Category:Kyam

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See also Wikipedia article: en:Mi gyaung.

Mi gyaung (Burmese: မိကျောင်း [mḭ dʑáʊɰ̃]) or kyam (Mon: ကျာံ, [cam] 🔊; pronounced "chyam") is a crocodile-shaped fretted, plucked zither with three strings that is used as a traditional instrument in Burma. It is associated with the Mon people. Both Burmese and Mon names also mean 'crocodile.'[1][2]

... In southern Myanmar the mí-gyaùng is associated with the Mon (who know it as kyam), an ethnic people linguistically related to the Mon-Khmer of Thailand and Cambodia.

— English Wikipedia article “w:en:Mi gyaung

See also categories: Chakhe, Krapeu, Kyam and Mi gyaung – for Thai, Cambodian, Burmese, and Mon's Crocodile zithers.

Footnote
  1. (1993) Burmese-English Dictionary, Yangon: Dept. of the Myanmar Language Commission, Ministry of Education, Union of Myanmar
  2. Shorto, H.L. (1962) A Dictionary of Modern Spoken Mon, London: Oxford University Press

Media in category "Kyam"

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