Khasi language


Khasi is an Austroasiatic language spoken primarily in Meghalaya state in India by the Khasi people. It is also spoken by a sizeable population in Assam and Bangladesh. Khasi is part of the Austroasiatic language family, and is related to Khmer, Palaung, Vietnamese and Mon languages of Southeast Asia, and the Munda and Nicobarese branches of that family, which are spoken in east–central India and in the Nicobar Islands, respectively.
Although most of the 1.6 million Khasi speakers are found in Meghalaya, the language is also spoken by a number of people in the hill districts of Assam bordering with Meghalaya and by a sizeable population of people living in Bangladesh, close to the Indian border. Khasi has been an associate official language of some districts within Meghalaya since 2005, and as of May 2012, was no longer considered endangered by UNESCO. There are demands to include this language to the Eighth schedule to the constitution of India.
Khasi is rich in folklore and folktale, and behind most of the names of hills, mountains, rivers, waterfalls, birds, flowers, and animals there is a story.

Speakers

Khasi speakers are mostly found in the Khasi Hills and Jaintia Hills region of Meghalaya. It is also spoken by a number of people in the hill districts of Assam and by a small population of people living in Bangladesh. Khasi has been an associate official language in Meghalaya since 2005.
Khasi is written using the Latin and Bengali scripts. Both scripts are taught as part of the compulsory Khasi language subject in elementary up to high school in Meghalaya and Bangladesh respectively.
The main dialects of Khasi spoken are Sohra and Shillong dialect. Shillong dialects form a dialect continuum across the capital region. Sohra dialect, due to strong colonial patronisation, came to be regarded as Standard Khasi.

Phonology

This section discusses mainly the phonology of Standard Khasi as spoken in and around the capital city, Shillong.
Khasi, mainly spoken in Meghalaya, is surrounded by unrelated languages: Assamese to the north and east, Bengali to the south, Garo to the west, and a plethora of other Tibeto-Burman languages including Manipuri, Mizo and Bodo.
Although over the course of time, language change has occurred, Khasi retains some distinctive features:
IPATranslationIPATranslation
mradanimalnariron
ñiaauntngenwane
panaskphyllaspecial
blanggoatbhoiBhoi
tdongtailthahice
durpicturedhengpark
beitstraight-
krungribkhringentice
pyutrotten
jlawhowljhiehwet
syiemmonarchshñiuhhair
hynmensibling
rynsanplatformliehwhite
ïorsnowwahriver

Vowels

IPATranslationIPATranslation
dinɡfireihcooked
yndauntil
plunɡplumpruhalso
mietniɡhtiermateyelash
lumhilludmoan
renɡhornerïonɡwhirlwind
onɡsayShillonɡShillonɡ
satspicysadceilinɡ

Morphology

Khasi is an Austroasiatic language and has its distinct features of a large number of consonant conjuncts, with prefixing and infixing.

Nouns and noun phrases

Word order

The order of elements in a Khasi noun phrase is
-----Noun---, as can be seen from the following examples:

Gender

Khasi has a pervasive gender system. There are four genders in this language:
Humans and domestic animals have their natural gender:
Rabel writes: "the structure of a noun gives no indication of its gender, nor does its meaning, but Khasi natives are of the impression that nice, small creatures and things are feminine while big, ugly creatures and things are masculine....This impression is not born out by the facts. There are countless examples of desirable and lovely creatures with masculine gender as well as of unpleasant or ugly creatures with feminine gender"
Though there are several counterexamples, Rabel says that there is some semantic regularity in the assignment of gender for the following semantic classes:
The matrilineal aspect of the society can also be observed in the general gender assignment, where so, all central and primary resources associated with day-to-day activities are signified as Feminine; whereas Masculine signifies the secondary, the dependent or the insignificant.

Classifiers

Khasi has a classifier system, apparently used only with numerals. Between the numeral and noun, the classifier tylli is used for non-humans, and the classifier ngut is used for humans, e.g.

Adjectives

There is some controversy about whether Khasi has a class of adjectives. Roberts cites examples like the following:
In nearly all instances of attributive adjectives, the apparent adjective has the prefix /ba-/, which seems to be a relativiser. There are, however, a few adjectives without the /ba-/ prefix:
When the adjective is the main predicate, it may appear without any verb 'be':
In this environment, the adjective is preceded by an agreement marker, like a verb. Thus it may be that Khasi does not have a separate part of speech for adjectives, but that they are a subtype of verb.

Prepositions and prepositional phrases

Khasi appears to have a well-developed group of prepositions, among them
The following are examples of prepositional phrases:

Verbs and verb phrases

Agreement

Verbs agree with 3rd person subjects in gender, but there is no agreement for non-3rd persons :
SingularPlural
1st personnga thoh 'I write'ngi thoh 'we write’
2nd personme thoh 'he writes' pha thoh 'she writes'phi thoh 'you. write'
3rd personu thoh 'he writes' ka thoh 'she writes'ki thoh 'they write’

The masculine and feminine markers /u/ and /ka/ are used even when there is a noun phrase subject :

Tense marking

Tense is shown through a set of particles that appear after the agreement markers but before the verb. Past is a particle /la/ and future is /yn/ :
KhasiEnglish
U thoh.He writes.
U la thoh.He wrote.
Un thohHe will write.

Negation

Negation is also shown through a particle, /ym/, which appears between the agreement and the tense particle. There is a special past negation particle /shym/ in the past which replaces the ordinary past /la/ :
KhasiEnglish
Um ju thoh.He doesn't write.
Um shym thoh.He didn't write.
Um nym thohHe won't write.
Um dei ban thohHe shouldn't write.

Copulas

The copula is an ordinary verb in Khasi, as in the following sentence:

Causative verbs

Khasi has a morphological causative /pn-/. :
Base verbGlossCausative verbGloss
hiarcome downpynhiarlet down, export
tipknowpyntipmake known
phuhblossompynphuhbeautify
ïaidwalkpyn-ïaiddrive, put agoing
jottornpyn-jotdestroy
poiarrivepyn-poideliver

Sentences

Word order

Word order in simple sentences is subject–verb–object :
However, VSO order is also found, especially after certain initial particles, like hangta 'then'.

Case marking

Sometimes the object is preceded by a particle ya. Roberts says "ia, 'to', 'for', 'against' implies direct and immediate relation. Hence its being the sign of the dative and of the accusative case as well"
It appears from Roberts that Khasi has differential object marking, since only some objects are marked accusative. Roberts notes that nouns that are definite usually have the accusative and those that are indefinite often do not.
Rabel says "the use of ïa is optional in the case of one object. In the case of two objects one of them must have ïa preceding.... If one of the objects is expressed by a pronoun, it must be preceded by ïa."
Broadly speaking, Khasi marks for eight cases, with the nominative case remaining unmarked, for a total of nine cases
CaseMarker
Nominativeunmarked
Accusative/ Dativeïa
Ablativena
Locativeha
Allativesha
Genitivejong
Instrumentalda
Comitativebad
Vocativeko

All case markers can appear with or without the prenominal markers/articles 'u, ka, i and ki', and placed before the prenominal markers.

Passive

Khasi has a passive, but it involves removing the agent of the sentence without putting the patient in subject position. . Compare the following active-passive pair where the patient continues to have accusative case and remains in the object position:
This type of passive is used, even when the passive agent is present in a prepositional phrase:

Questions

Yes-no questions seem to be distinguished from statements only by intonation:
Wh-questions don't involve moving the wh-element:

Embedded clauses

Subordinate clauses follow the main verb that selects them :
Relative clauses follow the nouns that they modify and agree in gender:

Syntax

Khasi has a SVO syntax, similar to English, but unlike all Indian languages, with the notable exception of Kashmiri, which has verb-second syntax.

Dialects of Khasi

Khasi has significant dialectal variation. Some dialects are Pnar, Sohra Khasi, Mylliem Khasi, Mawlai Khasi, Nongkrem Khasi, Bhoi Khasi Nonglung, Maram and War. Bhoi Khasi in Ri Bhoi District, Nongpoh block, and Nonglung in Ri Bhoi District, Umsning block are very different from Standard Khasi, with different word order. They are distinct enough to be sometimes considered separate languages. Sohra and War are lexically very similar.
The Sohra dialect is taken as Standard Khasi as it was the first dialect to be written in Latin and Bengali scripts by the British. Standard Khasi is in turn significantly different from the Shillong dialects which form a dialect continuum across the capital region.

Script

In the past, the Khasi language had no script of its own. Some of the Khasi Syiems of old used to keep official records and communicate with one another on paper primarily using the Bengali script. William Carey wrote the language with the Bengali script between 1813 and 1838. A large number of Khasi books were written in the Bengali script, including the famous book Ka Niyom Jong Ki Khasi or The Religion of the Khasis, which is an important work on the Khasi religion. The Welsh missionary, Thomas Jones, in 1841 wrote the language in the Latin script. As a result, the Latin alphabet of the language has a few similarities with the Welsh alphabet. The first journal in Khasi was U Nongkit Khubor published at Mawphlang in 1889 by William Williams.

Khasi Alphabet

Khasi in Latin script has a different system, distinct from that of English. Khasi uses a 23-letter alphabet by removing the letters c, f, q, v, x and z from the basic Latin alphabet and adding the diacritic letters ï and ñ, and the digraph ng, which is treated as a letter in its own right. Khasi in Bengali script uses all the letters of the Bengali alphabet.
Capital lettersABKDEGNgHIÏJLMNÑOPRSTUWY
Small lettersabkdegnghiïjlmnñoprstuwy
English Pronunciationahbeekaydeeayegengesheeyeejayellemmennohpeaaaressteeoodouble yuwhy
Bengaliঅংয়ি

Note

Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

Khasi Alphabet
Ïa ki bynriew baroh la kha laitluid bad ki ïaryngkat ha ka burom bad ki hok. Ha ki la bsiap da ka bor pyrkhat bad ka jingïatiplem bad ha ka mynsiem jingsngew shipara, ki dei ban ïatrei bynrap lang.
Assamese script
যা কি বৃনৰ‌্যের বাৰহ লা খা লাচলোছ বাড কী যৰূঙ্কট হা কি বুৰম বাড ক হক. হাকি লা বৃস্যপ দা ক বৰ-পৃৰ্খট বাড ক চিংযাতিপলেম বাড হা ক মৃন্স্যেম চিংস্ঙেউ শীপাৰা, কী দেই বাণ যত্ৰেই বৃনৰাপ লাং.
IPA
jaː ki bɨnreʊ baːrɔʔ laː kʰaː lacloc bat ki jaːrɨŋkat haː kaː burɔm bat ki hɔk. haː ki laː bsjap daː kaː bɔːr pɨrkʰat bat kaː dʒɪŋjaːtɪplɛm bat haː kaː mɨnseːm dʒɨŋsŋɛʊ ʃiparaː ki dɛɪ ban jaːtrɛɪ bɨnrap laŋ
Gloss
To the human all are born free and they equal in the dignity and the rights. In them are endowed with the power thought and the conscience and in the spirit feeling fraternity they should to work assist together.
Translation
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should work towards each other in a spirit of brotherhood.

Basic vocabulary

Numbers

Publications in Khasi

There are a number of books as well as newspapers in the Khasi language. The most famous Khasi poet is U Soso Tham. The online newspaper U Mawphor is published in the Khasi language.