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Khamti language
Kra–Dai language spoken in Myanmar and India

The Khamti language is a Southwestern Tai language spoken in Myanmar and India by the Khamti people. It is closely related to, and sometimes considered a dialect of, Shan.

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Name

Khamti has been variously rendered Hkamti, Khampti, Kam Ti, Kamti, Tai Kam Ti, Tai-Khamti, Khamti Shan, Khampti Shan, Khandi Shan, Hkampti Shan, and Khampti Sam (Burmese: ခန္တီးရှမ်းလူမျိုး).1 The name Khamti means 'place of gold'.

Demographics

In Burma, Khamti is spoken by 3,500 near Myitkyina and by 4,500 in Putao District, Kachin State (both reported in 2000). In India, it is spoken by 5,000 in Assam and Arunachal Pradesh, in the Dikrong Valley, Narayanpur, and north bank of the Brahmaputra (reported in 2007).

Three dialects of Khamti are known: North Burma Khamti, Assam Khamti, and Sinkaling Khamti. All speakers of Khamti are bilingual, largely in Assamese and Burmese.2

Possibly, there are also some Khamti in some parts of China (5,000 people).

History

The language seems to have originated around Mogoung in Upper Burma.3 Mung Kang was captured, a large group of Khamtis moved to the north and east of Lakhimpur. In the year 1850, 300–400 Khamtis settled in Assam.4

Phonology

Initial consonants

Khamti has the following initial consonants:567

BilabialAlveolarPalatalVelarGlottal
Nasalmnɲŋ
PlosiveTenuisptckʔ
Aspirated
Fricativesh
Laterall
Rhoticr
Semi-vowelwj

/c/ can be heard as [c] or [tʃ] across dialects. /s/ can also be heard as [ʃ].

Note: only the variety found in Myanmar uses the palatal nasal /ɲ/ and the rhotic /r/.8

Final consonants

Khamti has the following final consonants:

BilabialAlveolarPalatalVelarGlottal
Nasalmnŋ
PlosiveTenuisptkʔ
Semi-vowelwj

-[w] occurs after front vowels and [a]-, -[j] occurs after back vowels and [a]-.9

Vowels

The Khamti language uses the following vowels:1011

FrontBack
unr.unr.rnd.
shortlongshortlongshortlong
Closeiɯɯːu
Mideɤo
Openɛɛːaɔɔː
Diphthongiaua

/ɤ/ only appears in the dialect in Myanmar.12

Tones

Khamti uses five tones, namely: low falling /21/, mid rising /34/, mid falling /42/, high falling /53/~[33], and high level /55/~[44].13

Grammar

Syntax

Unlike other Tai languages that display SVO word order, Khamti has SOV word order.14

Nouns

Nouns are divided into common nouns and proper nouns.15

Common nouns

Common nouns can pluralized by adding /nai1 khau/ behind the noun. Common nouns are class categorized by using classifiers such as the generic /an3/, /ko1/ for people and /to1/ for animals.16

Proper nouns

People's names and place names are classified as proper nouns. Khamti prefixes people's names, depending on the social class or status of that person. These prefixes are gender specific. The prefix for Miss is /na:ng4/ and the prefix for Mr is /tsa:i3/. A prefix for Mr used to respectfully address a male of higher status is /tsau2/ or /tsau2 nuai/.17

Pronouns

Khamti uses a triparte pronoun system, consisting of singular, dual and plural forms. The dual form and the first person plural form are further divided between inclusive and exclusive forms. The following set of pronouns are the pronouns found in the Khamti language:18

singulardualplural
1st personinclusive/kau3//ha:4//haw1/
exclusive/hang4 khe:u//tu:3/
2nd person/maeu4//suang khe:u//su3/
3rd person/man4//suang kha://khau/

Demonstratives

Khamti uses the following demonstratives:19

Demonstratives
singularplural
near/an3 nai1/'this'/an3 nai1 nai1 khau/'these'
approximate/amaeu4 nai1/'that near you'/amaeu4 nai1 khau/'those by you'
distal/an3 pu:n nai1/'that over there'/an3 pu:n nai1 nai1 khau/'those over there'

Writing system

See also: Mon–Burmese script

The Tai Khamtis have their own writing system called 'Lik-Tai', which they share with the Tai Phake people and Tai Aiton people.20 It closely resembles the Northern Shan script of Myanmar, which is a variant of the Mon–Burmese script, with some of the letters taking divergent shapes.21 Their script is evidently derived from the Lik Tho Ngok script since hundreds of years ago. There are 35 letters including 17 consonants and 14 vowels. The script is traditionally taught in monasteries on subjects like Tripitaka, Jataka tales, code of conduct, doctrines and philosophy, history, law codes, astrology, and palmistry etc. The first printed book was published in 1960. In 1992 it was edited by the Tai Literature Committee, Chongkham. In 2003 it was again modified with tone marking by scholars of Northern Myanmar and Arunachal Pradesh.

Consonants

ကkaIPA: k khaIPA: kʰ gaIPA: ɡ ghaIPA: ɡʱ ngaIPA: ŋ
caIPA: c chaIPA: cʰ jaIPA: ɟ jhaIPA: ɟʱ nyaIPA: ɲ
ṭaIPA: ʈ ṭhaIPA: ʈʰ ḍaIPA: ɖ ḍhaIPA: ɖʱ ṇaIPA: ɳ
taIPA: t thaIPA: tʰ daIPA: d dhaIPA: dʱ naIPA: n
paIPA: p phaIPA: pʰ baIPA: b bhaIPA: bʱ maIPA: m
yaIPA: j ꩳရraIPA: r~ɹ22 laIPA: l waIPA: w~v saIPA: s
haIPA: h ḷaIPA: ɭ faIPA: f zaIPA: z xaIPA: x
oayIPA: oaʲ qnIPA: qⁿ hmIPA: mʰ aIPA: ʔ

Vowels

aIPA: a āIPA: aː āIPA: aː
iIPA: i īIPA: iː uIPA: u ūIPA: uː
eIPA: eː ူဝ်oIPA: oː aiIPA: ai23 ၢဲaaiIPA: aːi
ဝ်auIPA: au ်ွauIPA: au ၢဝ်aauIPA: aːu aṁIPA: (a)ŋ̊24
aeIPA: ɛ ေႃawIPA: ɔ awIPA: ɔ ိဝ်iuIPA: iu
iaIPA: ia ႅဝ်iauIPA: iau ျႃiaaIPA: iaː ိူoeIPA: ɤ
ွဲoiIPA: oi uaIPA: ua ဴွuaiIPA: uai ွႃuaaIPA: uaː
ေူuiIPA: ui ိုueIPA: ɯ ိုဝ်ueeIPA: ɯː25 ုဝ်uoIPA: wo
ႂ်aueIPA: aɯ ိုဝ်ueaIPA: ɯa

Tones and other diacritics

Displaying with the dummy letter ဢ,

  • tone 1 [21]:
    • for checked syllable, including single consonant - ဢႉ
    • for else - ဢႇ
  • tone 2 [34] - ဢႛ
  • tone 3 [42] - ဢႈ
  • tone 4 [53] - ဢး - In speaking, it may become [33].
  • tone 5:
    • for short open syllable - ဢႚ [44] (rare usage)
    • for else - ဢ [55] (unmarked)
  • ဢ် - asat - final consonant, silences inherent vowel26
  • ꩰ - duplication

Further reading

References

  1. "Khamti". Endangered Languages Project. Retrieved 2 May 2015. http://www.endangeredlanguages.com/lang/1425

  2. "Khamti". Endangered Languages Project. Retrieved 2 May 2015. http://www.endangeredlanguages.com/lang/1425

  3. "Khamti". Khamti - A Language of Siamese-Chinese sub-family. Retrieved 7 May 2015. http://www.iitg.ernet.in/rcilts/phaseI/languages/khamti.htm

  4. Needham, J.F. (1894). Outline Grammar of the Khamti Language. Government Printing, Burma. http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433081855326;view=1up;seq=9

  5. Diller, Anthony (1992). "Tai languages in Assam: Daughters or Ghosts". Papers on Tai Languages, Linguistics and Literatures: 16.

  6. Inglis, Douglas (2017). "Myanmar-based Khamti Shan Orthography". Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society. https://www.academia.edu/34791306

  7. Weidert, Alfons (1977). Tai-Khamti phonology and vocabulary. Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link) /wiki/Template:Cite_book

  8. Inglis, Douglas (2017). "Myanmar-based Khamti Shan Orthography". Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society. https://www.academia.edu/34791306

  9. Diller, Anthony (1992). "Tai languages in Assam: Daughters or Ghosts". Papers on Tai Languages, Linguistics and Literatures: 16.

  10. Inglis, Douglas (2017). "Myanmar-based Khamti Shan Orthography". Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society. https://www.academia.edu/34791306

  11. Weidert, Alfons (1977). Tai-Khamti phonology and vocabulary. Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link) /wiki/Template:Cite_book

  12. Inglis, Douglas (2017). "Myanmar-based Khamti Shan Orthography". Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society. https://www.academia.edu/34791306

  13. Inglis, Douglas (2017). "Myanmar-based Khamti Shan Orthography". Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society. https://www.academia.edu/34791306

  14. Wilaiwan Kanittanan. 1986. Kamti Tai: From an SVO to an SOV language. In Bhadriraju Krishnamurti (ed.), South Asian Languages: Structure, Convergence and Diglossia, 174-178. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass.

  15. Inglis, Douglas (2007). "Nominal Structure in Tai Khamti". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 13 June 2020. https://www.academia.edu/35155172

  16. Inglis, Douglas (2007). "Nominal Structure in Tai Khamti". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 13 June 2020. https://www.academia.edu/35155172

  17. Inglis, Douglas (2007). "Nominal Structure in Tai Khamti". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 13 June 2020. https://www.academia.edu/35155172

  18. Inglis, Douglas (2007). "Nominal Structure in Tai Khamti". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 13 June 2020. https://www.academia.edu/35155172

  19. Inglis, Douglas (2007). "Nominal Structure in Tai Khamti". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 13 June 2020. https://www.academia.edu/35155172

  20. Diller, Anthony (1992). "Tai languages in Assam: Daughters or Ghosts". Papers on Tai Languages, Linguistics and Literatures: 16.

  21. Inglis, Douglas (2017). "Myanmar-based Khamti Shan Orthography". Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society. https://www.academia.edu/34791306

  22. Ben Mitchell. "Notes on Khamti" (PDF). 20162-notes-khamti.pdf. Retrieved 26 January 2021. https://www.unicode.org/L2/L2020/20162-notes-khamti.pdf

  23. Hosken, Martin. "Representing Myanmar in Unicode: Details and Examples Version 4" (PDF). Unicode. Retrieved 12 March 2024. http://www.unicode.org/notes/tn11/UTN11_4.pdf

  24. "Khamti alphabet and language". Omniglot. Retrieved 26 January 2021. https://www.omniglot.com/writing/khamti.htm

  25. INGLIS, Douglas (January 2017). "Myanmar-based Khamti Shan Orthography". Journal of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society. Retrieved 8 February 2021. https://www.academia.edu/34791306

  26. "Khamti alphabet and language". Omniglot. Retrieved 26 January 2021. https://www.omniglot.com/writing/khamti.htm