Kham language


Kham language —narrowly defined—is a complex of Sino-Tibetan Magaric languages spoken natively in the highlands of the Rolpa and Rukum districts of Rapti and the westernmost part of Baglung district in Dhawalagiri Zone and Karnali region by western clans of the Kham tribes, called collectively western Khams. Randy LaPolla proposes that Kham magar and Dhut magar may be part of a larger "Rung" group. However, both may ultimately go for separate ethnic identity as they have distinct linguistic and cultural barriers.

Geographical distribution

Ethnologue lists the following location information for the varieties of Kham.
Eastern Parbate Kham is spoken in the following villages of Baglung District, Dhawalagiri Zone.
Western Parbate Kham
Taka-Shera considered to be the center of the Western Parbate Kham.
Gamale Kham
Gamale Kham is spoken in the western hills of Gam Khola, in Gam, Jhyalgung, Chalbang, Tamali, Dangadhara, Sheram, Ghusbang, Huiching, Guwakholagau, Maulabang, and Kuipadhara villages.
Sheshi Kham
Watters classifies the Kham dialects as follows.
;Proto-Kham

Consonants

Kham Pang has 22 consonants.
Kham Pang has 25 vowels.
Proto-Kham has been reconstructed by Watters. Proto-Kham reconstructions from Watters are given below.
;A. Body parts
;B. Pronouns/kinship terms/nouns referring to humans'
;C. Foodstuff
;D. Animal names or animal products
;E. Natural objects or phenomena; the inanimate landscape; vegetable and mineral kingdoms
;F. Artifacts and social organization
;G. Spatial/directional
;H. Numerals and quantifiers
;I. Verbs of utterance, body position or function
;J. Verbs of motion
;K. Verbs of emotion, cognition, perception
;L. Stative verbs with human patients
;M. Stative verbs with non-human patients
;N. Action verbs with human agent