Thai Prepositions and Location Words Quiz — Location Quest Game (Free)

Thai Prepositions Quiz Banner - Learn essential Thai location words, prepositions, giving directions, and the verb yuu with the Location Quest interactive game
Thai Prepositions learning illustration showing the sentence formula anchored by the verb 'yuu', vocabulary for directions, distance tone pairs (glai near vs glai far), and core position markers.

Knowing where things are is one of the most practical skills in any language, and Thai prepositions and location words are what make it possible. They answer the questions you ask constantly while traveling, shopping, or finding your way: Where is the bathroom? Is it near here? Is the shop on the left or the right? Thai prepositions are the small words that turn "the restaurant" into "the restaurant next to the temple, across from the market." This guide to Thai prepositions and location words gives you the complete toolkit for describing and asking about position, direction, and place.

There is a structural feature of Thai that makes location words especially learnable. Thai relies on a single, powerful verb — อยู่ (yuu — to be located) — as the anchor for almost every statement about where something is. Master yuu plus a handful of position words, and you can describe the location of anything. The cat is on the table becomes แมวอยู่บนโต๊ะ (maeo yuu bon to). The pattern is remarkably consistent, which means the effort you invest here pays off immediately across countless real situations.

This post covers the essential Thai prepositions for position (on, under, in, beside), the direction words for giving and following directions (left, right, straight), and the compound location phrases that sound natural to Thai ears. Each comes with the sentence pattern it lives in and the real scenarios where you will need it. By the end, you will be able to ask where anything is and understand the answer.

The Key Verb: Yuu (To Be Located)

Before the prepositions themselves, you need the verb that holds them together. อยู่ (yuu) means "to be located" or "to be situated," and it is the backbone of every location sentence in Thai. Unlike the English "is," which serves many functions, yuu specifically marks physical location. The structure is simple and unchanging: thing + yuu + preposition + place.

แมวmaeothing
+
อยู่yuuis located
+
บนbonon
+
โต๊ะtotable
แมวอยู่บนโต๊ะ — maeo yuu bon to — the cat is on the table

To ask where something is, you replace the place with the question phrase ที่ไหน (tii nai — where), which you met in the question words post. ห้องน้ำอยู่ที่ไหน (hong naam yuu tii nai — where is the bathroom?) follows the exact same structure, simply ending with the question word. This consistency is what makes Thai location language so approachable: one verb, one pattern, endless applications.

Position Prepositions — On, Under, In, Out

These are the core prepositions that describe where one thing sits relative to another. They slot directly into the yuu pattern and cover the majority of everyday position-describing needs:

⬆️
บน
bon
on / on top of
bon to — on the table
⬇️
ใต้
tai
under / below
tai to — under the table
📥
ใน
nai
in / inside
nai hong — in the room
📤
นอก
nawk
outside
nawk baan — outside the house
ข้างหน้า
khang na
in front of
khang na raan — in front of the shop
ข้างหลัง
khang lang
behind
khang lang baan — behind the house
👈
ข้างๆ
khang khang
beside / next to
khang khang thanon — beside the road
😥
ระหว่าง
rawang
between
rawang song raan — between two shops

A useful observation: many Thai position words are built on the root ข้าง (khang — side). ข้างหน้า (khang na) is literally "front side," ข้างหลัง (khang lang) is "back side," and ข้างบน (khang bon) is "upper side." Once you recognise khang as the "side" building block, this whole family of words becomes transparent rather than a set of separate items to memorise. This is a recurring theme in Thai: compound words are often beautifully logical once you see their parts.

🎯 The Most Practical Location Question for Travelers:
ห้องน้ำอยู่ที่ไหน (hong naam yuu tii nai — where is the bathroom?) is arguably the single most useful location sentence to memorise before any trip to Thailand. Follow it with ใกล้ไหม (glai mai — is it near?) and you can navigate almost any venue.

Near, Far, and Distance Words

Beyond exact position, you often need to express relative distance — whether something is close or far. Thai handles this with a small set of distance words that pair naturally with yuu and with the question structures from earlier posts:

ใกล้
glai
near / close
glai glai — quite near (doubled)
ไกล
glai (falling tone)
far
A tone pair! Near and far differ only by tone
ติด
tit
right next to / attached
tit kan — adjacent to each other

Here is one of the most notorious tone pairs in Thai: ใกล้ (glai — near) and ไกล (glai — far) are written differently but sound almost identical to untrained ears, distinguished only by tone. Near is a high tone; far is a falling tone. Confusing them can send you walking in entirely the wrong direction, which is why this pair appears in the tones practical guide. When in doubt, ask the speaker to clarify with a follow-up — Thai people are used to helping with this particular confusion.

Direction Words — Giving and Following Directions

When you need to get somewhere, direction words become essential. These are the words you will hear from taxi drivers and give to them, the words on signs and in spoken instructions:

⬅️
ซ้าย
sai
left
เลี้ยวซ้าย
liao sai — turn left
➡️
ขวา
khwa
right
เลี้ยวขวา
liao khwa — turn right
⬆️
ตรง
trong
straight
ตรงไป
trong pai — go straight
🔄
กลับรถ
klap rot
U-turn
ตรงนี้
trong nii — right here

The verb เลี้ยว (liao — to turn) combines with sai and khwa to give the two most common driving instructions: liao sai (turn left) and liao khwa (turn right). Add ตรงไป (trong pai — go straight) and จอดตรงนี้ (jawt trong nii — stop right here), and you have everything you need to direct a taxi or tuk-tuk to your destination. These four phrases alone will handle the vast majority of your direction-giving needs in Thailand.

Compound Location Phrases That Sound Natural

While the basic prepositions work, Thai speakers often use slightly longer compound phrases that sound more natural and precise. These are built by adding ด้าน (dan — side/direction) or ทาง (thang — way/direction) to a position word:

👑
ด้านบน
dan bon
the top / upper side
dan bon — up top
👇
ด้านล่าง
dan lang
the bottom / lower side
dan lang — down below
🗀️
ทางซ้าย
thang sai
on the left side
yuu thang sai — it is on the left
🗁️
ทางขวา
thang khwa
on the right side
yuu thang khwa — it is on the right
🎯
ตรงกลาง
trong klang
in the middle / center
trong klang — in the center
🔄
รอบ
rawb
around / surrounding
rawb baan — around the house

The distinction between the short and compound forms is one of register and precision rather than correctness. Saying yuu sai (it is left) is understood, but yuu thang sai (it is on the left side) sounds more complete and natural, the way a Thai person would actually phrase it. As you advance, reaching for these slightly fuller forms is one of the marks of moving from functional Thai toward fluent Thai.

Putting It Together — Describing a Location in Full

The real power of these words emerges when you combine them to give a complete location. Thai stacks location information naturally, often from a known landmark to the target. Consider how a Thai speaker might direct you to a restaurant:

ร้านอาหารอยู่ข้างๆวัด ตรงข้ามตลาด
raan aahaan yuu khang khang wat, trong kham talaat
The restaurant is next to the temple, across from the market.
raan aahaan = restaurant yuu = is located khang khang wat = next to the temple trong kham talaat = across from the market

Notice how the sentence anchors the unknown (the restaurant) to known landmarks (the temple, the market). This is exactly how Thai people give directions in practice — by reference to recognizable points rather than abstract distances or street numbers. The word ตรงข้าม (trong kham — opposite/across from) is especially useful here and worth adding to your core set, as Thai addresses and directions lean heavily on what a place is opposite to.

Quick Answers to Common Thai Location Questions

For quick reference, here are direct answers to the questions learners most often ask about Thai prepositions and location words:

How do you say "where is" in Thai?
"Where is X" is X yuu tii nai, where yuu means "is located" and tii nai means "where." For example, hong naam yuu tii nai means "where is the bathroom."
What is the Thai word for "on"?
The Thai word for "on" or "on top of" is bon. It goes before the place: bon to means "on the table."
How do you tell a taxi to turn left in Thai?
"Turn left" is liao sai and "turn right" is liao khwa. "Go straight" is trong pai, and "stop here" is jawt trong nii.
What is the difference between glai and glai in Thai?
They are a tone pair: glai with a high tone means "near," while glai with a falling tone means "far." They sound similar but mean opposites, so tone is critical here.
🔗 Connected Posts:
Post 35 — Adverbs (tawn nii, thii nii — here/now)
Post 32 — Question Words (tii nai — where)
Post 29 — Tones (glai near vs glai far)
Post 36 — Prepositions & Location (you are here)

The Location Quest game below has three levels. Level 1 matches prepositions to meanings. Level 2 picks the right location word for a situation. Level 3 — the hardest — builds complete location sentences using the yuu pattern. 🎯

📍 Location Quest
Three levels - match prepositions, pick the right word, build location sentences
0
Score
❤️❤️❤️
Lives
0🔥
Streak
Lv1
Level
Q 1 / 15
📍
บน
bon
📍

Level Complete!

Score

0
0
Correct
0
Missed
0%
Accuracy

📋 Preposition & Location Reference

Thai Roman Meaning Type
อยู่yuuto be locatedKey Verb
บนbonon / on top ofPosition
ใต้taiunder / belowPosition
ในnaiin / insidePosition
นอกnawkoutsidePosition
ข้างหน้าkhang nain front ofPosition
ข้างหลังkhang langbehindPosition
ข้างๆkhang khangbeside / next toPosition
ระหว่างrawangbetweenPosition
ตรงข้ามtrong khamopposite / acrossPosition
ตรงกลางtrong klangin the middlePosition
ใกล้glainear (high tone)Distance
ไกลglaifar (falling tone)Distance
ติดtitadjacent toDistance
รอบrawbaroundPosition
ซ้ายsaileftDirection
ขวาkhwarightDirection
ตรงtrongstraightDirection
เลี้ยวliaoto turnDirection
ทางซ้ายthang saion the left sideDirection
ทางขวาthang khwaon the right sideDirection
ด้านบนdan bonthe top sideDirection
ด้านล่างdan langthe bottom sideDirection
ที่thiiat (place marker)Marker
ที่ไหนtii naiwhereQuestion

Core pattern: thing + yuu (is located) + preposition + place. Example: maeo yuu bon to = the cat is on the table.

📍 Why Thai Location Language Is So Learnable

Thai prepositions and location words are among the most rewarding parts of the language to study because they offer an unusually high return on a small investment. A single verb, yuu, plus roughly fifteen position and direction words, equips a learner to describe and ask about the location of almost anything. Compare this to the irregular tangle of prepositions in many European languages, and Thai feels refreshingly systematic. This is why teachers of Thai as a foreign language often introduce location words early - they produce fast, visible progress and immediate real-world usefulness.

The Landmark Habit in Thai Directions

One cultural pattern worth understanding is how Thai people give directions. Rather than relying on street names, compass directions, or precise distances, Thai directions typically anchor to visible landmarks - a temple, a market, a 7-Eleven, a large tree. A Thai person will more naturally say the shop is opposite the temple than the shop is two hundred meters north. For a learner, this means the location vocabulary in this guide, combined with the names of common landmarks, covers the way directions actually work on the ground in Thailand. Mastering trong kham (opposite) and khang khang (next to) is often more practical than memorizing formal address structures.

Tone Awareness in Location Words

Location vocabulary contains one of the most important tone pairs in everyday Thai: glai (near) versus glai (far). These two words, opposite in meaning, are separated only by tone, and confusing them has real consequences when you are trying to find your way. This is a recurring lesson in Thai - that tone is not decorative but load-bearing, carrying meaning as surely as consonants and vowels do. Learners who treat the near-far pair as a priority early on save themselves considerable confusion later.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How do you ask where something is in Thai?
Use the pattern X yuu tii nai, where อยู่ (yuu) means is located and ที่ไหน (tii nai) means where. For example, ห้องน้ำอยู่ที่ไหน (hong naam yuu tii nai) means where is the bathroom. The verb yuu is the anchor of every Thai location question.
What is the Thai word for on, under, and in?
บน (bon) means on or on top of, ใต้ (tai) means under or below, and ใน (nai) means in or inside. Each goes before the place: bon to means on the table, tai to means under the table, nai hong means in the room.
How do you give directions to a taxi in Thai?
The four core phrases are เลี้ยวซ้าย (liao sai - turn left), เลี้ยวขวา (liao khwa - turn right), ตรงไป (trong pai - go straight), and จอดตรงนี้ (jawt trong nii - stop here). These handle the vast majority of direction-giving in Thailand.
What is the difference between glai and glai in Thai?
They form a tone pair. ใกล้ (glai) with a high tone means near, while ไกล (glai) with a falling tone means far. They sound nearly identical to untrained ears but mean opposites, so the tone distinction is essential when asking about distance or finding your way.
How do you say next to or beside in Thai?
ข้างๆ (khang khang) means next to or beside. Many Thai position words use ข้าง (khang - side) as a root: khang na (in front), khang lang (behind), khang bon (above). Recognising khang as the side building block makes the whole family transparent.
What does yuu mean in Thai?
อยู่ (yuu) means to be located or to be situated. It is the key verb for all location statements in Thai, following the pattern thing + yuu + preposition + place. For example, maeo yuu bon to means the cat is on the table. Yuu specifically marks physical location, unlike the multi-purpose English verb to be.

Loading comments...