The Khasic or Khasian languages are a family of Austroasiatic languages native to the Shillong Plateau and spoken by the Khasi, Pnar and other related ethnic groups. Most of them reside in the northeastern Indian state of Meghalaya where Khasi speakers form a plurality of the population. Smaller Khasic-speaking pockets are found in Assam, Manipur, Mizoram and Sylhet Division of Bangladesh.[1]
Khasic | |
---|---|
Geographic distribution | India, Bangladesh |
Linguistic classification | Austroasiatic
|
Proto-language | Proto-Khasic |
Language codes | |
Glottolog | khas1268 |
Map of the Khasic languages |
Languages
editSidwell (2018: 27–31) classifies the Khasian languages as follows.
Varieties called Bhoi are dialects of both Pnar and Khasi.
External relationships
editPaul Sidwell (2011) suggests that Khasian is closely related to Palaungic, forming a Khasi–Palaungic branch.
The following eight Khasian-Palaungic isoglosses have been identified by Sidwell (2018: 32).
Gloss | Proto-Khasian (Sidwell 2018) |
Proto-Palaungic (Sidwell 2015)[2] |
---|---|---|
blood | *snaːm | *snaːm |
claw/nail | *trʧʰiːm | *rənsiːm |
hair | *sɲuʔ | *ɲuk |
man/husband | trmɛ (Amwi) | *-meʔ |
rain | *slap; slɛ (Amwi) |
*clɛʔ |
swim | *ɟŋiː | *ŋɔj |
two | *ʔaːr | *ləʔaːr |
water | *ʔum | *ʔoːm |
Lexical innovations
editSidwell (2018: 23) lists the following Khasian lexical innovations (i.e., defining lexical forms) that are found exclusively in the Khasian branch, but not in other Austroasiatic branches).
English gloss | Proto-Khasian | Lyngngam | Maram | Khasi | Pnar | Mnar | War |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
cooked rice | *ʤaː | ʥa | ʤa | ja /ʤaː/ | ʤa | ci | ʧi |
moon | *bnəːj | bni | bne | bnai /bnaːi/ | bnaj | pni | pnʊ |
to sing | *rwəːj | rəŋwi | rwej | rwái /rwaːi/ | rwaj | – | rvʊ |
four | *saːw | saw | saw | sáw /saːw/ | so | sɔu | ria |
river | *waʔ | – | waɁ | wah /waːʔ/ | waɁ | waɁ | waɁ |
all | *barɔɁ | prok | barɔʔ | baroh /barɔːʔ/ | warɔʔ | – | bərɒʔ |
pig | *sniaŋ | sɲaŋ | sniaŋ | sniang /sniaŋ/ | sniaŋ | cʰɲaŋ | rniŋ |
sand | *ʧʔiap | ʥʔep | ʧiʔɛp | shyiap /ʃʔiap/ | ʧʔiap | ʃʔip | ʃʔiap |
to drink | *di:ʔ/c | dec | dɔc | dih /diːʔ/ | diʔ | deʔ | deʔ |
flower/star | *kʰloːr | kʰlor | kʰlɔr | khlúr /kʰloːr/ | kʰlor | – | khlʊə |
tongue | *tʰnləːc | təloc | tʰl̩let | thyllied /tʰɨlleːc/ | tʰl̩leɟ | kʰlut | kʰlit |
ice/freeze | *tʰaʔ | tʰaʔ | tʰaʔ | thah /tʰaːʔ/ | tʰaʔ | tʰaʔ | tʰaʔ |
Reconstruction
editProto-Khasian and Proto-Pnar-Khasi-Lyngngam have been reconstructed by Paul Sidwell (2018). Proto-Khasian is estimated to have originated about 2,000-2,500 years ago, with War splitting from other Khasian linguistic varieties about 1,500 years ago (Sidwell 2018: 20).
Proto-Khasian morphology includes a causative *pN- prefix and verbalizing *-r- infix (Sidwell 2018: 66-67).
The following reconstructed paradigmatic and closed class morphemes in Proto-Khasian are from Sidwell (2018: 51-67).
- Personal pronouns
Masculine | Feminine | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|
1st person | *ŋa (topic/oblique); *ʔɔ (default) |
*ŋa (topic/oblique); *ʔɔ (default) |
*ʔi |
2nd person | *me | *pʰa | *pʰi |
3rd person (animate) |
*ʔu | *ka | *ki |
3rd person (inanimate ~ diminutive) |
*ʔi | *ʔi | *ʔi |
- Demonstratives
- *ni 'proximal'
- *tu 'mesiodistal'
- *taj 'distal (visible)'
- *te 'mesioproximal'
- *tɛ 'distal (non-visible)'
- Negators
- *ʔǝm 'not'
- *ham 'do not'
- *ta 'not'
- Prepositions/case markers
- *ha 'locative/oblique'
- *ʤɔŋ 'to possess'
- *da 'instrumental'
- *ba (?) 'and/with'
- *tV 'oblique'
- Tense/aspect morphemes
- *la:j 'to go'
- *dɛp 'finish'
- *diʔ 'to go'
- *daː 'have'
- *ʤuʔ 'same'
- Morphological affixes
- *pN- 'prefix'
- *-r- 'verbalizer'
- Numerals
Gloss | Proto-Khasian | Proto-Pnar- Khasi-Lyngngam |
---|---|---|
one | *wiː~*miː | |
one | *ʧiː | |
two | *ʔaːr | |
three | *laːj | |
four | *saːw | |
five | *san | |
six | *tʰruː | |
seven | *ʰnɲəw | |
eight | *pʰraː | |
nine | *kʰndaːj | |
ten | *pʰəw |
Sound changes
editSidwell (2018) lists the following sound changes from Pre-Khasian (i.e., the ancestral stage of Khasian that preceded Proto-Khasian) to Proto-Khasian.
- Pre-Khasian *b- > *p-, *ɓ- > *b- chain shift
- Proto-Austroasiatic *b- > proto-Khasian *p-
- Proto-Austroasiatic *ɓ- > proto-Khasian *b-
- Pre-Khasian *d- > *t-, * ɗ- > *d- chain shift
- Proto-Austroasiatic *d- > proto-Khasian *t-
- Proto-Austroasiatic *ɗ- > proto-Khasian *d-
- Pre-Khasian *-l > *-n/*-Ø
- Pre-Khasian *-h > *-s > *-t
- Pre-Khasian *-ʔ > *-Ø >, *-k > *-ʔ chain shift
- Pre-Khasian *g- > *k-
See also
edit- List of Proto-Khasian reconstructions (Wiktionary)
References
edit- ^ Sidwell, Paul. "Khasian Languages Project".
- ^ Sidwell, Paul. 2015. The Palaungic Languages: Classification, Reconstruction and Comparative Lexicon Archived 2019-10-23 at the Wayback Machine. München: Lincom Europa.
- Sidwell, Paul. 2011. Proto-Khasian and Khasi-Palaungic. Journal of the South East Asia linguistics society Archived 2016-07-23 at the Wayback Machine, Vol. 4.2, pages 144-168, December 2011.
- Sidwell, Paul. 2011b. Proto-Khasian (or -War-Khasi); reconstruction and classification. Presented at SEALS 21, Kasetsart University, Bangkok, Thailand.
- Sidwell, Paul. 2018. The Khasian Languages: Classification, Reconstruction, and Comparative Lexicon. Languages of the World 58. Munich: Lincom Europa. ISBN 9783862889143