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| Wide use | Astronomical · Gregorian · Islamic · ISO |
| Calendar Types | |
| Lunisolar · Solar · Lunar | |
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| Selected use | Assyrian · Armenian · Attic · Aztec (Tonalpohualli – Xiuhpohualli) · Babylonian · Bahá'í · Bengali · Berber · Bikram Samwat · Buddhist · Celtic · Chinese · Coptic · Egyptian · Ethiopian · Calendrier Républicain · Germanic · Hebrew · Hellenic · Hindu · Indian · Iranian · Irish · Japanese · Javanese · Juche · Julian · Korean · Lithuanian · Malayalam · Maya (Tzolk'in – Haab') · Minguo · Nanakshahi · Nepal Sambat · Pawukon · Pentecontad calendar · Rapa Nui · Roman · Soviet · Tamil · Thai (Lunar – Solar) · Tibetan · Burmese . Vietnamese· Xhosa · Zoroastrian |
| Calendar Types | |
| Runic · Mesoamerican (Long Count – Calendar Round) | |
| Christian variants | |
| Julian calendar · Calendar of saints · Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar · Liturgical year | |
| Rarely used | Darian calendar · Discordian calendar |
| Display types and applications | Perpetual calendar · Wall calendar · Economic calendar |
The Thai lunar calendar or Patitin Chantarakati (Thai: ปฏิทินจันทรคติ) was replaced by the Thai solar calendar Patitin Suriyakati (ปฏิทินสุริยคติ) in AD 1888 2431 BE for most purposes, but the Chantarakati still determines most Buddhist feast or holy days, as well as a day for the famous Loy Krathong festival. These move with respect to the solar calendar, so Thai calendars continue to show Chantarakati dates, as well as Chinese calendar lunar dates. Thai birth certificates also include Chantarakati dates, and the appropriate Animal from the twelve Animals. In practice, many Thais reckon their ages from this sequence of Animals, though legally, age is determined by the solar calendar.
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Literally Against-the-Sun Moon-Ways, but properly the Chantarakati Calendar, this is Thailand's version of the lunisolar Buddhist calendar used in the southeast Asian countries of Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar (formerly Burma). Based on the original third-century Surya Siddhanta Hindu calendar, these combine lunar and solar calendars for a nominal year of 12 months. A leap day or 30-day leap month is intercalated at regular intervals; Thai, Lao, and Cambodian versions do not add the leap day to years with the leap month.
Years may have three lengths—354, 355 or 384 days. (See also Lunar Year).
Other Buddhist-calendar months have names in Sanskrit or old Burmese, but Thai lunar months number commonly from 1 to 12, where Caitra (Southern month 5) or Vaisakha (Southern month 6) begin the year. In a normal lunar year there are 354 days, so another 11 are needed in the next cycle of lunar months to make up 365 days. Consequently if one year began on Caitra 8, the next year would normally have to begin on Caitra 19. An extra day or an extra month in the lunar year, or a Leap in the solar year, will of course modify what the sequence will be. The system is prevented from passing ever onwards through the lunar months by the years with an extra month: there are then 384 lunar days, so the solar year will expire first and the next new year start will fall earlier in the lunar calendar.
Note: the numeration of the months has historically three modes, best seen with the athikamas, 2nd Ashadha, since the doubling of the digit makes the reference unambiguous. In the South 2nd Ashadha is 88, in the North predominantly 1010, but in all Lanna provinces it could be 99, a designation shared with Sipsongpanna and employed in some Lao records (e.g. Buddha statue inscriptions). Plain "month 8", on the other hand, could potentially equate with Ashadha, or Jyestha, or Vaisakha depending on the region involved. There is usually enough other information in a record to determine which of the three modes applies.
Months divide into two periods designated by the names of their characteristic "moons":
Days number sequentially from 1 to 14 or 15:
Thai orthography spells most native words phonetically, though there is no definitive system for transcription into Roman letters. Here, native Thai words are immediately followed by a vocabulary entry in this pattern:
Example:
Sanskrit loan words follow different rules [the way English rules vary for Greek and Latin ('ph-' in 'phonetic' being pronounced /f/, for example.)] Entered below in order of first appearance, these vocabulary entries are in this pattern:
Literally means "self-made" or "self-done", or "cultured" in a modern usage(which implies the language of cultured); Sanskrit alphabet, language, writing ; [presumed] compound of
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