lǎng/khūu nǎng), Tai Nüa ᥘᥒ (lang), Ahom 𑜓𑜂𑜫 (daṅ) or 𑜃𑜂𑜫 (naṅ), Aiton ဒင် (daṅ) or ꩫင် (naṅ).

In Northern Tai, cognate with Zhuang ndaeng, Bouyei ndangl.

Possibly cognate with Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *ijuŋ (nose).[3]

Alternative forms

Noun

ดัง • (dang)

  1. (archaic, poetry) nose.

References

  1. ^ Pittayaporn, Pittayawat (2009) The Phonology of Proto-Tai (Doctoral dissertation)‎[2], Department of Linguistics, Cornell University , page 348
  2. ^ Pittayaporn, Pittayawat (2009) The Phonology of Proto-Tai (Doctoral dissertation)‎[3], Department of Linguistics, Cornell University , page 323
  3. ^ Ostapirat, Weera (2005) "Kra-dai and Austronesian: notes on phonological correspondences and vocabulary distribution" In Sagart, Laurent; et al. (eds.) The Peopling of East Asia, London; New York: RoutledgeCurzon, pages 111, 119, 122