The Royal Thai General System of Transcription ( RTGS) is the official system for rendering Thai language words in the Latin alphabet, published by The Royal Institute of Thailand. It is used in road signs and government publications, and is the closest thing to a standard of transcription for Thai, though its use by even the government is inconsistent. FeaturesProminent features of the Royal Thai General System include: - spells all vowels and diphthongs using only vowel letters: a, e, i, o, u
- * combinations with "e" second as "ae", "oe", "ue", are simple vowels, similar to respective ligatures in IPA
- * combinations with trailing "a", "i", "o" (or several) are diphthongs, indicated by [a, j, w] respectively in IPA
- * combinations with "h" as "ph", "th", "kh" are used for aspirated p, t, k, similar to IPA , to distinguish them from the separate unaspirated "p", "t", "k"
- * uses "ng" for engma as in English, IPA
- * note that transcription of consonants in final position is according to pronunciation, not spelling
CriticismThe Royal Thai General System has been criticized as inadequate for learners of Thai, particularly because of the following shortcomings: - notation "ch" does not differentiate between IPA and IPA (see table below)
- notation "o" does not differentiate between IPA and IPA (see table below)
| Letter 1 | Letter 2 |
|---|
RTGS | Thai | IPA | Description | English | Thai | IPA | Description | English |
|---|
ch | จ | | alveo-palatal affricate | as "ty" in "let you" | ฉ, ช, ฌ | | aspirated alveo- palatal affricate | as "ch" in "check" | o | โ–ะ, – | | close-mid back short rounded | like "oa" in "boat" | เ–าะ | | open-mid back short rounded | like "aw" in "raw", but shorter | โ– | | close-mid back long rounded | like "oa" in "moan" | –อ | | open-mid back long rounded | like "aw" in "raw" |
Transcription tableFor consonants, the transcription is different depending on the location in the syllable. In the section on vowels a dash ("–") indicates the relative position of the initial consonant belonging to the vowel. See also
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