Baltic Romani

[9] Specific voicing alterations have changed grammatical endings and different dialects have different ways of interpreting vowels.

[14] Baltic genitives mark partial objects and sometimes subjects and also play a prominent role in the syntax of numeral constructions.

[15] There is a large Indo-Aryan presence in this language that appears mainly in reference to body parts and functions.

[16] Along with bodily parts and functions, the Indo-Aryan presence also resides in words that reference time, nature, landscape, numerals, animals, and plants.

[17] There is a pre-European lexicon that is mixed in this language that mainly refers to spiritual and religious ideas, tools, and artifacts.