เสียงวรรณยุกต์ – Thai Tone Etymology

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เสียงวรรณยุกต์
เสียงวรรณยุกต์

เสียง 📣 — sǐang (R)
Meaning: sound, voice, noise.
Etymology: Native Thai (Tai-Kadai) root — not borrowed from Sanskrit or Pali.

วรรณ 📣 — wan (M)
Meaning: here, “letter” (a single unit of the alphabet); more broadly can also mean “colour” or “class/caste.”
Etymology: From Sanskrit varṇa. The root sense is “a distinguishing category.” In Pāṇini’s grammar and Sanskrit phonetics, varṇa specifically denoted an individual speech-sound/letter — the sense inherited here. The same word also gave Thai วรรณคดี (wan-ná-khá-dii, “literature,” literally “the course of letters”) and, via its “class” sense, words touching on caste.

ยุกต์ 📣 — yúk (H)
Meaning: joined, connected, applied, yoked.
Etymology: From Sanskrit yukta, the past participle of the verb root yuj (“to join, harness, yoke”). This is a major Proto-Indo-European root (*yeug-), making ยุกต์ a direct relative of Sanskrit Yoga (“union”), and — through separate Indo-European branches — of English yoke, join, junction, and jugular.

The fusion: เสียงวรรณยุกต์ 📣

“Sound” + “letter” + “joined” → the pitch actually spoken on a syllable, as opposed to วรรณยุกต์ alone (letter + joined), which names the written tone mark rather than the spoken tone.

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