The Tai Khamtis have their own writing system called 'Lik-Tai', which they share with the
Tai Phake people and
Tai Aiton people. It closely resembles the Northern
Shan script of Myanmar, which is a variant of the
Mon–Burmese script, with some of the letters taking divergent shapes. Their script is evidently derived from the
Lik Tho Ngok script since hundreds of years ago. There are 35 letters including 17 consonants and 14 vowels. The script is traditionally taught in monasteries on subjects like
Tripitaka,
Jataka tales, code of conduct, doctrines and philosophy, history, law codes, astrology, and palmistry etc. The first printed book was published in 1960. In 1992 it was edited by the Tai Literature Committee, Chongkham. In 2003 it was again modified with tone marking by scholars of Northern Myanmar and Arunachal Pradesh.
Consonants Vowels Tones and other diacritics Displaying with the dummy letter ဢ, • tone 1 [21]: • for checked syllable, including single consonant — ဢႉ • for else — ဢႇ • tone 2 [34] — ဢႛ • tone 3 [42] — ဢႈ • tone 4 [53] — ဢး — In speaking, it may become [33]. • tone 5: • for short open syllable — ဢႚ [44] (rare usage) • for else — ဢ [55] (unmarked) • ဢ် —
asat — final consonant, silences inherent vowel • ꩰ — duplication ==References==