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Schools of Chinese, Vietnamese, Burmese, Laotian, Thai and Khmer languages
Published 2014-10-01Subjects: Get full text
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A study of motifs of matters appearing in Sangthong in the Thai language and Kyongsang in the Khmer Language
Published 2021-02-01Subjects: Get full text
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The Hmong Come to Southern Laos: Local Responses and the Creation of Racialized Boundaries
Published 2011-12-01“…This article looks at the interactions between the Hmong who have attempted to migrate into southern Laos and the Lao and Mon-Khmer language-speaking peoples they have encountered. …”
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Aspects of the grammar of the Ngeq language
Published 2014“…Ngeq (also known as Kriang) is a Mon-Khmer language of the Katuic branch. This poorly-understood language is spoken in the provinces of southern Laos. …”
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Final Year Project (FYP) -
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Aspects of the grammar of the Ngeq language
Published 2014“…Ngeq (also known as Kriang) is a Mon-Khmer language of the Katuic branch. This poorly-understood language is spoken in the provinces of southern Laos. …”
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Final Year Project (FYP) -
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A corpus analysis on the semantics of Semai idiomatic expressions / Sharina Saad...[et al.]
Published 2013“…Semai language is not a written language and most Semai speak the Aslian language, related to the Austro- Asiatic and the Mon-Khmer language family of mainland Southeast Asia. As it is not a written language, of late, there is a fear that the language may face gradual erosion and finally extinction as not all Semai people speak Semai language. …”
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South-East Asia: Emerging Regional Identity. Interview with prof. Dmitry Mosyakov (Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences)
Published 2017-12-01“…Dmitry Mosyakov, leading Russian expert on South-East Asia, graduated from the History and Philology Department of Institute of Asian and African Countries at Lomonosov Moscow State Uni-versity, majoring as an interpreter of the Khmer language in 1979. In 1979-1983 he studied in the post-graduate school of the Institute of Oriental Studies of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. …”
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Sino-Tibetan syntax
Published 2021“…After the split of the two branches, the Sinitic side of the family developed verb-medial clauses due to a gradual shift to a clause-final focus position, possibly due at least in part to contact with Tai-Kadai languages, much as the Tibeto-Burman languages Bai and Karen have changed to verb-medial syntax due to contact with Sinitic in the case of Bai, and Tai and Mon-Khmer languages in the case of Karen.…”
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Book Chapter