The consonant inventory of Lake Miwok differs substantially from the inventories found in the other Miwok languages. Where the other languages only have one series of plosives, Lake Miwok has four: plain, aspirated, ejective and voiced. Lake Miwok has also added the affricates č, c, čʼ, ƛʼ and the liquids r and ł. These sounds appear to have been borrowed through loanwords from other, unrelated languages in the Clear Lake area, after which they spread to some native Lake Miwok words.
Grammar
The word order of Lake Miwok is relatively free, but SOV is the most common order.
Verb morphology
Pronominal clitics
In her Lake Miwok grammar, Callaghan reports that one speaker distinguishes between 1st person dual inclusiveʔoc and exclusiveʔic. Another speaker also remembers that this distinction used to be made by older speakers.
Noun morphology
Case inflection
Nouns can be inflected for ten different cases:
the Subjective case marks a noun which functions as the subject of a verb. If the subject noun is placed before the verb, the Subjective has the allomorph-n after vowel, and -Ø after consonants. If it is placed after the verb, the Subjective is -n after vowels and -nu after consonants.
the Possessive case is -n after vowels and -Ø after consonants
the Objective case marks a noun which functions as the object of a verb. It has the allomorph -u or -Ø when the noun is placed immediately before a verb which contains the 2nd person prefix ʔin- or does not contain any subject prefix at all.
the locative case-m gives a less specific designation of locality than the Allative, and occurs more rarely.
the ablative case is -mu or -m depending on the context, and marks direction out of, or away from, a place.
the instrumental case-ṭu marks instruments, e.g. tumáj-ṭu " with a stick".
the comitative case -ni usually translates as "along with", but can also be used to :wikt:coordination|coordinate nouns, as in kaʔunúu-ni ka ʔáppi-ni "my mother and my father".
Lake Miwok uses pronominal clitics to indicate the possessor of a noun. Except for the 3d person singular, they have the same shape as the nominative pronominal clitics, but show no allomorphy. The reflexive hana forms have the same referent as the subject of the same clause, whereas the non-reflexive forms have a different referent, e.g.: