คุณอยากช่วยหรือ : Do You Wanna Help? | Learn Thai with Question and Answer Sentences

Blog “Learn Thai with Question and Answer Sentences” is going to teach you what the Thai sentences using for making a question and answer both in “YES” and “NO” sentences form.

Today, we are going to learn speaking Thai with the vocabulary “ช่วย(chûay)” which means “HELP” in Thai.


Here we go with the Question sentence first below:


คุณ อยาก ช่วย หรือ 
khun yàak chûay rĕu 
Do you wanna help?


To answer to the question above with the affirmative form below:


ใช่ ฉัน อยาก ช่วย 
châi chăn yàak chûay 
Yes, I do.


To answer to the question above with the negative form below:


ไม่ ฉัน ไม่ อยาก ช่วย 
mâi chăn mâi yàak chûay 
No, I don't.


Additional, see the sentences offering help. 


คุณ ต้องการ ให้ ฉัน ช่วย หรือ ไหม
khun dtông gaan hâi chăn chûay rĕu măi
Do you want any help?


To reply if you want help, say this below sentence.


ใช่ ฉัน ต้องการ ให้ ช่วย
châi chăn dtông gaan hâi chûay
Yes, I do.

If you don't want any help, so you can use the following replying the offerer;


ไม่ ฉัน ไม่ ต้องการ ความช่วยเหลือ
mâi chăn mâi dtông gaan kwaam chûay lĕua
No, I don't. 


Why should you learn Thai?



See more in details that around 65 millions Thai populations say it(Thai language) in their daily life and in the near future, it will be 625 millions of ASEAN population that they are going to learn Thai language as well, because Thai nation is one permanent member of the 10 ASEAN countries.

They will openly transfer skill employers within their member nations. Although they plan to invest, import and export across one another within the ASEAN member countries at the end of 2015.

Thailand will be also one country that it would be the center for investment, transportation and logistics hub as of it is in the mid of many countries in the region.


See you in the next Learn Thai sentence.
Bye,

Vocabulary 
Pronunciation 
Translation
คุณ khun "Title, of Pali/Sanskrit origin Mr ; Mrs ; Miss ; Ms (คุณ , usually transliterated as ""Khun"", is a standard polite and relatively formal title used before the names of both men and women in Thai. Unlike the English equivalent titles though, ""Khun"" is always used before first names and not surnames. This is a practice many Thais carry over when talking in English, so in Thailand John Smith would frequently be called Mr John (Khun John) rather than Mr Smith. This habit leaves the English of many Thais sounding somewhat more informal than they intended.)"
ฉัน chăn Pronoun I, me: Commonly used by females (Occasionally, monks and men might use it too).
ช่วย chûay Adverb-Auxiliary; please, Verb [to] help ; aid ; assist
ใช่ châi yes
ไม่ mâi no, not
หรือ rĕu (question particle used when seeking confirmation of something thought to be true, or to make a question sound softer) Examples ใช่หรือ châi rĕu "is that right ? ; is that so ?" (question particle)
อยาก yàak Verb: [to] want to

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