Vijay wrote: ↑Tue May 11, 2021 12:05 amApparently, at least in standard Odia, words never end in a consonant, always in a vowel, and the default vowel is always [ɔ], so e.g. Bhuvaneswar (the capital of Odisha) is [bʱubɔneswɔɾɔ].
This isn't really all that surprising, I suppose this would have been the state of Magadhi Prakrit too, only surprising in that it remained and there wasn't any later syncope as in Eastern Magadhi varieties like Bengali and Sylheti (which incidentally tend to leave the original *ɔ in the writing by not using the virama to suppress the inherent vowel).
Speaking of Sylheti, it's the only IE language I've seen which could be argued to have no inherent /k/, because original IA *k was spirantised /x/ when not geminated or next to a high vowel (though the modern language is obviously messy and from what I can tell there does appear to be an incipient contrast between the two emerging), on top of the spirantisations of *p and *c to /ɸ/ and /s/ respectively, e.g. /aɸne/ "2SG formal", /san/ "moon", /xoɸal/ "forehead" from *kapāla, /xala/ "black" vs. /kita/ "what?", /duk/ "sorrow".
Also it's the only Indo-Aryan language I've seen that's entirely ditched the aspiration contrast, with both viced and voiceless aspirates seemingly leaving a high tone (though the history is messy as heck and honestly I have no idea what's going on and I'm trying to learn the language).