Consonants • Aspirated plosives /pʰ/, /dʱ/, /ɖʱ/, and /kʰ/ rarely appear in word-final position. /ɖ/ and /ɖʱ/ never stay on the same word with their allophones /ɽ/ and /ɽʱ/. • Four affricates /t͡ʃ/, /t͡ʃʰ/, /d͡ʒ/, /d͡ʒʱ/ can be found in initial, medial, and final positions. When articulating these phonemes, the blade of the tongue touches the back of the teeth-ridge. When a stop consonant is articulated, the touch continues longer, and the separation of the tongue is slower than it is for the affricates. • /s/ occurs with all positions, while /h/ is mostly found in word-initial. In rapid conversation, there seems to be a case for h-elision between vowels. Eg. /d͡ʒohɛk/ 'to wait' is realized as [d͡ʒoɛk], and /mohor/ 'old coin' as [moːr]. • /ŋ/ is restricted to the word-final position. Breathy nasals /mʱ nʱ ŋʱ/, lateral /lʱ/, and flap /ɾʱ/ are only attested in word-medial and word-final positions. • Glides mostly occur in intervocalic positions; however, they are also found in word-final position in a few lexical items. Inserting glides in intervocalic positions, which is common in Indo-Aryan, is not favored in Khortha. • Aspirated consonants cannot be geminated. Gemination of /ɾ/ will yield the first consonant as [r], and the second as [ɾ]. Eg. [
barɾa] 'banyan tree'.
Vowels Nasalization consistently occur with all vowels and positions in Khortha, although it is noted that /a/ is the most nasalized vowel in all accounts, and there is a tendency that phonemic contrast between nasalized and oral vowels is likely to be the strongest in word-medial and final positions. Some minimal and near-minimal pairs found in the corpus are listed in the table below:
Vowel rules When a word root is bound with an affix that contains a vowel, the internal open central vowel /a/ of the first syllable is replaced by the mid-close central vowel. Eg.
gʱaɾ ('house') +
wʌin (plural) →
gʱʌɾwʌin 'houses'. This process is pretty common, but it is not related to
vowel harmony and is more likely due to intonation. It also does not apply to compounds and reduplicated nouns. Eg.
gatʃʰ-palha 'greenery' (lit. "tree-leave"). Final-vowel stem, when is marked with plural suffix -wʌin, the final vowel is dropped. Eg.
kaɽa +
wʌin →
kʌɽwʌin 'buffalos'. Root with /a/ final merges with the initial /a/ of the following element. Eg.
kʰa-a (eat-2PL.IMP.HON) →
kʰa 'you eat!' (plural and honorific). The long open vowel is dropped when it is followed by the mid-close central vowel. In some verbs, the open central vowel is dropped in imperative constructions due to the addition of the suffix
-o. Eg.
kʰa-o (eat-2SG.IMP) →
kʰo 'you eat!' The nominalizing suffix
-bɛ assimilates with additive clitic
=o, producing the contracted version
-bo 'NMLZ.ADD'. ==Morphology==