Kamviri dialect

Kamviri (کامويري Kâmviri) is a dialect of the Kamkata-vari language spoken by 5,000 to 10,000 of the Kom people of Afghanistan and Pakistan. There are slight dialectal differences of the Kamviri speakers of Pakistan. The most used alternative names are Kati, Kamozi, Shekhani or Bashgali.

Name
The name derives from Kom, the ethnonym of the Kom people (pronounced in Kata-vari as Kum ), with the suffix viri "language, speech". Cognates of the ethnonym in other Nuristani languages include Prasuni Kâ̄ma (borrowed from Kamkata-vari) and Waigali Kam.

Phonology
The inventory as described by Richard Strand. In addition, there is stress.

The neutral articulatory posture, as in the reduced vowel, consists of the tip of the tongue behind the lower teeth and a raised tongue root is linked with a raised larynx, producing a characteristic pitch for unstressed vowels of about an octave above the pitch of a relaxed larynx.

Consonants
One suffix voices to  for most speakers.
 * Sounds are found in loanwords.
 * Between vowels, voice to.
 * can also be heard as bilabial or a labial approximant.
 * For most speakers, and especially in Kombřom, becomes a retroflex flap.
 * becomes a velar tap.

are phonetic affricates.

Nasals voice a following obstruent.

Laminal consonants change a following from  to.

Vowels
$⟨a⟩$ is after another vowel,  after a laminal consonant and after. For some speakers, it is after. Otherwise it is or.

Numbers

 * 1) ev
 * 2) dü
 * 3) tre
 * 4) što
 * 5) puč
 * 6) ṣu
 * 7) sut
 * 8) uṣṭ
 * 9) nu
 * 10) duć