Anyway just what does buri mean ??

So many places in LOS end with buri it must mean something.
Does anyone know


Your at it again Randy. Why would he have mentioned "Not sure if this should be here or On the Road." of he was talking about tobacco,.Randy Cornhole wrote:Your not getting confused with 'Burii' by any chance? which means cigarette.
Guess wrote:Your at it again Randy. Why would he have mentioned "Not sure if this should be here or On the Road." of he was talking about tobacco,.Randy Cornhole wrote:Your not getting confused with 'Burii' by any chance? which means cigarette.
BG and Pete are correct. The word originates fron Sanskrit which probably inherited from an older source. It is one of the very few words (less than one hundred obvious examples have been found) that are common in Thai and English.
Buri is in fact town. (The exact meaning of which can vary even between English speaking counties.)
Larger conurbations in Thai are Thani and Nakhorn (or Nakawn depending upon transliteration).
Absolutely.
I was told that years ago in England by a good friend and his Thai wife.
"Do you know what Canter -bury, means". "Do you know etc etc.
Buri/town.
Now I think the Thais must have influenced our language.
Mai pen rai and all that.
The origin of the buri is exactly the same in Chon Buri as it is in Cantebury (New Hampshire in the US and Kent in the UK).
Another word used in two words that have common origins in English town name and Thai names is Baan (Barn) and Ratcha (Regis). Ban is house or village and Regis/Ratcha is related to royalty.
So, that give us Ban Chang (home of elephants?) and places like Ubon Ratchathani, Nakawn Ratchatisma (Korat), Udom Thani (Udorn) etc. It is now becoming clear as klong water...LOL.Guess wrote:Randy Cornhole wrote: Buri is in fact town. (The exact meaning of which can vary even between English speaking counties.)
Larger conurbations in Thai are Thani and Nakhorn (or Nakawn depending upon transliteration).
The origin of the buri is exactly the same in Chon Buri as it is in Cantebury (New Hampshire in the US and Kent in the UK).
Another word used in two words that have common origins in English town name and Thai names is Baan (Barn) and Ratcha (Regis). Ban is house or village and Regis/Ratcha is related to royalty.
You got one Thai beer in there spelled correctly Lomu.lomuamart wrote:Hey, I'm trying to learn Sanskrit - any teachers out there?
Amo
Amas
Amat
Amaris
Amarit
Amant
Any help would be appreciated as I qualify as a lawyer and brain surgeon next month.
And as Dr Feelgood said, get down to my surgery tonight.
Well you stick to your arty farty reference books and psuedo educational web sites but some geeezer down the pub told me and he said he had read it in the Sun so it must be true.Jaime wrote:The origin of Bury in English, is therefore probably not from the Sanskrit. See this link for the Indo-European family trees, which should make it all clear.... as mud!
http://www.friesian.com/cognates.htm