The government of Mexico recognizes 68 distinct indigenous Amerindian languages as national languages ... languages of Mexico style background efefef align center Language style background efefef align center ... languages with Spanish began with the arrival of Spanish forces and colonists in Mexico in the 16th ... Linguistics, 14 , pp 200 219 ref ref Grinevald, Colette. Endangered Languages of Mexico and Central ... List of endangered languages in Mexico The following is a classification of the 65 indigenous languages grouped by family Language families with members north of Mexico Algonquian languages ... known members in Mexico Totonacan languages Totonacan languages Totonac different varieties Tepehua ... Popoluca Both Mixean Language family with members south of Mexico Mayan languages Huastecan branch Wastek ... 120 align center bgcolor black Maps of indigenous languages of Mexico align center valign center bgcolor ... The non indigenous languages spoken in Mexico include English language English by English speaking ... of Indigenous Peoples in Spanish Languages of Mexico North America in topic Languages of DEFAULTSORT Languages Of Mexico Category Languages of Mexico Category Languages of North America Mexico Category ... of Indigenous Languages INALI , while 10 14 of the population identifies as belonging to an indigenous ... Maya language Yucatec Maya Maaya t aan align right 759,000 Mixtecan languages Mixtec Tu u u u n s vi align right 423,216 Zapotec languages Zapotec Binizaa align right 410,901 Tzeltal language Tzeltal ... 329,937 Otomi language Otom H h align right 239,850 Totonacan languages Totonac Tachihuiin align right 230,930 Mazatecan languages Mazatec Ha shuta enima align right 206,559 Ch ol language Ch ... jujm align right 125,706 Mixe languages Mixe Ay k align right 115,824 Mazahua language Mazahua J atho ... Na yarite align right 17,086 Popolocan languages Popoloca Oto manguean align right 18,926 Huave Ikoods ... Mixtecan languages Tacuate Mixtec de Santa Mar a Zacatepec Tu un Va a align right 2,067 Chichimeca ... more details
distinguishes four levels of endangerment in languages, based on intergenerational transfer ref name UNESCO Moseley, Christopher ed. . 2010. Atlas of the World s Languages in Danger, 3rd edn. Paris ... Mexico , Akatek people Akatek ref name UNESCO Speakers   STATUS Vulnerable Ethnologue entry Ethnolink knj knj comments   primary source   Language Awakatek language Mexico , Awakatek ... entry Ethnolink chf chf comments   primary source   Language Chuj language Mexico , Chuj ... cnm cnm br Ethnolink cac cac comments   primary source   Language Cocopa language Mexico ... primary source   Language Ixil language Mexico , Ixil Community Ixil ref name UNESCO Speakers ... entry Ethnolink otz otz comments   primary source   Language Jakaltek language Mexico , Jakaltek ... Ethnolink jai jai comments   primary source   Language K&apos iche&apos language Mexico , K ... entry Ethnolink quc quc comments   primary source   Language Kaqchikel language Mexico , Kaqchikel ... comments   primary source   Language Kickapoo language Mexico , Kickapoo people Kickapoo ref ... source   Language Mam language Mexico , Mam people Mam ref name UNESCO Speakers   STATUS ... Oto Manguean languages , Mixtecan languages Mixtecan primary source   Language Mixtec of San ... endangered Ethnologue entry comments Oto Manguean languages , Mixtecan languages Mixtecan primary source ... UNESCO Speakers   STATUS Definitely endangered Ethnologue entry comments Oto Manguean languages , Mixtecan languages Mixtecan primary source   Language Mixtec of Santa In s de Zaragoza language ... Ethnologue entry comments Oto Manguean languages , Mixtecan languages Mixtecan primary source   ...   STATUS Definitely endangered Ethnologue entry comments Oto Manguean languages , Mixtecan languages ... Oto Manguean languages , Mixtecan languages Mixtecan primary source   Language Mixtec of the Puebla ... STATUS Definitely endangered Ethnologue entry comments Oto Manguean languages , Mixtecan languages ... more details
index.php?DNA 91 publisher Presidency of Mexico title Official Name of the Country location ... States common name Mexico image flag Flag of Mexico.svg alt flag image coat Coat of arms of Mexico.svg ... of the United Mexican States File Seal of the Government of Mexico.svg 18px image map Mexico orthographic projection .svg map width 220px alt map map caption image map2 alt map2 map caption2 capital Mexico City latd 19 latm 03 latNS N longd 99 longm 22 longEW W largest city Mexico City official languages national languages regional languageslanguages type languages ethnic groups Mestizo 70 ref name Lizcano br White 15 ref name Lizcano br Indigenous peoples of Mexico Indigenous 9.8 ref name CDI1 ... Mexico issn 1405 1435 url http convergencia.uaemex.mx rev38 38pdf LIZCANO.pdf language Spanish format ... ref leader title1 President of Mexico President leader name1 Felipe Calder n National Action Party Mexico PAN leader title2 Secretary of the Interior Mexico Secretary of the Interior leader name2 Alejandro ... leader name5 leader title6 leader name6 legislature Congress of Mexico Congress upper house Senate Mexico Senate lower house Chamber of Deputies Mexico Chamber of Deputies sovereignty type Mexican ... Mexico publisher International Monetary Fund accessdate 2012 04 18 ref GDP PPP rank GDP PPP year 2011 ... zone Time in Mexico Official Mexican Timezones utc offset 8 to 6 time zone DST varies antipodes date ... map3 alt map3 footnotes footnote1 footnote2 footnote7 Mexico IPAc en audio En us Mexico.ogg m k ... , Belize , and the Caribbean Sea and on the east by the Gulf of Mexico . ref Merriam Webster s Geographical ... Mexico ref Mexico is the fifth largest country in the Americas by total area and the List of countries ... most populous country and the Hispanophone Hispanosphere most populous Spanish speaking country. Mexico is a federation comprising Administrative divisions of Mexico thirty one states and a Mexico City Federal District , the capital city. In Pre Columbian Mexico many cultures matured into advanced ... more details
Infobox language family name Mixean region Oaxaca , Veracruz , Chiapas familycolor American fam1 Mixe Zoquean languages Mixe Zoquean child1 Mixe languages Mixe Oaxacan child2 Oluta Popoluca Olutec child3 Sayula Popoluca Sayultec child4 Tapachultec language Tapachultec Tapachula map Mixezoquemap.png mapcaption Locations red where Mixean languages are spoken The Mixean languages are a primary branch of the Mixe Zoquean languages Mixe Zoquean language family of southern Mexico. According to Wichmann 1995 , there are three divergent Mixean languages, and a Oaxacan branch that constitutes the bulk of the family Oluta Popoluca Veracruz Sayula Popoluca Veracruz Tapachultec language Tapachultec Chiapas, extinct Mixe languages Oaxaca, several languages References Wichmann, S ren, 1995, The Relationship among the Mixe Zoquean Languages of Mexico. University of Utah Press. Salt Lake City. ISBN 0 87480 487 6 Languages of Mexico DEFAULTSORT Mixe Languages Category Indigenous languages of Mexico Category Mesoamerican languages Category Mixe Zoque languages de Mixe Sprache es Idioma mixe nah Mixetlaht lli no Mixe spr k qu Mishi simi na lang stub ... more details
Infobox language family name Popolocan region Oaxaca , Mexico familycolor American fam1 Oto Manguean languages Oto Manguean fam2 Eastern Oto Mangue fam3 Popolocan Zapotecan child1 Chochotec Chocho Popoloca languages Popoloca child2 Ixcatec language Ixcatec a single language child3 Mazatecan languages Mazatecan sil 1874 16 The Popolocan languages are a subfamily of the Oto Manguean languages Oto Manguean language family of Mexico , spoken mainly in the state of Puebla . The Popolocan languages should not be confused with the languages called Popoluca spoken in the state of Veracruz , which belong to the unrelated Mixe Zoquean languages Mixe Zoquean language family. The term comes from the Nahuatl language and means to speak unintelligibly, which is why Nahuatl speakers called several different unrelated languages Popol ca . The Nahuatl term was later adopted by the Spanish. The convention now is that the Oto Manguean languages are referred to as Popoloca and the Mixe Zoquean languages are referred to as Popoluca , although the latter term is falling into disuse. The Popolocan languages are subdivided into the Chocho Popolocan languages, including the Chocho language and seven distinct varieties of Popoloca languages Popoloca . the Ixcatec language the Mazatecan languages including a number of related languages called Mazatec External links http www.ethnologue.com show family.asp?subid 1874 16 Ethnologue report for Popolocan Category Popolocan languages Category Endangered Oto Manguean languages Na lang stub br Yezho popolokanek fr Langues popolocas ... more details
Infobox language family name Corachol region western Mexico family Uto Aztecan languages Uto Aztecan familycolor Uto Aztecan child1 Cora language Cora child2 Huichol language Huichol Coracholan alternatively Corachol , Cora Huichol or Coran is a grouping of language s within the Uto Aztecan languages Uto Aztecan language family . The living members of Coracholan are the Huichol language Huichol and Cora languages , spoken by communities in Jalisco and Nayarit , states in central Mexico . Cazcan language Cazcan Chichimeca may have belonged as well. Coracholan languages are Mesoamerican languages , and display many of the traits defined by the Mesoamerican Linguistic Area , or sprachbund . Category Uto Aztecan languages Category Mesoamerican languages na lang stub es Lenguas corachol ... more details
Infobox language family name Huastecan region Mesoamerica familycolor American fam1 Mayan languages Mayan child1 child2 child3 The Huastecan languages of Mexico are the most divergent branch of the Mayan languages Mayan language family . They are Wastek language Wastek Huastec and Chikomuseltek language Chikomuseltek Chicomuceltec . See Mayan languages Huastecan branch for details. Category Mayan languages na lang stub ... more details
Infobox language family name Tlapanecan region Mexico , Nicaragua familycolor American fam1 Oto Manguean languages Oto Mangue fam3 Tlapanec Mangue fam2 Western Oto Mangue child1 Tlapanec language Tlapanec child2 Subtiaba language Subtiaba sil 1900 16 The Tlapanecan languages are Tlapanec Me phaa of Guerrero and the extinct Subtiaba of Nicaragua . They are the most recently recognized members of the Oto Manguean language family, the relationship having been demonstrated in 1977 by Jorge Su rez. DEFAULTSORT Tlapanecan Languages Category Oto Manguean languages ... more details
Infobox language name Totonac nativename states Mexico region Puebla state Puebla , Veracruz state Veracruz , Zacatl n ethnicity Totonac people speakers 200,000 date 1980 census ref ref ethnologue toc Coyutla Totonac ref familycolor American fam1 Totozoquean languages Totozoquean ? fam2 Totonacan languages Totonacan agency http www.inali.gob.mx INALI lc1 ld1 Totonac is an language cluster of Mexico , spoken across a number of central Mexican states by the Totonac people . It is a Indigenous languages of Mesoamerica Mesoamerican language and shows many of the traits which define the Mesoamerican Linguistic Area . Along with some 62 other indigenous languages, it is recognised as an official language of Mexico, though as a single language. ref PDFlink http www.inali.gob.mx pdf LGDLPI.pdf Ley General de Derechos Ling sticos de los Pueblos Ind genas 56.2  Kibibyte KiB application pdf, 57557 bytes General Law of the Linguistic Rights of Indigenous peoples , decree published 13 March 2003 ref See also Totonacan languages Totonacapan for a list of municipalities with Totonac speakers References reflist Languages of Mexico DEFAULTSORT Pimic, Tepehua, Language Category Agglutinative languages Category Totonacan languages na lang stub ... more details
distinguish Popoluca Infobox language family name Popoloca region Puebla , Mexico familycolor American fam1 Oto Manguean languages Oto Manguean fam2 Popolocan languages Popolocan fam3 Chocho Popoloca sil 1912 16 child1 Eastern child2 Central Western map Otomanguean Languages.png mapcaption The Popoloca languages, number 6 purple , center. Popoloca is is an indigenous Mexican cluster of languages of the Popolocan languages Popolocan branch of the Oto Manguean languages Oto Manguean language family, closely related to Mazatecan languages Mazatec . They are spoken by 25,000 people in Puebla state, Mexico, near Tehuac n . Languages The Ethnologue distinguishes seven varieties of Popoloca as separate languages. However, these fall into four groups with 75 mutual intelligibility or greater. Eastern Popoloca Southern Popoloca language Southern Atzingo Metzontla San Juan, Los Reyes Northern Popoloca language Northern Temalacayuca Tlalcoyalco San Luis, San Marcos Central Popoloca Coyotepec Popoloca language Coyotepec San Mateo dialect may be distinct, or a dialect of San Felipe Western Popoloca language Western Ahuatempan Otlaltepec Santa In s, San Felipe DEFAULTSORT Popoloca Languages Category Popolocan languages Na lang stub br Yezho popolokek fr Langues popolocas ... more details
Infobox language family name Ch olan altname Cholan Tzeltalan region Mesoamerica familycolor American fam1 Mayan languages Mayan fam2 Western br Q anjobalan Ch olan child1 Ch olan proper child2 Tzeltalan The Ch olan sc aka Cholan Tzeltalan languages are a branch of the Mayan languages Mayan family of Mexico. Languages Cholan proper Ch ol language Ch ol Chontal Maya language Chontal , Ch orti language Ch orti Ch olti language Ch olti Tzeltalan Tzeltal language Tzeltal , Tzotzil language Tzotzil See Mayan languages Western branch for details. Category Mayan languages na lang stub ... more details
Infobox language family name Yucatecan region Mesoamerica familycolor American fam1 Mayan languages Mayan child1 Mopan Itza child2 Yucatec Lacandon The Yucatecan languages are a branch of the Mayan languages Mayan family of Mexico, Belize, and Guatemala. Languages Mopan Itza Itza language Itza , Mopan language Mopan Yucatec Lacandon Yucatec Maya language Maya Yukatek , Lakantun language Lakantun Lacandon See Mayan languages Yucatecan branch for details. Category Mayan languages na lang stub ar ... more details
Infobox language family name Manguean region Mexico , Nicaragua , Costa Rica familycolor American fam1 Oto Manguean languages Oto Mangue fam2 Western Oto Mangue fam3 Tlapanec Mangue child1 Chorotega language Chorotega Mangue child2 Chiapanec language Chiapanec The extinct Manguean languages were a branch of the Oto Manguean languages Oto Mangean family. They were Chorotega language Chorotega of Costa Rica and Nicaragua where it was called Mangue or Monimbo , and Chiapanec language Chiapanec of Mexico . Category Oto Manguean languages es Lenguas chiapaneco mangues ... more details
Infobox language family name Taracahitic region familycolor Uto Aztecan fam1 Uto Aztecan languages Uto Aztecan fam2 Southern Uto Aztecan languages Southern The Taracahitic or Taracahita languages are a branch of the Uto Aztecan language family of Mexico. The best known is Tarahumara language Tarahumara . Languages Tarahumaran Tarahumara language Tarahumara Guarijio language Guarij o Varihio Tubar sup sup C hita Cahita Yaqui language Yaqui &ndash Mayo language Mayo Opata language pata sup ? sup Eudeve, Heve, Dohema Category Uto Aztecan languages ... more details
Infobox language family name Zapotecan region Oaxaca , Mexico familycolor American fam1 Oto Manguean languages Oto Manguean fam2 Eastern Oto Mangue fam3 Popolocan Zapotecan child1 Zapotec languages Zapotec child2 Chatino language Chatino The Zapotecan languages are a group of related Oto Manguean languages which descend from the common proto language proto Zapotecan language spoken by the Zapotec civilization Zapotec people during the era of the dominance of Monte Alb n . The Zapotecan language group contains the languages of the Zapotec language Zapotec dialect continuum and the Chatino language . References http zapotec.agron.iastate.edu lenguas.html Lenguas Zapotecas Category Zapotecan languages Category Mesoamerican languages na lang stub br Zapotekeg es Idioma zapoteco fr Zapot que langue hr Zapotecan nah Tzapot catlaht lli nl Zapoteeks pl J zyk zapotecki ru ... more details
Mexico. American Anthropologist , 17 , 17 40. Language families Category Comecrudan languages Category Indigenous languages of Mexico Category Indigenous languages of the Southwestern United States Category ... map Comecrudan langs.png mapcaption Pre contact distribution of Comecrudan languages. Distribution continues to the south. Comecrudan refers to a group of possibly related languages spoken in the southernmost part of Texas and in northern Mexico along the Rio Grande . Comecrudo is the most well known. Very little is known about these languages or the people who spoke them. Knowledge of them primarily .... All Comecrudan languages are Extinct language extinct . Family division The three languages were ... of North American languages , Comecrudo was grouped together with the Cotoname language Cotoname and Coahuilteco language Coahuilteco languages into a family called Coahuiltecan . John R. Swanton ... language Tonkawa , Atakapa language Atakapa , and Maratino language Maratino languages into a Coahuiltecan ... Coahuiltecan into his Hokan languages Hokan stock. After these proposals, documentation of the Garza and Mamulique languages was brought to light. It is now thought that the Comecrudan languages are not part ... related. See also Native American languages Classification schemes for Native American languages Handbook ... Campbell, Lyle. 1997 . American Indian languages The historical linguistics of Native America . New York Oxford University Press. ISBN 0 19 509427 1. Campbell, Lyle & Mithun, Marianne Eds. . 1979 . The languages ... Press. Goddard, Ives. 1979 . The languages of south Texas and the lower Rio Grande. In L. Campbell & M. Mithun Eds. The languages of native America pp.  355 389 . Austin University of Texas Press. Goddard, Ives Ed. . 1996 . Languages . Handbook of North American Indians W. C. Sturtevant, General ... languages and language families of North America rev. and enlarged ed. with additions and corrections ... of the map in Goddard 1996 . ISBN 0 8032 9271 6. Mithun, Marianne. 1999 . The languages of Native North ... more details
Infobox language family name Zoque altname O de p t region Chiapas , Oaxaca , Tabasco ethnicity Zoque people Zoques familycolor American fam1 Mixe Zoquean languages Mixe Zoquean child1 Gulf Zoquean child2 Chimalapa Zoque child3 Chiapas Zoque child4 ? Isthmian script Epi Olmec map Mixezoquemap.png mapcaption Locations green where Zoquean languages are spoken The Zoque languages form a primary branch of the Mixe Zoquean languages Mixe Zoquean language family indigenous to southern Mexico. They are spoken by around 70,000 indigenous Zoque people . The Zoques which date December 2011 call their language O de p t . Zoque language which date December 2011 programming is carried by the National Commission for the Development of Indigenous Peoples CDI s radio station XECOPA , broadcasting from Copainal , Chiapas . Languages Zoquean languages fall in three groups Gulf Zoquean Veracruz Zoque Sierra Popoluca Soteapan Zoque , Texistepec Popoluca , Ayapa Zoque Tabasco Zoque Oaxacan Zoque Chimalapa Zoque Chiapas Zoque Copainal Zoque , Francisco Le n Zoque , Ray n Zoque a dialect cluster References Wichmann, S ren, 1995. The Relationship Among the Mixe Zoquean Languages of Mexico . University of Utah Press. Salt Lake City. ISBN 0 87480 487 6 See also Epi Olmec script Category Indigenous languages of Mexico Category Mesoamerican languages Category Mixe Zoque languages na lang stub es Lenguas zoqueanas it Lingua zoque Tabasco pt L ngua zoque ... more details
Festivals in Mexico Health care in Mexico Humor in MexicoLanguages of Mexico Media in Mexico ...double image right Flag of Mexico.svg 197 Coat of arms of Mexico.svg 124 The Flag of Mexico The Coat of arms of Mexico Image MEX orthographic.svg right 188px Image Mexico CIA WFB Map.png thumb An enlargeable map of the United Mexican States See also Index of Mexico related articles The United Mexican ... translation Mexican United States is rarely used ref commonly known as Mexico , is a federalism ... mx.html title Mexico work The World Factbook publisher United States Central Intelligence Agency accessdate July 23, 2009 ref Mexico is bound on the north by the United States on the south and west by the Pacific ... and on the east by the Gulf of Mexico . ref Merriam Webster s Geographical Dictionary , 3rd ed. Springfield, MA Merriam Webster, Inc. p. 733 ref ref http www.bartleby.com 65 me Mexico.html Mexico . http .... ref The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to Mexico TOC limit limit 2 General reference image Mexico CIA WFB Map.png thumb An enlargeable basic map of Mexico International ... UK IPA es me.xi.ko lang Common English country name Mexico Official English country name United Mexican States Common endonym List of countries and capitals in native languages M xico Official endonym ... of adjectival and demonymic forms of place names Countries and nations Demonym s Etymology Name of Mexico International rankings of Mexico Area and size ranking covering almost 2 million square kilometers, ref name CIA World Factbook Mexico is the fifth largest country in the Americas by total area ... country in the world list of countries by GDP PPP Mexico is the 11th largest economy in the world ... See ISO 3166 2 MX Internet country code top level domain .mx Geography of Mexico Image Mexico topographic map blank.svg thumb An enlargeable topographic map of Mexico. Main Geography of MexicoMexico ... s Time in Mexico Time Zone 1   UTC 06 , summer UTC 05 Time in Mexico Time Zone 2   UTC 07 , summer ... more details
Infobox language family name Tequistlatecan altname Chontal de Oaxaca, Slijuala xanuk ethnicity Oaxaca Chontal people Oaxaca Chontal familycolor American region Oaxaca fam1 Tolatecan languages Tolatecan ? child1 Highland Chontal child2 Coastal Chontal map Tolatecan Languages.png mapcaption The Tequistlatecan languages are in Mexico at the left of the map. The Tequistlatecan languages , also called Chontal of Oaxaca , are three close but distinct languages spoken by the Oaxaca Chontal people Chontal people of Oaxaca State, Mexico Huamelultec language Huamelultec Lowland Oaxaca Chontal , Tequistlatec language Tequistlatec proper extinct , Highland Oaxaca Chontal . The Tequistlatecan languages are part of some versions of the controversial Hokan languages Hokan Macro family proposal, but generally considered to be an language isolate isolate . Campbell and Oltrogge 1980 believe that the Tequistlatecan languages may be related to Jicaque an but this hypothesis remains to be explored further. References Campbell, Lyle and David Oltrogge, 1980, Proto Tol Jicaque , International Journal of American Linguistics, 46 205 223 Campbell, Lyle. 1979 . Middle American languages. In L. Campbell & M. Mithun Eds. , The languages of native America Historical and comparative assessment pp.  902 1000 . Austin University of Texas Press. Campbell, Lyle 1997 American Indian Languages, The Historical Linguistics of Native America , Oxford Studies in Anthropological Linguistics, Oxford University Press External links http www.ethnologue.com show language.asp?code chd Ethnologues page on Highland Chontal http www.ethnologue.com show language.asp?code clo Ethnologues page on Lowland Chontal http cdi.gob.mx ini monografias chontalesoax.html Information of Chontal culture at INI website es icon Mesoamerican families Indigenous people of Oaxaca Category Tequistlatecan languages na lang stub de Tequistlatekische Sprachen es Lenguas tequistlatecas fr Langues tequistlat ques ru ... more details
Infobox language family name Piman altname Tepiman region familycolor Uto Aztecan fam1 Uto Aztecan languages Uto Aztecan fam2 Southern Uto Aztecan languages Southern Piman or Tepiman refers a group of languages within the Uto Aztecan languages Uto Aztecan family that are spoken by ethnic groups including the Pima spanning from Arizona in the north to Durango , Mexico in the south. The Piman languages are as follows Campbell 1997 1. O odham language O odham sc aka Pima language, Papago language 2. Pima Bajo sc aka Mountain Pima, Lowland Pima 3. Tepehu n language Tepehu n sc aka Northern Tepehu n, Southeastern Tepehu n, Southwestern Tepehu n 4. Tepecano Morphology Piman are agglutinative languages, where words use suffix complexes for a variety of purposes with several morpheme s strung together. Sources refbegin indent yes cite book author aut Campbell, Lyle authorlink Lyle Campbell year 1997 title American Indian Languages The Historical Linguistics of Native America format OUP paperback edition, 2000 series Oxford Studies in Anthropological Linguistics, 4 others William Bright series general ed. publisher Oxford University Press location New York isbn 0 19 509427 1 oclc 32923907 DEFAULTSORT Piman languages Category Agglutinative languages Category Uto Aztecan languages Category Languages of the United States Category Indigenous languages of the Southwestern United States Category Indigenous languages of the North American Southwest na lang stub es Lenguas tepimanas hr Piman ... more details
For American languages see Indigenous languages of the Americas Languages of North America Languages of South America Languages of the United States disambig ... more details
no footnotes date March 2010 Infobox language name Chinantec nativename Tsa Jujmi states Mexico region Oaxaca ethnicity Chinantecs speakers 93,000 familycolor American fam1 Oto Manguean languages Oto Mangue fam2 Western Oto Mangue fam3 Oto Pame Chinantecan lc1 cco ld1 Comaltepec Chinantec lc2 chj ld2 Ojitl n Chinantec lc3 chq ld3 Quiotepec Chinantec lc4 chz ld4 Ozumac n Chinantec lc5 cle ld5 Lealao ... Chinantec map Otomanguean Languages.png mapcaption The Chinantecan languages, number 9 chartreuse , east. The Chinantecs are an indigenous people that live in Oaxaca and Veracruz , Mexico , especially in the districts of Cuicatl n, Ixtl n de Ju rez , Tuxtepec and Choapan. The Chinantec languages belong to the Chinantecan branch of the Oto Manguean languages Oto Manguean family. unintelligible varieties of Chinantec. Languages Egland 1978 established fourteen Chinantec languages on the basis of 80 ... Chiltepec Tlacoatzintepec would be languages, reducing the count to ten. Leolao Latani is the most divergent ... languages tonal language and some dialects Usila Chinantec have five register tones, an uncommon trait in the world s languages. Chinantec also has ballistic syllable s, which is apparently of laryngeal ... Reflist S. Egland and D. Bartholomew 1978. http www.sil.org mexico sondeos G038b SondeosInteligibilidad.pdf La inteligibilidad inter dialectal en Mexico Resultados de algunos sondeos. Mexico, D.F. Instituto Linguistico de Verano External links The Chinantec language family http www.sil.org mexico chinanteca 00i chinanteca.htm SIL Mexico http www.sil.org mexico chinanteca sochiapam 00i ChinantecoSochiapam cso.htm Sochiapan Chinantec SIL Mexico A whistled conversation in http www.sil.org mexico chinanteca sochiapam 13i Conversacion cso.htm Sochiapan Chinantec SIL Mexico Indigenous people of Oaxaca Languages of Mexico Category Ethnic groups in Mexico Category Indigenous peoples in Mexico Category Oto Manguean languages language stub es Lenguas chinantecas eo inanteka grupo fr Langues chinant ques ... more details
and Piro fled south with the Spanish to El Paso del Norte present day Ciudad Ju rez , Mexico . There they founded Ysleta, Texas , Socorro, Texas and Senecu, Mexico Senec del Sur ref Marshall, Michael ... of a Rio Grande Province New Mexico Historic Preservation Division, Santa Fe, p. 252, http www.worldcat.org ... show family.asp?subid 92551 Ethnologue page on Tiwa Category Tanoan languages Category Languages of the United States Category Indigenous languages of the Southwestern United States Category Indigenous languages of the North American Southwest Category Tiwa Category Pueblo culture na lang stub br Tiweg ... more details
s strung together. References references External links Languages of Mexico DEFAULTSORT Pimic, Tepehua, Language Category Agglutinative languages Category Totonacan languages na lang stub br Yezho tepehouek ...distinguish Tepehu n language Infobox language name Tepehua nativename Hamasipini region Mexico Puebla state Puebla , Veracruz state Veracruz , Hidalgo state Hidalgo speakers 10,000 date 1982 1990 familycolor American fam1 Totozoquean languages Totozoquean ? fam2 Totonacan languages Totonacan agency http www.inali.gob.mx INALI lc1 tee ld1 Tepehua of Huehuetla lc2 tpp ld2 Tepehua of Pisaflores lc3 tpt ld3 Tepehua of Tlachichilco Tepehua is an language cluster of Mexico , spoken across a number of central Mexican states by the Tepehua people . Tepehua is a Indigenous languages of Mesoamerica Mesoamerican language and shows many of the traits which define the Mesoamerican Linguistic Area . Along with some 62 other indigenous languages, it is recognised by a statutory law of Mexico ref PDFlink http www.inali.gob.mx pdf LGDLPI.pdf Ley General de Derechos Ling sticos de los Pueblos Ind genas 56.2  Kibibyte KiB application pdf, 57557 bytes General Law of the Linguistic Rights of Indigenous peoples , decree published 13 March 2003 ref as an official language in the Mexican Federal District and the other administrative divisions in which it is spoken, and on an equal footing with Spanish language Spanish . class wikitable cellspacing 0 cellpadding 5 width 65 style border collapse collapse Approximate number of speakers of all varieties of Tepehua 10,000 width 5 align left bgcolor 778899 span style color 000000 Language span width 5 align left bgcolor 778899 span style color 000000 ISO Code span width 22 align left bgcolor 778899 span style color 000000 Where spoken span width 20 align left bgcolor 778899 span style color 000000 Number of speakers span Huehuetla Tepehua Tepehua of Huehuetla http www.ethnologue.com show language.asp?code tee tee Northeastern Hidalgo Mexico Hidalgo ... more details
Mexico spoke a single or related languages. ref Logan, Jennifer L. Chapter 8 Linguistics Reassessing ... term for the languages and people of this region. Language relationships Similarities among ... that the languages of the region were also similar. ref Newcombe, Jr., W. W. The Indians of Texas ... family was proposed to include all the languages of the region, including Karankawa and Tonkawa ... Languages. International Journal of American Linguistics . Vo. L, No 4 Dec 1020 , p. 280 ref Most ... words are known from seven different languages Comecrudo , Cotoname , Aranama , Solano language Solano ..., many more languages were spoken, but numerous Coahuiltecan bands and ethnic groups became extinct between the 16th and 19th century and their languages were unrecorded. In 1886, ethnologist Albert Gatschet found perhaps the last surviving speakers of Coahuiltecan languages 25 Comecrudo, 1 Cotoname, and 2 Pakawa. They were living near Reynosa, Mexico . ref Powell, J. W. 7th Annual Report of the Bureau ... in northeastern Mexico and southern Texas may have been 100,000. The Coahuiltecans were sold into slavery ... known of the languages. They were spoken in the delta of the Rio Grande River ref Salinas, Martin ... exists to classify Solano and Aranama. However, linguistic conservatives say that all these languages ... relationships between and among the languages. ref Logan, Jennifer L. Chapter 8 Linguistics Reassessing ... Center for Ecological Archaeology, Texas A&M, 2001 ref The Coahuiltecan languages and culture are now ... . The languages of Native North America . Cambridge Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0 521 23228 7 hbk ... 2011 location Austin Category Proposed language families Category Extinct languages of North America ... more details