. . . . "khb" . . "Tai L\u00FC (Tai L\u00FC: \u1985\u19C4\u1991\u19BA\u199F\u19B9\u19C9, kam tai lue, [k\u00E2m.t\u00E2j.l\u026F\u0300]) or Tai L\u026F, Tai Lue, Thai Lue, Tai Le; Xishuangbanna Dai (Chinese: \u50A3\u4EC2\u8BED; pinyin: D\u01CEil\u00E8y\u01D4; Thai: \u0E20\u0E32\u0E29\u0E32\u0E44\u0E17\u0E25\u0E37\u0E49\u0E2D, phasa tai lue, pronounced [p\u02B0\u0101\u02D0.s\u01CE\u02D0.t\u02B0\u0101j.l\u026F\u0301\u02D0]; Vietnamese: L\u1EF1 or L\u1EEF) is a Tai language of the Lu people, spoken by about 700,000 people in Southeast Asia. This includes 280,000 people in China (Yunnan), 200,000 in Burma, 134,000 in Laos, 83,000 in Thailand, and 4,960 in Vietnam."@en . "Kam Tai Lue"@en . "Tai L\u00FC"@en . . .