Grammar of Khowar is the first comprehensive English-language study of Khowar, a unique Indo-Aryan language spoken in northern Pakistan. Drawing on over thirty years of field research, Elena Bashir provides a detailed snapshot of the language at a critical moment in its evolution, as increasing cultural and economic pressures accelerate linguistic change.
The book presents Khowar’s phonology, morphology, and syntax, alongside an in-depth analysis of how its grammatical structures shape the way speakers conceptualize the world. Rife with original example sentences—many sourced from oral texts recorded in multiple villages—this work preserves linguistic data that might otherwise be lost. A special appendix includes a thirty-page sample text in Khowar’s Perso-Arabic script, followed by a romanized transcription and English translation, offering an invaluable resource for scholars.
A critical contribution to South Asian linguistics, this book underscores the urgency of studying and preserving endangered mountain languages before they fade from use.
368 pages | 6.14 x 9.21
Grammars of World and Minority Languages
Language and Linguistics: Language Studies

Table of Contents
List of figures and tables
Using the grammar
Acknowledgements and list of contributors
1 Introduction
2 Phonology
3 Word formation
4 Nominal morphology
5 Deictic elements 6 Verbs
7 Adjectival modification
8 Adverbial modification
9 Morphosyntax
10 Morphosemantics
Appendix. Text, ‘Jeshtanan Shilogh’, a folktale rendered by Mumtaz Hussain
References
Index
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