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The autonym of the Kơho people is kon cau (IPA [kɔn.caw]) while Koho (IPA [kəˈhɔ]) is a Cham exonym.
Subgroups and dialects
There are at least twelve Kơho dialect groups for the area: Chil (Cil, Til); Kalop (Tulop); Kơyon (Kodu, Co-Don); Làc (Làt, Lach); Mà (Mạ, Maa); Nồp (Nop, Xre Nop, Noup); Pru; Ryông Tô (Riồng, Rion); Sop, Sre (Chau Sơre, Xrê); Talà (To La); and Tring (Trinh). Although Mạ/Maa is a Koho dialect group, the Mạ people identify as a separate ethnic group.
Before the palatal finals /c/ and /ɲ/, there is an audible palatal offglide after the vowel , so that /pwac/ ‘flesh’ is pronounced as and /ʔaɲ/ ‘I (1st person singular)’ as .
One of the more productive prefixes in Sre is the causative tơn- , converts intransitive
verbs to causative verbs. If the prefixed verbs have a nasal initial, then the nasal cluster avoidance rule applied.
Word
Meaning
Prefixed form
Meaning
duh
to be hot
tơnduh
to make hot
chơt
to die
tơnchơt
to kill
ring
to be flat, level, equal
tơnring
to equalize, make right
mut
to enter
tơmut
to make enter
muu
to descend, go down
tơmuu
to make descend, to lower
Cultural References
The Vietnamese acrobatic show Teh Dar by Lune Productions uses the Koho language.
References
Kơho at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required) Maa at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
^ Olsen, Neil H. (2015). "Kơho-Sre". In Jenny, Mathias; Sidwell, Paul (eds.). The Handbook of Austroasiatic Languages. Leiden: Brill.
Le, Tan Duong (2003). A phonological comparison of Maa and Koho varieties (Master’s thesis). Payap University.