Tlapanec language

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Tlapanec
Meph'aa
Spoken in: Mexico 
Region: Guerrero, Morelos
Total speakers: approx. 75,000
Language family: Oto-Mangue
 Tlapanec-Subtiaba
  Tlapanecan
   Tlapanec
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: tpa
ISO 639-3: tpc

Tlapanec is a Mexican indigenous language spoken by around 75,000 Tlapanec people in the states of Guerrero and Morelos.[1] Like other Oto-Manguean languages, it is tonal and has complex inflectional morphology. The Tlapanec themselves call their language Me'phaa.[2]

Tlapanec was long regarded as unclassified. Later it was connected to Subtiaba of Nicaragua, and once linked to the controversial Hokan language family.[3] More recent analyses have now definitively linked Tlapanec to the Oto-Manguean linguistic family, of which it forms its own subgroup along with the extinct and very closely related Subtiaba language.[4]

Although originally from Guerrero, some Tlapanec speakers have recently settled in the state of Morelos near Chinameca.

Contents

[edit] Dialects

Ethnologue lists four principal varieties of Tlapanec:[5]

  • Acatepec
  • Azoyú
  • Malinaltepec
  • Tlacoapa.

Others, including native speakers, identify as many as eight major dialects.[6]

The Azoyú variety is the only natural language reported to have used the Pegative case.[7]

[edit] Media

Tlapanec-language programming is carried by the CDI's radio station XEZV-AM, broadcasting from Tlapa de Comonfort, Guerrero.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Instituto Lingüístico de Verano (n.d.)
  2. ^ Instituto Lingüístico de Verano (n.d.)
  3. ^ Often (mis-)spelled as Tlappanec in publications at that time.
  4. ^ See Suárez (1977; 1986).
  5. ^ "Ethnologue report for Subtiaba-Tlapanec" (Gordon 2005).
  6. ^ Instituto Lingüístico de Verano (n.d.)
  7. ^ Wichmann (2005).

[edit] References

Fernández de Miranda, María Teresa (1968). "Inventory of Classificatory Materials", in in Norman A. McQuown (Volume ed.): Handbook of Middle American Indians, Vol. 5: Linguistics, R. Wauchope (General Editor), Austin: University of Texas Press, pp.63–78. ISBN 0-292-73665-7. OCLC 277126. 
Gordon, Raymond G., Jr. (Ed.) (2005). Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Fifteenth edition, online version, Dallas, TX: SIL International. Retrieved on 2007-03-12. 
Instituto Lingüístico de Verano (n.d.). Tlapanecan family. El Instituto Lingüístico de Verano en México. Retrieved on 2007-03-13.
Sapir, Edward (1925). "The Hokan affinity of Subtiaba in Nicaragua". American Anthropologist (New Series) 27 (3,4): pp.402–435, 491–527. doi:10.1525/aa.1925.27.3.02a00040. 
Suárez, Jorge A. (1977). El tlapaneco como lengua Otomangue (MS), México, D.F.: Universidad Nacional Autonoma de México.  (Spanish)
 ——— (1983). La lengua tlapaneca de Malinaltepec. México, D.F.: Universidad Nacional Autonoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Filologicas. ISBN 968-5805-07-5.  (Spanish)
 ——— (1986). "Elementos gramaticales otomangues en tlapaneco", in Benjamin F. Elson (ed.): Language in a global perspective (Papers in honor of the 50th anniversary of the Summer Institute of Linguistics 1935-1985. Dallas: The Summer Institute of Linguistics. ISBN 0-714-17263-5. 
Swadesh, Morris (1968). "Lexicostatistic Classification", in Norman A. McQuown (Volume ed.): Handbook of Middle American Indians, Vol. 5: Linguistics, R. Wauchope (General Editor), Austin: University of Texas Press, pp.79–116. ISBN 0-292-73665-7. OCLC 277126. 
Weathers, Mark L. (1976). "Tlapanec 1975". International Journal of American Linguistics 42 (4): pp.367–371. doi:10.1086/465442. ISSN 0020-7071. 
Weathers, Mark L.; and Abad Carrasco Zúñiga (1989). Xó nitháán mè’phàà: Cómo se escribe el tlapaneco. México, D.F.: Editorial Cuajimalpa. 
Wichmann, Søren (2005). "Tlapanec Cases" (PDF) in Conference on Otomanguean and Oaxacan Languages, March 19-21, 2004. Rosemary Beam de Azcona and Mary Paster (eds.) Report 13, Survey of California and Other Indian Languages: pp.133-145, Berkeley CA: University of California at Berkeley. Retrieved on 2007-03-12. 

[edit] External links

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