Tayaw kinpun

Shí Wikipedia, njikotá édémédé nke onyobulạ
Shampoo ọdịnala nke tayaw kinpun

Tayaw kinpun (Àtụ:Lang-my, Àtụ:IPA-myÀtụ:IPA-myÀtụ:IPA-my or Àtụ:IPA-my; also transliterated tayaw kinmun[1][2] or tayaw kinbun[3][4]) is a traditional shampoo used in Myanmar. Its main ingredients are the bark of the tayaw (Grewia) tree and the soapy kinpun (Senegalia rugata) fruit. Lime may also be added to the mix.[5] Shampooing with tayaw kinpun has been an important tradition in Burmese culture since ancient times. Burmese kings used to wash their hair with tayaw kinpun during the royal hair-washing ceremony (Àtụ:Lang-mykLang-mykLangLang-mykLang-mykL[6].[7][8]

[9][10] mgbakwunye na ojiji ya, ndị Burmese ka na-eji tayaw kinpun eme ihe n'ọtụtụ ebe, a na-erekwa ya n'ahịa ikuku nke mba ahụ, nke a na-ahụkarị na akpa plastik.

Akụkọ ifo[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

Ihe oyiyi nke Queen Panhtwar

Dị ka akụkọ ifo si kwuo, Eze Duttabaung nke Sri Ksetra nwere ike karịrị nke mmadụ site na onye a ma ama ya n'etiti ihu ya. [11][12] maara ya dị ka Eze nwere Anya Atọ, Duttabaung meriri Beikthano, ma were onye ọchịchị steeti ahụ e meriri Panhtwar dị ka eze nwanyị ya. Ọ bụ ezie na e meriri ya, Eze Nwanyị Panhtwar kwere nkwa iweghachite alaeze ya. Mgbe ọ chọpụtara na eze ahụ bụ isi iyi nke ike ya, o chepụtara atụmatụ iji belata ike nke eze ahụ site n'inye eze ákwà ihu, nke e ji htamein (sarong) mee. Eze ahụ tụfuru ike ya site na iji ákwà nhicha. N'oge na-adịghị anya, ọ chere ọtụtụ nnupụisi ihu, ọ ghaghịkwa ịgbapụ n'isi obodo. Mgbe ọ na-agba ọsọ, ọ zuru ike n'okpuru nnukwu osisi tayaw, nke osisi kinpun gbara gburugburu. Mgbe mmiri malitere izo, a na-etinye mmiri n'isi ya na ihe ọṅụṅụ nke osisi tayaw na kinpun, nke na-achụpụ ọgwụ nke ákwà nhicha Panhtwar, ike ya wee pụta ọzọ. Site mgbe ahụ gaa [12]'ihu, ndị eze Burmese na-esote jiri ngwakọta tayaw kinpun saa ntutu ha n'ụzọ omenala iji chụpụ ihe ọjọọ, ma bulie ike ha.

  1. Hardiman (1901). in Sir James George Scott: Gazetteer of Upper Burma and Shan States Part 2. Government Press, British Burma. Retrieved on 2022-08-07. 
  2. United States National Herbarium, United States National Museum (2003). Contributions from the United States National Herbarium. Smithsonian Institution Press. Retrieved on 2022-08-07. 
  3. Burma Research Group (1987). Burma and Japan: Basic Studies on Their Cultural and Social Structure. Burma Research. Retrieved on 2022-08-07. 
  4. SEAMEO Regional Centre for History and Tradition (2005). Traditions, 2005. Retrieved on 2022-08-07. 
  5. Yadu. "မှေးမှိန်လာနေတဲ့ တရော်ကင်ပွန်းသုံးစွဲခြင်း အလေ့အထ", The Myanmar Times, 31 August 2019. Retrieved on 2 August 2022. (in my-MM)
  6. "Soap Nut (ကင်ပွန်းသီး)", Hello Sayarwon, 25 September 2017. Retrieved on 2 August 2022. (in my-MM)
  7. "နှစ်ဆန်းတစ်ရက်နေ့", Eleven Media Group, 17 April 2019. Retrieved on 2 August 2022. (in my)
  8. "မြန်မာရိုးရာ အတာနှစ်ကူး ခေါင်းဆေးမင်္ဂလာ", DVB, 14 April 2021. Retrieved on 2 August 2022. (in my-MM)
  9. "Yan Win (Taung Da Gar) – Myanmar Shampoo", THIT HTOO LWIN (Daily News), 16 April 2011. Retrieved on 2 August 2022. (in my-MM)
  10. "Myanmar Shampoo", www.myanmars.net, 13 November 2018. Retrieved on 2 August 2022. (in en-gb)
  11. "တရော်ကင်းပွန်းဖြစ်လာပုံ", Ayeyar Myay, 12 July 2020. Retrieved on 3 August 2022. (in my-MM)
  12. 12.0 12.1 "ဆေးဖက်ဝင်အပင်များနှင့် အဓိကပျောက်ကင်းနိုင်သောရောဂါများ", Myawawady News. Retrieved on 2022-08-03.

N'omenala a ma ama[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

na 13 April n'afo 2021, n'onwa abuo gachara nu mgbe e mere 2021 Myanmar coup d'etat, activists na Mandalay bidoro tayaw kinpun strike, na tube shampoo

Ihe odide[dezie | dezie ebe o si]