Tilquiapan Zapotec
Tilquiapan Zapotec | |
---|---|
San Miguel Tilquiápam | |
Region | Oaxaca in Mexico |
Native speakers | 5,000 (2007)[1] |
Latin script | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
zts |
Glottolog |
tilq1235 [2] |
Tilquiapan Zapotec (Zapoteco de San Miguel Tilquiápam) is an Oto-Manguean language of the Zapotecan branch, spoken in southern Oaxaca, Mexico.
Santa Inés Yatzechi Zapotec is close enough to be considered a dialect, and Ocotlán Zapotec is also close. They were measured at 87% and 59% intelligibility, respectively, in recorded text testing.[3]
Sounds
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i | ɨ | u |
Mid | ɘ | o | |
Open | a |
Each vowel can also be glottalized, a phenomenon manifested as either creaky voice throughout the vowel or, more commonly, as a sequence of a vowel and a glottal stop optionally followed by an echo of the vowel.[5]
Consonants
Bilabial | Dental/ Alveolar |
Post- alveolar |
Palatal | Velar | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
plain | labialized | ||||||||||||
Nasal | m | nː n | |||||||||||
Plosive | pː | b | tː | d | tːʃ | dʒ | kː | ɡ | kːʷ | ɡʷ | |||
Fricative | sː | z | ʃː | ʒ | |||||||||
Approximant | central | j | |||||||||||
lateral | l͡d l |
As with other Zapotec languages, the primary distinction between consonant pairs like /t/ and /d/ is not of voicing but between fortis and lenis (measured in length[7]), respectively, with voicing being a phonetic correlate.[6] There are two exceptions to this in Tilquiapan:
- The contrast between fortis /nː/ and lenis /n/
- The contrast between fortis /ld/ and lenis /l/
Neither is voiceless, but /nˑ/ is pronounced a little longer and /ld/ replaces /l/ in certain causative verbs in ways similar to other fortis/lenis consonantal changes (e.g. [blaˀa] 'get loose' vs. [bldaˀa] 'let loose').[6]
Notes
- ↑ Tilquiapan Zapotec at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Tilquiapan Zapotec". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
- ↑ Egland, Cruz Ramos & Bartholomew (1978)
- ↑ Merrill (2008), p. 109
- ↑ Merrill (2008), p. 110
- 1 2 3 Merrill (2008), p. 108
- ↑ See Nellis & Hollenbach (1980)
References
- Egland, Steven; Cruz Ramos, Saúl; Bartholomew, Doris (1978), La inteligibilidad interdialectal en México: resultados de algunos sondeos [Interdialectal intelligibility in Mexico: study results] (in Spanish), México: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano, ISBN 9683100031
- Merrill, Elizabeth (2008), "Tilquiapan Zapotec" (PDF), Journal of the International Phonetic Association 38 (1): 107–114, doi:10.1017/S0025100308003344
- Nellis, Donald G.; Hollenbach, Barbara E. (1980), "Fortis versus lenis in Cajonos Zapotec phonology", International Journal of American Linguistics 46: 92–105, doi:10.1086/465639