Sierra Totonac language
Sierra Totonac | |
---|---|
Highland Totonac | |
Native to | Mexico |
Region | Puebla and Veracruz |
Native speakers |
unknown (120,000 cited 1982)[1] plus 48,000 Coyutla (2000) |
Latin | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
Either: toc – Coyutla Totonac tos – (other varieties) |
Glottolog |
lowl1244 [2] |
Sierra Totonac is a native American language complex spoken in Puebla and Veracruz, Mexico. One of the Totonacan languages, it is also known as Highland Totonac. The language is best known through the work of the late Herman “Pedro†Aschmann who produced a small dictionary and several academic articles on the language.
Varieties
The varieties of Sierra Totonac are rather diverse, and specialists tend to consider them distinct languages. They are:
- Zapotitlán (Zapotitlán de Méndez) Totonac (in Sierra Norte de Puebla)
- Coyutla Totonac
- Olintla Totonac
- Ozelonacaxtla Totonac
- Huehuetla Totonac
- Coatepec Totonacâ€
Zapotitlán Totonac is the best known, being the variety described by Aschmann.
See also
References
- ↑ Coyutla Totonac at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
(other varieties) at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) - ↑ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Lowland Central Totonacan". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1946a. Totonaco Phonemes. International Journal of American Linguistics. 12:34–43.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1946b. Totonac Categories of Smell. Tlalocan. 2:187–189.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1948. Cuento del zorro. México: Instituto LingüÃstico de Verano.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1949a. Cuento de la hija del ratón. México: Instituto LingüÃstico de Verano.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1949b. Vocabulario de la lengua totonaca. México: Instituto LingüÃstico de Verano.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1950a. Cuento de la rana y el buey. México: Instituto LingüÃstico de Verano.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1950b. Tres cuentos con moraleja. México: Instituto LingüÃstico de Verano.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1950c. A literal Translation of 2 Corinthians 1:1–11 in Totonac. The Bible Translator. 1:171–179.
—*Aschmann, Herman P. 1953. Los dos niveles de composición en el verbo totonaco. In Bernal, Ignacio and Hurtado, Eusebio Dávalos, eds. Huastecos, totonacos y sus vecinos. Revista Mexicana de Estudios Antropológicos. 13(2/3):119–122. México: Sociedad Mexicana de AntropologÃa.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1956. Vocabulario de la lengua totonaca. México: Instituto LingüÃstico de Verano y Dirección General de Asuntos IndÃgenas de la SecretarÃa de Educación Pública.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1962. Vocabulario totonaco de la sierra. [Serie de vocabularios indÃgenas 'Mariano Silva y Aceves', Núm. 7.] México: Instituto LingüÃstico de Verano.
- Aschmann, Herman P. 1983 [1962]. Vocabulario totonaco de la sierra. [Serie de vocabularios indÃgenas 'Mariano Silva y Aceves', Núm. 7.] México: Instituto LingüÃstico de Verano. http://www.sil.org/mexico/totonaca/sierra/S007a-VocTotonacoFacs-tos.htm