Highland Oaxaca Chontal Explained

Highland Oaxaca Chontal
Nativename:Slijuala xanuk
Region:Oaxaca
Ethnicity:Oaxaca Chontal
Speakers:4,394
Date:2010 census
Ref:inali
Familycolor:American
Fam1:Hokan ?
Fam2:Tequistlatecan
Iso3:chd
Glotto:high1242
Glottorefname:Highland Oaxaca Chontal

Highland Oaxaca Chontal, or Chontal de la Sierra de Oaxaca, is one of the Chontal languages of Oaxaca, Mexico. It is sometimes called Tequistlatec, but is not the same as Tequistlatec proper, which is extinct.

Background

Highland Oaxaca Chontal (or Chontal de la Sierra de Oaxaca) is one of three Tequistlatecan languages family groups. The other two are Huamelultec (Lowland Oaxaca Chontal) and Tequistlatec (extinct). They are spoken or once spoken by the Chontal people of Oaxaca State, Mexico. Tequistlatecan language is also referred to as the Chontal of Oaxaca. The distinct breakdown in the dialect of the Chontal of Oaxaca is as follows: Highland Chontal (the mountainous terrain) and Lowland Chontal (of Pacific coast).

It was spoken by 4,400 people in 2010.

Phonology

Consonants

Highland Chontal has a medium-sized inventory of 23 native consonants, along with four borrowed consonants from Spanish /β ð ɾ r/. It distinguishes ejective consonants, including the cross-linguistically unusual ejective labiodental fricative /f'/.

LabialAlveolarPalato-
(-alveolar)
VelarGlottal
or placeless
CentralLateral
StopPlainpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Voicedpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Ejectivepronounced as /link/
AffricatePlainpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Ejectivepronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
FricativePlainpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/~pronounced as /link/
Ejectivepronounced as /link/
Voiced(pronounced as /link/)(pronounced as /link/)
Nasalpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/ɴ̥
Glidepronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Tap(pronounced as /link/)
Trill(pronounced as /link/)

Turner (1966) transcribes the ejective lateral affricate [{{IPA|tɬʼ}}] as an ejective fricative /pronounced as /ɬʼ//.[1] It is not clear whether the ejective labiodental fricative /pronounced as /fʼ// might likewise be a phonetic affricate [p̪fʼ] or similar.

The placeless voiceless nasal /ɴ̥/ assimilates to the place of articulation of the consonant following it, e.g. /ɴ̥t/ > [n̥t]. Thus it has four allophones [m̥ n̥ ɲ̊ ŋ̊]. Its place of articulation before glottal consonants, vowels or pause is unclear, if it occurs in these environments at all.

Highland Chontal Glottalized Phonemes:[2]
BilabialLabiodentalAlveolarPalato AlveolarVelar
Ejective Stopk'
Ejective Affricativests'tʃ'
Glottalized Fricativesf'
Glottalized Nasalsm'n'ŋ’
Glottalized Lateral Fricativesɫ’
Highland Chontal Non-Glottalized consonant Phonemes:
BilabialLabio-dentalAlveolarPalato-AlveolarPalatalVelarGlottal
Plosivesp, bt, dk, gʔ
Affricatests
Fricativesfsʃ
Nasalsmnɲŋ
Lateral fricativesɫ
Lateral Approximantsl
Trillr
Central Approximantsʍ, w

Vowels

Highland Chontal has an inventory of five vowels, an arrangement similar to Spanish and many other world languages:

FrontCentralBack
Closepronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Midpronounced as /link/pronounced as /link/
Openpronounced as /link/

The distinction between /e/ and /a/ is neutralized before /j/.

There is no vowel hiatus (since all syllables begin with a consonant), nor any phonemic diphthongs.

In the Highland Chontal also has stressed vowels which are /í é á ó ú/.

Orthography

In Highland Chontal, phonemes correspond to orthographic conventions which are in angled brackets <>.[3]

p
t, c č k
fc' č' k'ʔ t
fs.Nš Wh t
bdg
mnyŋ wl

Syntax

The structure for highland Chontal is formatted but, not limited to: Verb-Subject-Object or VSO, another order is SVO. Rules for prefixes depend on the tense used,

Example: in the first-person plural for an object, if it is present in a sentence, it does not allow subject prefix. The order for certain words like adjectives and nouns can change, the examples below can be used for reference:[4]

Suffixes

Identifying a singular person object in a sentence is marked by a suffix, plural objects in sentences are always suffixes.

Morphemes

The morpheme in the sentence structure determines which roots are used by verb stems. Readers can identify nouns in sentences by "limiters", these are described as prefixes. Limiters can be in a sentence structures as initial words and also be present if possession prefixes are present.

The Highland Chontal of Tequistlatecan has a complex system of verbal prefix system.[5] According to Gregory Richter, the author of "Highland Chontal Morphology: Some New Perspectives", the current morphological structure for Highland Chontal is that there are distinct verb classes and they each have a set of corresponding prefixes.[5] Highland Chontal can be differentiated from Lowland with its tense and subject prefixes, the sets of rules for prefixes in highland is not found with lowland chontal.

Morphological Structure for Run
Recent indicativePresent Indicative
1sgn-inu-bag-inu
2sgm-inu-bad-a-ynu
3sginu-bad-inu
1pll-inul-bal-inul-yi
2plol-inul-bad-ul-inul-yi
3plinul-bad-inul-yi

Morphological structure: VERB--> (NPST-) (PREFIX-) ROOT (-SUFFIX)[5]

The tables above show the one to one correspondence between segments of a prefix and its underlying representation.

The table shows the changes in the paradigm of /inu/ (run) when appended to the particle /l/ (when).with yes/no are used by rising the pitch of speech in speaking. Examples:

Particles

Highland Chontal contains three main interrogative particles for inquiring more information, the particles are:

be- ‘where’, nai- ‘who’, and te ‘what’

LIM:limiterRCT:recentIMPF:imperfective

References

  1. Book: Turner, Paul Raymond. Highland Chontal Grammar. University of Chicago. 1966.
  2. Sonnenschein, Aaron. (Unpublished/pending). In Mesoamerican Languages Handbook. (Tentative title). S. Wichmann (ed). Mouton DeGruyer. (Invited Chapter).
  3. Langdon. Margaret. 1996. Notes on Highland Chontal Internal Reconstruction. UC Berkeley:Department of Linguistics.
  4. Book: Sonnenschein, Aaron. The Chontal Language Family. Unpublished Manuscript- Pending. 20.
  5. Richter. Gregory C.. October 1982. Highland Chontal Morphology: Some New Perspectives. International Journal of American Linguistics. 48. 4. 472–476. 10.1086/465757. 145685745 . 0020-7071.

External links