The Languages

Burmese Pronouns

Burmese, the official language of Myanmar, has a unique set of pronouns that vary based on status, familiarity, gender, and politeness. Understanding pronouns in Burmese is crucial for effective communication, as they significantly differ from those in many other languages due to the language’s emphasis on social hierarchy and respect. This guide covers personal, possessive, demonstrative, reflexive, and interrogative pronouns, providing examples and transliterations for each.

Personal Pronouns

In Burmese, personal pronouns change not just based on the person but also on the level of formality and the gender of the speaker or the person being referred to.

Subject Pronouns:

  • ကျွန်တော် (Kywan-taw) – I/me (male speaker, formal): “ကျွန်တော် သွားမယ်။” (Kywan-taw thwa me) – I am going.
  • ကျွန်မ (Kywan-ma) – I/me (female speaker, formal): “ကျွန်မ စားမယ်။” (Kywan-ma sa me) – I am eating.
  • ငါ (Nga) – I/me (informal): “ငါ ရောက်မယ်။” (Nga yout me) – I have arrived.
  • သင် (Thin) – You (polite): “သင် ဘယ်သွားမလဲ။” (Thin be thwa le) – Where are you going?
  • မင်း (Min) – You (informal): “မင်း ကိုယ့်ကို မြင်မလား။” (Min koy ko yin ma la) – Do you see me?
  • သူ (Thu) – He/She: “သူ လာမယ်။” (Thu la me) – He/She is coming.
  • ကျွန်တော်တို့ (Kywan-taw to) – We (male speaker, formal): “ကျွန်တော်တို့ သွားကြမယ်။” (Kywan-taw to thwa gyi me) – We are going.
  • သူတို့ (Thu to) – They: “သူတို့ လာကြမယ်။” (Thu to la gyi me) – They are coming.

Object Pronouns:

In many cases, Burmese uses the same form for subject and object pronouns, but contextually it’s understood. For clarification or emphasis, prefixes/suffixes can be added.

  • ငါ့ကို (Nga ko) – Me: “သူ ငါ့ကို မြင်တယ်။” (Thu nga ko yin de) – He sees me.

Possessive Pronouns

Possessive pronouns in Burmese indicate ownership and are usually formed by adding particles to the personal pronouns.

  • ကျွန်တော်၏ (Kywan-taw ei) – My (male speaker, formal): “ကျွန်တော်၏ စာအုပ်။” (Kywan-taw ei sa ouk) – My book.
  • သင်၏ (Thin ei) – Your (polite): “သင်၏ ဖုန်း။” (Thin ei phone) – Your phone.

Demonstrative Pronouns

Demonstrative pronouns in Burmese are used to point to specific nouns and vary based on proximity.

  • ဒီ (Di) – This: “ဒီ စာအုပ်။” (Di sa ouk) – This book.
  • ဟို (Ho) – That: “ဟို ကား။” (Ho ka) – That car.

Reflexive Pronouns

Reflexive pronouns in Burmese indicate the subject performs an action upon itself, often using “ကိုယ်ကို (Koy ko)” for self.

  • ကိုယ်ကို (Koy ko) – Myself: “ငါ ကိုယ်ကို စားတယ်။” (Nga koy ko sa de) – I eat by myself.

Interrogative Pronouns

Interrogative pronouns are used to ask questions about people, places, or things.

  • ဘယ်သူ (Be thu) – Who: “ဘယ်သူ လား။” (Be thu la) – Who is it?
  • ဘာ (Ba) – What: “ဘာ ဖြစ်တယ်။” (Ba phyit de) – What happened?
  • ဘယ်မှာ (Be mha) – Where: “ဘယ်မှာ ရှိတယ်။” (Be mha shit de) – Where is it?
  • ဘယ်သူ့ (Be thu) – Whose: “ဘယ်သူ့ ဖုန်းလဲ။” (Be thu phone le) – Whose phone is it?

Mastering the use of pronouns in Burmese is crucial for navigating both simple and complex conversations. Practice these pronouns in different contexts, and try to engage in conversations with native speakers to enhance your understanding and usage. Remember, the level of formality and respect towards the listener plays a significant role in choosing the appropriate pronoun in Burmese.