How to say [ good morning ] in Lao Language ( Laotian and Kra-Dai Language )

 How to say [ good morning ] in Lao Language ( Laotian and Kra-Dai Language )



Peoples are searching for How to say [ good morning ] in Lao Language ( Laotian and Kra-Dai Language ) Lao Language is a Kra–Dai language of the Lao people. According to report 30 millions native speakers in Lao language globally.

Lao language, also called Laotian, one of the Tai languages of Southeast Asia, and the official language of Laos. Lao occurs in various dialects, which differ among themselves at least as much as Lao as a group differs from the Tai dialects of northeastern Thailand.


The Lao script was developed from the Khmer script which has its roots in the Indian Brahmic script, and its arrival was attributed to the Theravada Buddhists who were on a mission of popularizing Buddhism in the 14th century.


Lao script dates back to the 16th century BC. It descended from Old Khmer which, in turn, evolved from the Brahmi script. As in the case of most Indic-derived scripts, the alphabet of Modern Lao is syllabic which means that Lao consonants all have an inherent vowel.





Good = ດີ

Morning = ຕອນເຊົ້າ

Good Morning = ສະ​ບາຍ​ດີ​ຕອນ​ເຊົ້າ


Good Morning Image In Lao Language
Good Morning Image In Lao Language


FAQ about good morning in Lao Language 




Q. How to say good morning in Lao Language ?

ສະ​ບາຍ​ດີ​ຕອນ​ເຊົ້າ



Q. How to say good morning in Laotian and Kra-Dai language ?

ສະ​ບາຍ​ດີ​ຕອນ​ເຊົ້າ



Q. How many native speakers in Lao language ?

- 30 millions native speakers in Lao language globally wide.



Q. Who invented Lao language ?

The Lao script was developed from the Khmer script which has its roots in the Indian Brahmic script, and its arrival was attributed to the Theravada Buddhists who were on a mission of popularizing Buddhism in the 14th century.



Q. What is the origin of Lao language ?

- The origin of the ancestors of the Lao people were speakers of Southwestern Tai dialects that migrated from what is now southeastern China, specifically what is now Guangxi and northern Vietnam where the diversity of various Tai languages suggests an Urheimat.

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