Khetrani | |
---|---|
Native to | Pakistan |
Native speakers | over 100,000 (2017)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | xhe |
Glottolog | khet1238 |
Khetrani is a minor language of Pakistan which is mainly spoken in Barkhan District, it is given a space in this map. |
Khetrānī, or Khetranki,[2] is an Indo-Aryan language of north-eastern Balochistan. It is spoken by the majority of the Khetrans,[3] an ethnolinguistic tribe that occupies a hilly tract in the Sulaiman Mountains comprising the whole of Barkhan District as well as small parts of neighbouring Kohlu District to the south-west, and Musakhel District to the north.[4] Alternative names for the language attested at the start of the 20th century are Barāzai and Jāfaraki.[5]
Khetrani has grammatical features in common with both Sindhi and with Saraiki,[6] but is not mutually intelligible with either.[7] Khetrani has a relatively small number of Balochi loanwords in its vocabulary.[8] Khetrani was formerly a dialect continuum of both Sindhi and Saraiki.[6]
It is likely to have been formerly spoken over a wider area, which has been reduced with the expansion of Pashto from the north and Balochi from the south-east.[9] The earlier suggestion that Khetrani might be a remnant of a Dardic language[10] has been found "difficult to substantiate" by more detailed recent research.[11]