Eastern Pwo or Phlou, ( my, အရှေ့ပိုးကရင်) is a
Karen language spoken by
Eastern Pwo people
The Eastern Pwo ( my, အရှေ့ပိုးကရင်မျိုးနွယ်စု or ဖလုံမူထင်း) are a subgroup of the Karen ethnic groups who live in the southeast of Myanmar. The Eastern Pwo Karen is from Karen S ...
and over a million people in
Burma
Myanmar, ; UK pronunciations: US pronunciations incl. . Note: Wikipedia's IPA conventions require indicating /r/ even in British English although only some British English speakers pronounce r at the end of syllables. As John C. Wells, Joh ...
and by about 50,000 in
Thailand
Thailand ( ), historically known as Siam () and officially the Kingdom of Thailand, is a country in Southeast Asia, located at the centre of the Indochinese Peninsula, spanning , with a population of almost 70 million. The country is b ...
, where it has been called ''Southern Pwo''. It is not intelligible with
other varieties of Pwo.
A script called
Leke
Leke is a town in Diksmuide
(; french: Dixmude, ; vls, Diksmude) is a Belgian city and municipality in the Flemish province of West Flanders. The municipality comprises the city of proper and the former communes of Beerst, Esen, Kaaskerke ...
was developed between 1830 and 1860 and is used by members of the millenarian Leke sect of Buddhism. Otherwise, a variety of
Mon-Burmese alphabets are used, and refugees in Thailand have created a
Thai alphabet that is in limited use.
Distribution
*
Kayin State
Kayin State ( my, ကရင်ပြည်နယ်, ; kjp, ဖၠုံခါန်ႋကၞင့်, italics=no; ksw, ကညီကီၢ်စဲၣ်, ), also known by the endonyms Kawthoolei and Karen State, is a state of Myanmar. The ...
and
Tanintharyi Region: long contiguous area near the Thai border
*
Bago Region:
Bago and
Toungoo townships
Phonology
The following displays the phonological features of two of the eastern Pwo Karen dialects, Pa'an and Tavoy:
Consonants
* Post-alveolar affricates //, are realized as fricatives [], among some formal dialects.
*// when pronounced slowly is phonetically realized as a dental affricate [].
*Voiced plosives // are pronounced as implosives [] only in the Pa'an dialect.
*// does not exist in the Tavoy dialect.
*// may tend to be slightly fricativized [] when preceding front vowels.
*// may also be realized as a tap [].
Vowels
* // does not occur after a // sound.
*// are merged with // in the Tavoy dialect.
Tones
Four tones are present in Eastern Pwo:
Dialects
*Pa’an (Inland Eastern Pwo Karen, Moulmein)
*Kawkareik (Eastern Border Pwo Karen)
*Tavoy (Southern Pwo Karen)
Alphabet
History
The alphabet used for Eastern Pwo Karen language is in
Mon-Burmese script.
The Eastern Pwo Karen numeric symbols have bee
proposed for encodingin a future
Burmese Unicode block.
* The number zero, ''ploh plih'' (ပၠဝ်ပၠေ), means "of no value".
* The number zero is not used in day-to-day life and mostly exists in writing only. People are taught to use the Burmese numeric system instead, including zero.
*''Chi'' (ဆီ့) denotes 10, any number from 1 to 9 before ''chi'' can be interpreted as "of ten(s)", so 20 would be ''ne chi''. ''Pong'' (ဖငၲ) denotes 100, any number from 1 to 9 before ''pong'' can be interpreted as "hundred(s)", so 200 would be ''ne pong''. Similarly, the same rule applies to thousand, ''muh'' (မိုငၲ့); ten-thousand, ''lah'' (လါ); and hundred-thousand, ''thay'' (သိငၲႉ).
* Numbers after the hundred-thousands (millions and above) are prefixed with ''thay'' (သိငၲႉ), hundred thousand. For example, one million would be ''thay luh chi'' (သိငၲႉလ်ုဆီ့), "hundred thousand of tens"; two million would be ''thay ne chi (သိငၲႉဏီ့ဆီ့)'', ''hundred thousand of two tens;'' ten million would be ''thay luh pong'' (သိငၲႉလ်ုဖငၲ), "hundred thousand of hundreds"; one billion would be ''thay luh lah'' (သိငၲႉလ်ုလါ), "hundred thousand of ten thousands".
Decimals
Due to the close approximation to Thailand, the Eastern Pwo Karen adopts Thai's
decimal word, ''chut'', (Karen: ကျူဒၲ, ကျူ(ဒၲ); Thai: จุด; English: and, dot). For example, 1.01 is ''luh chut ploh plih luh'' (လ်ု ပၠဝ်ပၠေလ်ု).
Fractions
Fractions are formed by saying ''puh'' (ပုံႉ) after the numerator and the denominator. For example, one-third (
1/
3) would be ''luh puh thuh puh'' (လ်ုပုံသိုငၲ့ပုံ) and three over one, three-"oneths" (
3/
1) would be ''thuh puh luh puh'' (သိုငၲ့ပုံလ်ုပုံ).
References
{{Languages of Burma
Karenic languages