471. Reference : MM-1-16-62

| Courtship of Tai Lue men and women. Men visit the woman at home in the evening for chatting. | Punch card

472. Reference : MM-1-16-63

| Local animals: ox, buffalo, horse, chicken, pig. They are raised as labor and as a food source. | Punch card

473. Reference : MM-1-16-64

| In previous times, the class difference between the people in the village was not very large. | Punch card

474. Reference : MM-1-16-65

| The household numbers in Ban Phaed village increased from 22 to between 50 and 60. | Punch card

475. Reference : MM-1-16-66

| The father of the village headman usually pays respect to the altar with an image of Buddha, before going to sleep. | Punch card

476. Reference : MM-1-16-67

| In previous times, a monk would spend each day copying manuscripts onto palm leaves. It was both for worship and to learn Tham. | Punch card

477. Reference : MM-1-16-68

| Most of the Tai Lue assimilated with the Yuan (native people). The Tai Lue in Chiengmuon do not speak the Tai Lue language anymore, instead the northern Thai language is spoken. They don’t weave cloth for household use and have short hair. | Punch card

478. Reference : MM-1-16-69

| The usefulness of cloth - weaving and dying it with natural color. The influence of central Tai culture on the Tai Lue culture. | Punch card

479. Reference : MM-1-16-70

| The price of meat - pork, duck, and chicken is available at the market, but there is no beef. If an animal (ox, buffalo, pig) died, it would be slaughtered and distributed among the people in village. | Punch card

480. Reference : MM-1-16-71

| The process involved in leaving the Buddhist monkhood. | Punch card