Koho or K'Ho is a South Bahnaric language spoken by the Koho people and Mạ people, mainly in the Lâm ÃÂá»Âng Province of Vietnam. It is very close to the Mnong language.
The autonym of the Káho people is kon cau () while Koho () is a Cham exonym.
There are at least twelve Káho dialect groups for the area: Chil (Cil, Til); Kalop (Tulop); Káyon (Kodu, Co-Don); Làc (Làt, Lach); Mà(Mạ, Maa); Ná»Âp (Nop, Xre Nop, Noup); Pru; Ryông Tô (Riá»Âng, Rion); Sop, Sre (Chau Sáre, Xrê); Talà(To La); and Tring (Trinh). Although Mạ/Maa is a Koho dialect group, the Mạ people identify as a separate ethnic group.
Data below are from Olsen (2015).
Compounding is a common way of coining new words in Koho. Some examples:
One of the more productive prefixes in Sre is the causative tán- , converts intransitive verbs to causative verbs. If the prefixed verbs have a nasal initial, then the nasal cluster avoidance rule applied.