1, Peking University.
2. Beijing Foreign Studies University.
Yunnan University.
4. Shanghai International Studies University.
5. Guangxi University.
6. Shantou University.
7. Guangdong University of Foreign Studies.
Yunnan Normal University.
9. Beijing Foreign Studies University.
10, Chengdu University.
Thai is mainly used by Dai and Thai people in Thailand, Laos, Myanmar, northwestern Vietnam, northwestern Cambodia, southwestern China and northeastern India.
Thai is divided into three dialects: Thai (western and southwestern Yunnan, China, northern and northwestern Myanmar and northeastern India), Lanna (southern Yunnan, China, northeastern Shan State, northern Thailand, northern Laos and northwestern Vietnam) and Siam (central and southern Thailand, southern Laos and northwestern Cambodia). Lanna dialect is spoken in northern and northeastern Thailand, Siam dialect is spoken in central and southern Thailand, and central Thai is the standard Thai language in Thailand.
Thai word order:
There are three kinds of Thai today: secular language, royal language and monk language.
Characters are written in the form of comic strips, from left to right, horizontally, with no punctuation marks and no spaces between words. A sentence is spelled continuously from beginning to end, and a sentence is expressed by the space between two empty letters or a small pause in the sentence.
The traditional printing of Thai letters is like notes on a staff. Most letters have small circles, so some people compare them to tadpoles. Thai is very similar to Cambodian and Lao.
In spoken and written Thai, the basic word order is the subject-predicate-object structure as in Chinese, but the biggest difference from Chinese is that the modifier comes after the modifier, that is to say, in short, Thai adjectives come after nouns and adverbs come after verbs, such as "these socks are beautiful" in Chinese and "socks are beautiful" in Thai.