Thai Weather Quiz Sun, Rain and Everything Between (Free Quiz)
On my first full day in Bangkok I made the mistake that almost every first-time visitor makes: I left the hotel in the morning, felt the pleasant warmth of 8am sunshine, and decided I did not need the umbrella sitting on the luggage rack. By two in the afternoon I was sheltering under the awning of a closed pharmacy somewhere in Silom while the sky delivered what could only be described as a personal intervention — sheets of vertical rain so intense that the street became a fast-moving river within four minutes.
This is Thailand's weather: reliably extreme, predictably timed, and entirely survivable once you understand its logic. The afternoon thunderstorm during rainy season arrives as reliably as the tuk-tuks. The hot season heat is real but manageable. The cool season, despite its name, is genuinely pleasant — just not cold by most standards. Understanding the Thai vocabulary for these conditions turns weather from a series of surprises into a legible system you can navigate and discuss.
This quiz covers all the essential weather words plus the three seasons, a temperature scale in Thai, and the handful of phrases that let you commiserate about the heat with a taxi driver or warn a fellow traveler that rain is coming. Because in Thailand, weather is always a conversation.
Essential Weather Words
Temperature Scale in Thai
The Three Seasons of Thailand
Fon Tok — Understanding the Rain
ā¸ā¸ā¸ā¸ (fon tok — literally rain falls) is one of the most frequently used weather phrases in Thailand, particularly during the rainy season from June to October. But the rainy season is often misunderstood. It is not a period of continuous grey drizzle. It is a season of brilliant mornings, building afternoon clouds, and then — usually between two and five in the afternoon — a spectacular tropical downpour that arrives with little warning and ends within an hour or two, leaving the air cooler and the streets steaming.
The Thai response to ā¸ā¸ā¸ā¸ is pragmatic. Most Thais carry an umbrella (⏪่ā¸Ą — rom) at all times during rainy season. Street vendors disappear under their awnings, covered walkways become highways of people waiting out the rain, and the food stalls on uncovered streets often develop temporary canvas shelters that appear within seconds of the first drops. Understanding the rhythm of the rain — and having the vocabulary to ask about it — makes navigating this season much less stressful.
Talking About Weather — Practical Phrases
Asking about weather: ā¸ā¸˛ā¸ā¸˛ā¸¨ pen yang-ngai (aa kaat pen yang-ngai) — What is the weather like? The phrase pen yang-ngai (how is it / what is it like) attaches to any noun to ask about its current state.
Commenting on heat: ⏪้ā¸ā¸ā¸Ąā¸˛ā¸ loei (rawn mak loei) — Really very hot! The particle loei adds emphasis and genuine feeling to the statement. Saying this to any Thai person in summer will generate immediate sympathetic agreement and often an offer of water or a seat in the shade.
Warning about rain: ā¸ā¸ ja tok (fon ja tok) — It's going to rain. The particle ja indicates near-future intention or likelihood. A weather forecast on Thai television uses fon ja tok extensively.
Good weather: ā¸ā¸˛ā¸ā¸˛ā¸¨ā¸ี mak wan nee (aa kaat dee mak wan nee) — The weather is really nice today. This phrase produces warm responses in December and January when the cool season delivers its best days.
✅ Post 03 — Numbers
✅ Post 16 — Colors
✅ Post 17 — Body Parts
✅ Post 18 — Weather (you are here)
Fifteen weather words and phrases below. By the end, you will know exactly what to say when the sky turns dark at 3pm and everyone around you starts looking for cover. ⛈️
⛈️ How to Play
- 1See a Thai weather word with emoji
- 2Press Listen to hear it in Thai
- 3Choose the correct meaning from 4 options
- 43 in a row earns a streak bonus!
Quiz Complete!
Your final score
đ Weather Reference
| Thai | Romanized | Meaning | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| ā¸ā¸˛ā¸ā¸˛ā¸¨ | aa kaat | Weather / air | Base word for weather |
| ⏪้ā¸ā¸ | rawn | Hot | Most-used weather word in Thailand |
| ā¸Ģā¸ā¸˛ā¸§ | naaw | Cold | Relative — Thais say naaw at 20°C |
| āšā¸ĸ็⏠| yen | Cool / pleasant | Also = cold for drinks |
| ā¸ุ่⏠| un | Warm | Comfortable temperature |
| ā¸ā¸ā¸ā¸ | fon tok | Raining | fon=rain, tok=fall |
| ā¸้⏞⏪้ā¸ā¸ | fah rong | Thunder | fah=sky, rong=roar |
| ā¸้⏞āšā¸Ĩ⏠| fah laep | Lightning | fah=sky, laep=flash |
| ā¸Ĩā¸Ąāšā¸Ŗā¸ | lom raeng | Strong wind | lom=wind, raeng=strong |
| ā¸Ąีāšā¸Ąā¸ | mee mek | Cloudy | mee=have, mek=cloud |
| āšā¸ā¸ā¸ā¸ā¸ | daet ok | Sunny | daet=sun, ok=emerge |
| ā¸ื้⏠| chuen | Humid | Very common in Bangkok |
| ā¸ā¸˛ā¸ā¸˛ā¸¨ā¸ี | aa kaat dee | Good weather | Use in cool season |
| ⏤ā¸ู⏪้ā¸ā¸ | ruedu rawn | Hot season | Mar–May, 35–40°C |
| ⏤ā¸ูā¸ā¸ | ruedu fon | Rainy season | Jun–Oct, afternoon storms |
| ⏤ā¸ูā¸Ģā¸ā¸˛ā¸§ | ruedu naaw | Cool season | Nov–Feb, best to visit |
| ⏪่ā¸Ą | rom | Umbrella | Carry always in rainy season |
⛅ Deep Dive: Weather and Thai Daily Life
Weather is not just small talk in Thailand — it is a practical, immediate concern that shapes daily decisions about what to wear, when to travel, where to eat, and how to plan. The rainy season afternoon storm is one of the most predictable meteorological events in Southeast Asia, and local life organizes around it with an efficiency that visitors often find impressive once they notice the pattern.
The Art of Reading Bangkok Weather
Bangkok weather during rainy season follows a remarkably consistent pattern. Mornings are typically clear and bright. Clouds begin building around noon. By early afternoon the sky turns a specific shade of grey-purple that experienced Bangkok residents recognize immediately. At this point, street vendors begin covering merchandise, motorcycle taxi drivers don their rain jackets, and anyone with sense starts moving toward shelter. The downpour arrives, intense and theatrical, lasts between thirty minutes and two hours, and then stops. The air temperature drops by several degrees and the evening becomes the most pleasant part of the day.
Cool Season Expectations
When Thais say it is cold (naaw), they are operating on a different scale than northern European or North American visitors. Temperatures of 20 to 22 degrees Celsius in Chiang Mai during December will prompt locals to appear in winter coats and scarves while foreign tourists wear shorts. The cool season in Bangkok rarely drops below 18 degrees at night, and midday temperatures remain comfortable in the mid-twenties. For Thais accustomed to heat, this is cold. For most foreign visitors, it is perfect.
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