Lotha language
The Lotha language is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken by approximately 180,000 people in Wokha district of west-central Nagaland, India. It is centered in the small district of Wokha. This district has more than 114 villages such as Pangti, Maraju, Englan, Baghty and others, where the language is widely spoken and studied.
Names
Alternate names include Chizima, Choimi, Hlota, Kyong, Lhota, Lotha, Lutha, Miklai, Tsindir, and Tsontsii.Dialects
Ethnologue lists the following dialects of Lotha.- Live
- Tsontsü
- Ndreng
- Kyong
- Kyo
- Kyon
- Kyou
Phonology
Consonants
- /v/ when followed by /o/ can also be heard as in free variation.
- The pronunciation of the trills /r, rʰ/ may vary as approximants or a retroflex fricative among speakers.
- /j/ only occurs as phonemically aspirated as /jʰ/ among other dialects.
- Plosives /p, k/ can be heard as unreleased in word-final position.
Vowels
- When /u/ follows a labial consonant or /k, kʰ/, the consonant is then affricated and /u/ is realized as unrounded . The result is then from /ku, kʰu, pu, pʰu/ to .
- /i/ may also tend to centralize and lower as in open syllables when following sibilant sounds.
- /ə/ may also range in pronunciation to a back sound .
- /i, u/ can also be heard shortened as within the first syllable.