- Tzeltal language
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Tzeltal Bats'il K'op Spoken in Mexico Region Chiapas Ethnicity Tzeltal Native speakers 372,000[1] (date missing) Language family Mayan- Cholan–Tzeltalan
- Tzeltalan
- Tzeltal
- Tzeltalan
Language codes ISO 639-3 tzh This page contains IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. Tzeltal is a Mayan language spoken in the Mexican state of Chiapas, mostly in the municipalities of Ocosingo, Altamirano, Huixtán, Tenejapa, Yajalón, Chanal, Sitalá, Amatenango del Valle, Socoltenango, Villa las Rosas, Chilón, San Juan Cancun, San Cristóbal de las Casas and Oxchuc. It is a living language with some 371,730 speakers as of 2005, including a number of monolinguals.[2]
Tzeltal forms, together with the Tzotzil language, a sub-branch of the Mayan languages, called Tzeltalan, which again forms a sub-branch called Cholan-Tzeltalan, together with the Ch'ol languages, Chontal, Ch'ol and Ch'orti'. All these languages are the most spoken Mayan languages in Chiapas today. Historically, the branches are believed to have split about 1,400 years ago. Also, some researchers believe that the Tzeltal language has been spoken as far away as in Guatemala.[citation needed]
One of the primary differences between the Tzeltalan and the Ch'ol languages today is that while the Ch'ol languages feature split ergativity, the Tzeltalan languages are fully morphologically ergative.
Tzeltal language programming is carried out by the CDI's radio station XEVFS, broadcasting from Las Margaritas, Chiapas.
Contents
Phonology
The phonology of Tzeltal is quite straightforward with a common vowel inventory and a typical consonant inventory for Mayan languages. Some phonological processes do occur, however, including assimilation, epenthesis, lenition and reduplication.
Vowels
Tzeltal has 5 vowels:
Front Back Unrounded Rounded Close i u Close-mid e o Open a Whether vowel length is phonemic distinctive in Tzeltal is debatable.[3]
Consonants
Tzeltal has 21 consonants, including the glottal stop:
Bilabial Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar Glottal Plosive Aspirated p [pʰ] t [tʰ] k [kʰ] ' [ʔ] Ejective p' [pʼ] t' [tʼ] k' [kʼ] Nasal m [m] n [n] Fricative s [s] x [ʃ] j [x] h [h] Affricate Aspirated tz [t͡sʰ] ch [t͡ʃʰ] Ejective tz' [t͡sʼ] ch' [t͡ʃʼ] Trill r [r] Approximant l [l] y [j] w [w] [pʼ] has three allophones:[4]
- [pʼ] at the end of a word: early, sap' [sapʼ]
- [ʔb] between vowels: many, tzop'ol [t͡sʰoʔbol]
- [b] everywhere else: road, p'e [be]
[w] has two allophones:
- [β] when it is the first member of a CC-consonant cluster,
- or if it is at the end of a word: seed, awlil [ʔaβlil]
- [w] everywhere else: I feared, siwon [siwon]
Note, however, that it can be interchangeably [w] or [β] in the beginning of a word, as in older sister, wix [wiʃ] ~ [βiʃ].
References
Notes
- ^ Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía, Mexico
- ^ Ethnologue: tzh
- ^ Shklovsky, Kirill (2005). Person Marking in Petalcingo Tzeltal. http://linguistics.kirill.org/KS-thesis-large.pdf.
- ^ Gerdel, Florence (1955). Tzeltal (Maya) Phonemes. http://www.sil.org/mexico/workpapers/scans/WS001i-WS012i-WorkpaperScans.htm.
General
- Robinson, Stuart P. (2009). Manual of Spoken Tzeltal. http://www.tzeltal.org/cgi-bin/stuart/tzeltal/static_page.cgi?page=download.
External links
Languages of Mexico
Official languagesSpanish · Nahuatl · Yucatec Maya · Mixtec · Zapotec · Tzeltal · Tzotzil · Otomi · Totonac · Mazatec · Chol · Huastec · Chinantec · Mixe · Tlapanec · Mazahua · P'urhépecha · Tarahumara · Amuzgo · Chatino · Tojolabal · Mayo · Trique · Tepehuan · Huichol · Kekchi · Tepehua · Yaqui · Popoloca · Quiche · Chichimeca Jonaz · Cora · Guarijio · Lacandon · Chocho · Seri · Pima Bajo · Chuj · Cocopah · Paipai · Matlatzinca · Mam · Kickapoo · Huave · Cuicatec · Tlahuica · Papago · Tipai · Ixil · Kiliwa ·
AwakatekCategories:- Language articles with undated speaker data
- Agglutinative languages
- Mayan languages
- Mesoamerican languages
- Indigenous languages of Mexico
- Cholan–Tzeltalan
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