Thai
Etymology
From ออก (ɔ̀ɔk, “to cause to come out”) + ตัว (dtuua, “self; body”).
Pronunciation
| Orthographic | ออกตัว ɒ ɒ k t ạ w |
| Phonemic | ออก-ตัว ɒ ɒ k – t ạ w |
| Romanization | Paiboon | ɔ̀ɔk-dtuua |
|---|
| Royal Institute | ok-tua |
| (standard) IPA(key) | /ʔɔːk̚˨˩.tua̯˧/(R) |
Verb
ออกตัว • (ɔ̀ɔk-dtuua) (abstract noun การออกตัว)
- to humble, defend, or excuse oneself from the outset or beforehand.
- to take off (as a plane from a runway or a runner from a starting point).
- (slang, humorous) to appear in a certain way or give a certain impression: to come across, to come off, to come on, etc.
- แรง
- ɔ̀ɔk-dtuua rɛɛng
- to come on strong