AWU ၏ လုပ္ငန္းစဥ္အခ်ဳိ႔

Monday, February 15, 2010

ရခုိင္ယ်ဥ္ေက်းမွု

The Rakhine are predominantly Theravada Buddhists and are one of the four main Buddhist ethnic groups of Myanmar (the others being the Bamar, Shan and Mon). They claim to be one of the first groups to become followers of the Buddha in Southeast Asia. The Rakhine culture is similar to the dominant Burmese culture but with more Indian influence, likely due to its geographical isolation from the Burmese mainland divided by the Rakhine Roma and closer proximity to South Asia. Traces of Indian influence remain in many aspects of Rakhine culture, including its literature, music, and cuisine.
The Rakhine speak Arakanese language which is an archaic form of Burmese. Still generally mutually intelligible with standard Burmese, Arakanese retains the /r/ sound, which is now a /j/ sound in Burmese. Modern Arakanese script, aside from few vocabulary differences, is essentially the same as standard Burmese script. (The northern Brahmi-based Rakhawunna script found in stone inscriptions in the Vesali (Wethali) era is no longer in use.)[1]




သင္သက္တမ္းတေလွ်ာက္မွာ သမိုင္းေကာင္းဖို႔အတြက္ ဇါတခု လုပ္ျပီးယာလဲ၊၊ မလုပ္သိေက စလုပ္လိုက္ပါ၊၊ သင့္အတြက္ အခ်ိန္ေကာင္းမဟိယာ၊၊
စည္းလံုးညီညြတ္ေရးဆိုစြာ အလုပ္ပါ၊၊ စကားမ်ားမ်ားမေျပာပါကဲ့ အလုပ္နန္႔သက္သီျပကက္ေမ မ်ဳိးခ်စ္ရို ႔၊၊
သမိုင္းဆိုစြာ လိမ္လို႔မရပါ၊၊ ေဒနိန္႔ သင္ဇါလုပ္ေရလဲ၊၊ ေဒနိန္႔ သင့္အလုပ္သည္ မိုးေသာက္ခါ သင့္၏သမိုင္းမွန္ပါ၊၊

ရခိုင္သူေခ်

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Maesot, Thailand

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