Pangkhua (Pangkhu), or Paang, is a Kuki-Chin language primarily spoken in Bangladesh.
There are minimal language differences between Pangkhua, Tlanglau, Falam Chin, Bawm and Mizo.
[2] The dialects of the two main communities that use Pangkhu, Bilaichari and Konglak, share 88% of their basic vocabulary.
Residents of Pangkhua Para refer to their village as Dinthar (IPA: /d̪int̪ʰar/; from Mizo d̪in 'stay' and Mizo and Pangkua t̪ʰar 'new') Pangkhu has twenty-one consonant phonemes: However, only unaspirated voiceless stops, /h/, /r/, /m/, /n/, /ŋ/, and /l/ may occur at syllable coda.
[3] Augmentative -pui and diminutive -te can be affixed to kinship terms in order to denote relative age or size.