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Burmese kinship
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Burmese kinship system is a fairly complex system used to define family in the Burmese language.[1] In the Burmese kinship system:[2]
History
Many of the kinship terms used in Burmese today are extant or derived from Old Burmese.[3] These include the terms used to reference siblings and in-laws.[3]
Grades of kinship
The Burmese kinship system identifies and recognizes six generations of direct ancestors, excluding the ego:[4]
- Be (ဘဲ) - great-grandfather's great-grandfather (6 generations removed)
- Bin (ဘင်) - great-grandfather's grandfather (5 generations removed)
- Bi (ဘီ) - great-grandfather's father (4 generations removed)
- Bay (ဘေး) - great-grandfather (3 generations removed)
- Pho (ဘိုး) - grandfather (2 generations removed)
- Phay (ဖေ) - father (1 generation removed)
The Burmese kinship system identifies seven generations of direct descendants, excluding the ego:[4]
- Tha (သား) - (1 generation removed)
- Myi (မြေး) - (2 generations removed)
- Myit (မြစ်) - (3 generations removed)
- Ti (တီ) - (4 generations removed)
- Tut (တွတ်) or Hmyaw (မျှော့) - (5 generations removed)
- Kyut (ကျွတ်) - (6 generations removed)
- Hset (ဆက်) - (7 generations removed)
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Extended family and terminology
Summarize
Perspective
Kinship terms differ depending on the degree of formality, courtesy or intimacy. Also, there are regional differences in the terms used.
Common suffixes
- female: မ (ma)
- male: ဖ (hpa)
Burmese also possesses kin numeratives (in the form of suffixes):
Relationships
The Burmese kinship system also recognizes various relationships between family members that are not found in English, including:[4]
- တူအရီး (tu ayi) - relationship between uncle or aunt and nephew or niece
- ခမည်းခမက် (khami khamet) - relationship between parents of a married couple
- မယားညီအစ်ကို (maya nyi-ako) - relationship between the husbands of two sisters
- သမီးမျောက်သား (thami myauk tha) - relationship between cousins, used in Arakanese language[6]
Members of the nuclear family
Members of the extended family
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References
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