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New Tai Lue

New Tai Lue script sample using the SIL Dai Banna font

Script details

See all script details: code, region, status and more
Code Talu
Script type abugida
Region Mainland Southeast Asian
Status Current
Direction LTR
Baseline hanging
Case no
White space unspecified
Complex behaviors diacritics, reordering, split graphs, optional ligatures
OpenType code talu
ISO 15924 Numeric Code / Key 354 (alphasyllabic)

Explanation of script details

Script description

The New Tai Lue script (also known as Xishuangbanna Dai) is an abugida derived from Old Tai Lue, which is derived from the Lanna script.It was created in the 1950s and is used mainly by the Tai Lue (also called Water Dai) people in Southern China for writing the Lü (also called Tai Lue) language. The language is also spoken in Burma, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam where it is written with the Old Tai Lue script.

The script is written from left to right in horizontal lines. There are 3 types of consonant symbol in the New Tai Lue script: initial, final, and clusters. There are 36 initial consonant symbols; these represent a high and a low tone for each of the 18 Tai Lue consonant sounds. Initial consonants contain an inherent [a] vowel. Only 7 consonant sounds can be used at the end of a syllable. These are written using 7 final consonant symbols, which contain a mark to show that the inherent [a] vowel has been muted. There are also 6 symbols for writing consonant clusters.

There are 17 vowel symbols, some of which represent phonetically complex vowels such as glides and diphthongs. Some, such as those representing [i:], [ɔi] and [yi] are written to the right of the consonant; others, such as those representing [o], [ai] and [ə] are written to the left. Some vowels are expressed using two symbols; these are called digraphs.

Where the selection of the appropriate initial consonant symbol is not sufficient to indicate the tone, additional tones are represented using spacing tone marks. These are written after the final consonant in a closed syllable, or after the vowel in an open syllable.

Digits from one to nine are written with script-specific symbols.

The script was promoted from the time of its creation until 1987 by the Chinese government, and was used in schools and newspapers. However in 1987 the Old Tai Lue script was revived and widely used. In 1996 the government once again decided to promote the New Tai Lue script. The result is that both are in current use in China.

Languages that use this script

LanguageWriting System
Code
Writing System
Status
SLDR/CLDR
locale
Regional
variants
khb-Taluin use khb (SLDR) khb-Talu-CN (China)

Unicode status

In The Unicode Standard, New Tai Lue script implementation is discussed in Chapter 16: Southeast Asia-I — Thailand, Laos, Myanmar, Cambodia, Vietnam.

Resources