When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Thai greeting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thai_greeting

    The Thai greeting referred to as the wai (Thai: ไหว้, pronounced) consists of a slight bow, with the palms pressed together in a prayer-like fashion. It has its origin in the Indian Añjali Mudrā , like the Indian namaste and Burmese mingalaba .

  3. Wan Ok Phansa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wan_Ok_Phansa

    Wan Ok Phansa (Thai: วันออกพรรษา, pronounced [wān ʔɔ̀ːk pʰān.sǎː]; literally "day of going out of Vassa", ออก in Thai meaning exit or leave) is the last day of the Thai-Lao observance of Vassa.

  4. Tai folk religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tai_folk_religion

    Lowland Thai and Lao villages believe they are protected by the phi ban, which requires an annual offering to ensure the continued prosperity of the village. The village ritual specialist presides over this major ritual, which in the past often involved the sacrifice of a water buffalo and is still an occasion for closing the village to any ...

  5. Suvannamaccha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suvannamaccha

    The figure of Suvannamaccha is popular in Thai folklore and is represented on small cloth streamers or framed pictures that are hung as luck-bringing charms in shops and houses throughout Thailand. Suvannamaccha luck bringing charm in a riverside shop in Nonthaburi, Thailand

  6. Culture of Thailand - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Thailand

    Buddhist temples in Thailand are known as wats, from the Pāḷi vāṭa, meaning an enclosure. A temple has an enclosing wall that divides it from the secular world. Wat architecture has seen many changes in Thailand in the course of history. Although there are many differences in layout and style, they all adhere to the same principles.

  7. Ramakien - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramakien

    It is a Thai version of the ancient Indian epic Ramayana, and an important part of the Thai literary canon. King Rama VI was the person who shed the light first on the Ramayana studies in Thailand, by tracing the sources of the Ramakien, comparing it with the Sanskrit Valmiki Ramayana.

  8. Thainess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thainess

    The flag of Thailand is commonly invoked as a symbol of the Thai identity.. Thainess, or the Thai identity (Thai: ความเป็นไทย, RTGS: khwam pen thai), is a conceptual identity regarding the quality of being Thai: characteristics seen as distinctive to the Thai people, Thai culture, and those belonging to Thailand as a whole.

  9. Sawang Daen Din district - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sawang_Daen_Din_District

    Sawang Daen Din (Thai: สว่างแดนดิน, pronounced [sā.wàːŋ dɛ̄ːn dīn]) is a district in the western part of Sakon Nakhon province, northeast Thailand. Geography [ edit ]