Linguae Uto-Aztecae
Linguae Uto-Aztecae sunt familia linguarum quae in plus quam triginta linguis consistit, quarum paene omnes in Civitatibus Foederatis Occidentalibus et Mexico inveniuntur. Nomen familiae creatum est ut monstret eam linguam Utam Utae et linguas Aztecanas Mexici comprehendere.
Uto-Aztecana est una ex maximis familiis linguarum in Americis secundum numerum loquentium, distributionem geographicam, et numerum linguarum.[1] Sua septentrionalissima lingua est Shoshoni, in usu usque ad Salmon Idahi, cum meridianissima est lingua Pipil Salvatoriae. Ethnologue dicit summam linguarm in familia esse sexaginta unam, et summam loquentium 1 900 412.[2] Loquentes linguarum Nahuatl sunt paene quattuor partes (78.9%) eorum hominum.
Interna familiae descriptio familiam in duos ramos saepe dividit: ramum septentionalem, omnes linguas Civitatum Foederatarum, et ramum meridianum, omnes linguas Mexici comprehendens, sed nondum intellegitur num hoc exemplar classificationem geneticam vel geographicam significet. Rami principales infra hoc stratum classificationis bene accipiuntur: Numicae (linguis sicut Comanche et Shoshoni comprehensis) et linguae Californienses (olim grex Takicae appellatae), Cahuilla et Luiseño non exclusis, sunt plurimae ex linguis septentrionalibus, praeter Hopi et Tübatulabal. Linguae meridianae dividuntur in linguas Tepimanas (inter quas O'odham et Tepehuán), linguas Tarahumaranas (inter quas Raramuri et Guarijio, linguas Cahitan (Yaqui et Mayo), linguas Coracholanas (inter quas Cora et Huichol), et linguas Nahuanas. Patria linguarum Uto-Aztecanarum in Civitatibus Foederatis meridioccidentalibus vel fortasse Mexico boreoccidentali plerumque fuisse habetur, sed incertum est num familia in Mexico meridiano ortam esse, intra linguam linguisticam Mesoamericanam.
Linguae Uto-Aztecanae in usu sunt in montibus et terris humilibus Civitatum Foederatarum Occidentalium (in civitatibus Oregonia, Idaho, Montana, Uta, California, Nivata, Arizona) et Mexico (civitates Sonora, Chihuahua, Nayarit, Durango, Zacatecas, Jalisco, Michoacán, Guerrero, San Luis Potosí, Hidalgo, Puebla, Veracruz, Morelos, Civitas Mexici, et Mexicopolis). Nahuatl classica, lingua Azteorum, et eius progenies hodiernae ad familiam Uto-Aztecanam pertinent. Lingua Pipil, proles linguae Nahuatl, ad Mediam Americam migratione ex Mexico extenditur, et multi loquentes olim ibi habitabant. Nunc exstincta in Guatemala et Honduria, et paene exstincta in Salvatoria occidentali est, omnibus regionibus ubi Hispanica dominatur.
Classificatio genealogica linguarum Uto-Aztecanarum | ||||||
Familia | Greges | Linguae | Ubi in usu et numerus loquentium | Opera | ||
Linguae Uto-Aztecanae | Uto-Aztecana Septentrionalis (fortasse grex arealis) |
Numica | Numic Occidentalis | Paviotso, Bannock, Paiuta Septentrionalis | 700 loquentes in California, Oregonia, Idaho, Nivata | Nichols 1973 |
Mono | Circa 40 loquentes in California | Lamb 1958 | ||||
Numica Centralis | ||||||
Shoshoni, Goshiute | 1000 loquentes et 1000 discipuli in Vyomina, Uta, Nivata, Idaho | McLaughlin 2012 | ||||
Comanche | 100 loquentes in Oclahoma | Robinson et Armagost 1990 | ||||
Timbisha, Panamint | 20 loquentes in California et Nivata | Dayley 1989 | ||||
Numica Meridiana | lingua Fluminis Colorati: Uta, Paiute meridiana, Chemehuevi | 920 loquentes omnium dialectorum, in Colorato, Nivata, California, Uta, Arizona | Givón 2011; Press 1979; Sapir 1992 | |||
Kawaiisu | 5 loquentes in California | Zigmond, Booth, et Munro 1991 | ||||
Regio linguistica Californiana | Serran | Serrano, Kitanemuk (†) | Nulli loquentes nati, sed discipuli Serrano in California Meridiana | Hill 1967 | ||
Cupan | Cahuilla, Cupeño | 35 loquentes Cahuillae, nulli loquentes nati Cupeño | Hill 2005; Seiler 1977 | |||
Luiseño-Juaneño | 5 loquentes in California Meridiana | Kroeber et Grace 1960 | ||||
Tongva (Gabrielino-Fernandeño) (†) | (exstincta ex ca. 1900) Insula Sanctae Catalinae, California Meridiana, conatus ad linguam redintegrandam | Munro et al. 2008 | ||||
Hopi | Hopi | 6,800 loquentes in Arizona boreorientali | Hopi Dictionary Project 1998; Jeanne 1978 | |||
Tübatulabal | Tübatulabal | 5 loquentes in Kern Comitatu, California | Voegelin 1935, Voegelin 1958 | |||
Uto-Aztecana Meridiana (fortasse grex arealis) |
Tepiman | |||||
Pimic | O'odham (Pima-Papago) | 14,000 loquentes in Arizona meridiana, et Sonora septentrionali Mexici | Zepeda 1983 | |||
Pima Bajo (O'ob No'ok) | 650 loquentes in Chihuahua et Sonora Mexici | Estrada-Fernández 1998 | ||||
Tepehuana | Tepehuana septentrionalis | 6,200 loquentes in Chihuahua Mexici | Bascom 1982 | |||
Tepehuana meridiana | 10,600 loquentes in Durango meridiorientali | Willett 1991 | ||||
Tepecano (†) | Exstincta ex 1972, olim in usu in Jalisco septentrionali | Mason 1916 | ||||
Tarahumarana | Tarahumara (nonnullae varietates) | 45,500 loquentes omnium varietatum, omnibus in Chihuahua | Caballero 2008 | |||
Upriver Guarijio, Downriver Guarijio | 2,840 loquentes in Chihuahua et Sonora | Miller 1996 | ||||
Tubar (†) | In usu in Sinaloa et Sonora | Lionnet 1978 | ||||
Cahita | Yaqui | 11,800 in Sonora et Arizona | Dedricket Casad 1999 | |||
Mayo | 33,000 in Sinaloa et Sonora | Freeze 1989 | ||||
Opatan | Opata (†) | Exstincta ex circa 1930. Olim in usu in Sonora. | Shaul 2001 | |||
Eudeve (†) | Exstincta ex 1940; olim in usu in Sonora | Lionnet 1986 | ||||
Corachol | Cora | 13 600 loquentes in Nayarit septentrionali | Casad 1984 | |||
Huichol | 17 800 loquentes in Nayarit et Jalisco | Iturrioz Leza, Ramírez de la Cruz, et al. 2001 | ||||
Aztecana | Pochutec (†) | exstinct ex annis 1970; olim in usu in litore Oaxacano | Boas 1917 | |||
Nahuana nuclearis | Pipil | 20-40 loquentes Salvatore | Campbell 1985 | |||
Nahuatl | 1 500 000 loquentes in Medio Mexico | Langacker 1979; Launey 1986 |
Notae
recensere- ↑ Caballero 2011.
- ↑ Ethnologue (2014). "Summary by language family". SIL International.
Bibliographia
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- Steele, Susan. 1979. An assessment for historical and comparative linguistics. In The Languages of Native America: Historical and Comparative Assessment, ed Lyle Campbell et Marianne Mithun, 444–544. Austiniae Texiae: University of Texas Press.
- Sapir, Edward. 1913. Southern Paiute and Nahuatl, a study in Uto-Aztekan. Journal de la Société des Américanistes 10(2):379–425. doi:10.3406/jsa.1913.2866.
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Opera de linguis singulis
recensere- Boas, Franz. 1917. El dialecto mexicano de Pochutla, Oaxaca. International Journal of American Linguistics 1(1):9–44. Novi Eboraci: Douglas C. McMurtrie. doi:10.1086/463709. OCLC 56221629.
- Hopi Dictionary Project. 1998. Hopi Dictionary: Hopìikwa Lavàytutuveni: A Hopi–English Dictionary of the Third Mesa Dialect With an English–Hopi Finder List and a Sketch of Hopi Grammar. Tucsoniae: University of Arizona Press.
- Campbell, Lyle. 1985. The Pipil Language of El Salvador. Mouton Grammar Library, 1. Berolini: Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-010344-1. OCLC 13433705. PHP.
- Dayley, Jon P. 1989. Tümpisa (Panamint) Shoshone Grammar. University of California Publications in Linguistics 115. Berkeleiae: University of California Press.
- Givón, Talmy. 2011. Ute Reference Grammar. Culture and Language Use, 3. Amstelodami: John Benjamins Publishing Company.
- Jeanne, LaVerne Masayesva. 1978. Aspects of Hopi grammar. Dissertatio, MIT.
- Voegelin, Charles F. 1935. Tübatulabal Grammar. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 34:55–190.
- Voegelin, Charles F. 1958. Working Dictionary of Tübatulabal. International Journal of American Linguistics 24(3):221–228. doi:10.1086/464459.
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- Nichols, Michael. 1973. Northern Paiute historical grammar. Dissertatio, Universitas Californiensis Berkeleiae.
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- Caballero, Gabriela. 2008. Choguita Rarámuri (Tarahumara) Phonology and Morphology. Dissertatio PhD, University of California at Berkeley. PDF.
- Kroeber, Alfred L., et George William Grace. 1960. The Sparkman Grammar of Luiseño. University of California Publications in Linguistics, 16. Berkeleiae: The University of California Press.
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- Willett, T. 1991. A reference grammar of southeastern Tepehuan. Summer Institute of Linguistics and University of Texas at Arlington.http://www-01.sil.org/acpub/repository/29375.pdf PDF.]
- Mason, J. Alden. 1916. Tepecano, A Piman language of western Mexico. Annals of the New York Academy of Science 25:309–416. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1916.tb55171.x.
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- Bascom, Burton W. 1982. Northern Tepehuan. In Uto-Aztecan Grammatical Sketches, ed. Ronald W. Langacker, 267–393. Studies in Uto-Aztecan Grammar, 3. Dallasiae Texiae: Summer Institute of Linguistics and the University of Texas at Arlington
- Lionnet, Andrés. 1978. El idioma tubar y los tubares: Segun documentos ineditos de C. S. Lumholtz y C. V. Hartman. Mexicopoli: Universidad Iberoamericana.
- Casad, Eugene H. 1984. Cora. Studies in Uto-Aztecan grammar 4: Southern Uto-Aztecan grammatical sketches, ed. Ronald W. Langacker, 153–149. Summer Institute of Linguistics Publications in Linguistics, 56. Summer Institute of Linguistics and the University of Texas at Arlington.
- Iturrioz Leza, José Luis, Julio Ramírez de la Cruz, et al. 2001 Gramática Didáctica del Huichol: Vol. I. Estructura Fonológica y Sistema de Escritura. Departamento de Estudios en Lenguas Indígenas–Universidad de Guadalajara, Secretaria de Educación Pública.
- Dedrick, John, et Eugene H. Casad. 1999. Sonora Yaqui Language Structures. Tucsoniae Arizonae: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 978-0-8165-1981-1. Catalogus.
- Freeze, Ray A. 1989. Mayo de Los Capomos, Sinaloa. Archivo de Lenguas Indígenas del Estado de Oaxaca, 14.14.166. Mexicopoli: Instituto de Investigación e Integración Social del Estado de Oaxaca.
- Lionnet, Andrés. 1986. Un idioma extinto de sonora: El eudeve. Mexicopolis: UNAM. ISBN 968-837-915-8. Google Books.
- Estrada-Fernández, Zarina. 1998. Pima bajo de Yepachi, Chihuahua. Archivo de Lenguas Indigenas de Mexico. Colegio de México.
- Munro, Pamela, et al. 2008. Yaara' Shiraaw'ax 'Eyooshiraaw'a: Now You're Speaking Our Language: Gabrielino/Tongva/Fernandeño. Lulu.com.
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- Langacker, Ronald W., ed. 1979. Modern Aztec Grammatical Sketches. Studies in Uto-Aztecan Grammar,2. Summer Institute of Linguistics Publications in Linguistics, 56. Dallasii: Summer Institute of Linguistics and the University of Texas at Arlington. ISBN 0-88312-072-0.
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Nexus externi
recensere- Uto-Aztecan.org, a website devoted to the comparative study of the Uto-Aztecan language family
- Swadesh vocabulary lists for Uto-Aztecan languages (from Wiktionary's Swadesh-list appendix)