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    Evolution of Thai Script

    From ancient Pallava origins to the modern Thai alphabet

    The Thai language belongs to the Tai-Kadai (Kra-Dai) language family. While the language itself did not evolve from Sanskrit or Khmer, its script and lexicon developed through heavy borrowing and adaptation from Khmer and the liturgical languages of Buddhism.

    Khmer and Pallava Origins

    Pre-13th Century: Before the establishment of a distinct Thai script, the Old Khmer script (derived from the South Indian Pallava alphabet) was dominant in the region.

    Buddhism Connection

    The Pallava and Old Khmer scripts were vehicles for spreading Indian culture and religions, particularly Buddhism, into Southeast Asia.

    Creation of Thai Script (1283)

    King Ramkhamhaeng the Great is credited with creating the Thai script in 1283 CE, with the famous Ramkhamhaeng Inscription (1292) serving as the earliest major evidence.

    Adaptation from Khmer

    The script was modeled on the Old Khmer script but modified to suit the Tai language family. Innovations included writing vowels on the main line and writing consonant clusters horizontally.

    Tone Markers

    Crucially, tone markers were introduced. Since the source languages (Mon-Khmer, Sanskrit, Pali) were not tonal, the Thai script required new symbols to record the distinctive tones of the Tai language.

    Influence of Buddhism on Orthography

    13th Century – Present: The Thai alphabet was specifically designed to preserve the original spelling of Sanskrit and Pali loanwords.

    Duplicate Letters

    This resulted in "duplicate" letters—multiple Thai consonants representing the same sound (e.g., several letters for 's' or 't')—which corresponded to distinct sounds in Sanskrit/Pali but not in indigenous Thai.

    44 Consonants

    Pali is the liturgical language of Thai Buddhism. To read and write Buddhist texts accurately, the Thai script retained 44 consonants to match the Sanskrit/Pali inventory, even though modern Thai phonology only requires 21 distinct consonant sounds.

    Lexical Expansion

    Approximately 60% of the Thai lexicon, particularly polysyllabic words, consists of Indic (Pali-Sanskrit) loanwords, largely driven by religious and formal usage.

    The Great Tone Split

    Post-13th Century: At the time of the script's creation, the language had three tones and a clear distinction between voiced and voiceless consonants.

    The Split

    A "wave of drastic sound changes" known as the Great Tone Split occurred later. The distinction between voiced and unvoiced initial consonants was lost. To compensate, the original three tones split into two variants each, yielding the modern system of five tones.

    Orthographic Fossilization

    The modern Thai writing system preserves the history of this split. The complex "Class" system (High, Mid, Low consonants) used today is actually a record of the voicing distinctions that existed before the Great Tone Split occurred.

    For more details, see our Origin of the Thai Tonal System article.

    Visual Timeline

    This infographic illustrates the evolution of the Thai script from its ancient origins to the modern alphabet.

    Evolution of Thai Script infographic showing the timeline from Pallava script through Khmer to modern Thai alphabet

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