traditional pakistani kohistani attire
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traditional pakistani kohistani attire

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"Kalash Religion" by M. Witzel
Young Pashai man with flowers in his hair, out in the fields of Dari Noor.
Source: Todd Huffman
Modern Indic strikes again
TIL: apparently Dardic is distinguished from the entire rest of Indo-Aryan (including Vedic Sanskrit) by the absense of *Η°Κ° > *Ι¦ (medially at least?), and rather eventual merger with *Η°, alongside with *BΚ° > *B in general.Β [x]
The author seems to consider the two to be sister branches entirely, which may be indeed on to something⦠but then again *Bʰ > *B is also shared by Nuristani, Iranian, Balto-Slavic etc. and will not suffice to establish anything as a group.
Note that primary palatal *Δ΅Κ° (from PIE *Η΅Κ°) however still turns into *Ι¦ > β (initially at least?), e.g. PIE *Η΅Κ°es- > PII/PIA *Δ΅Κ°asta- > OIA/Skt. hasta > Pkt. hattha > Kashmiri atha βhandβ. Still, rather than two separate changes *Η°Κ° > h and *Δ΅Κ° > h, Iβd rather assume a single arealish shift *jΚ° > h that was preceded by the merger of *Η°Κ° *Δ΅Κ° in mainline Indic but not across Dardic.
π¨ππ°π₯πͺπ¦π―: π±π₯π’ π©ππ«π‘ π¬π£ π°π’π―π’π«π¦π±πΆ ππ«π‘ π₯π’ππ³π’π« β§ΛΒ°β°οΈΰΌ

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Kalasha, indigenous people of Pakistan.Β Currently about 5,000 people speak Kalasha, a Dardic language, sub-branch of the Indo-Iranian group, itself part of the larger Indo-European family, and it is considered critically endangered by UNESCO.