[1] It is a pidgin that stemmed from Hindustani and includes vocabulary from several other languages, such as Assamese, Dimasa and Zeme Naga.
It is named after Haflong, which is the headquarters of Dima Hasao district.
The dialect is largely intelligible to Hindi speakers, and features simplified grammar with loanword infusions.
[2] In contrast to printed forms of Hindi, the Haflong variety lacks person and number agreement in the verb and ergative marking of the subject when transitive clauses are in a preterite or perfect tense.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article about the culture of India is a stub.