Athpare, also known as Athapre, Athpariya, Athpre, Arthare, Arthare-Khesang, or Jamindar, spelled Athpariya I to be distinguished from Belhariya, is an eastern Kiranti language.
The consonants are shown in the table below. Voiced consonants are rare in the initial position. In the medial position of verbs, voiced consonants are conditioned variants. Aspiration is phonemic in initial position. There are no fricativesexcept for and . Geminated consonants are found in verbs with stem-final and as the result assimilation to the infinitival suffix. Vowel phonemes There are five vowels in Athpare: a, e, i, o and u. Vowels are somewhat lengthened in open root syllables, but are likely allophonic to short vowels. Diphthongs are marginal in Athpare—ai, oi and ui have been shown to exist but in very few words.
Morphology
Subject and object person markers are realized partly as prefixes, partly as suffixes. There are separate number suffixes and tense markers, some of them followed by a copy of the person marker. Periphrastic tense-aspects are fully grammaticalized. Athpare is morphologically ergative, with a split between 1st person and the rest. Minimal use is made of non-finite verb forms: Compound verbs consist of two verbs marked for person and tense, subordinators follow inflected verbs. Athpare has an extremely complex verbal system, with both actor and undergoer being marked on the verb. There are also several types of suffix copying, resulting in the longest suffix chains of any Kiranti language, e.g. ni-ni-m-get-n-et-ni-m-ci-m-ma-ga see-NEG-1/2pA-v2:attain-NEG-AUX:PT-NEG-1/2pA-3nsU-1/2pA-e-NML:ns ‘we had not seen them’ Word order Athpare is a verb-final language. Topics and sentence adverbials normally have initial position. There is much freedom in rearranging elements according to communicative needs. Athpare has a number of verbs corresponding to the English ‘be’:
wa-, wama
yuŋ-, yuŋma
lis-, lima
is-, ima
le-na
NEG: waina~woina
Participants are coded by pronominal affixes on the verb, and if necessary, by noun phrases Pronouns are optional and used only if the speaker wants to make the reference more explicit. The following post-positions serve as case markers:
Athpare is SOV word order, all modifiers precede their head. It has nine tense-aspect forms: past, non-past, progressive, ambulative, perfect, negative non-past, negative past, a generalized negative and a negative past anterior/past progressive form - and two modes: imperative and optative. The two modes are inflected for person, but have no final tense-aspect markers. Athpre marksnatural gender with kinship terms and for larger animals. Gender plays no role in agreement. There are two qualitative classifiers which distinguish human from non-human. The language has three numbers: singular, dual and plural, and different 1st person inclusive and exclusive pronouns in dual and plural. Diminutives are formed from animate nouns with the suffix -cilet. There are unique temporal adverbs for two, three and four units of time before and after the present.