Mixe languages explained

Mixe
Also Known As:Oaxacan Mixean
Ayuujk
Region:Oaxaca, Mexico
Ethnicity:Mixe people
Date:2020 census
Familycolor:American
Fam1:Mixe–Zoque
Fam2:Mixean
Child1:Totontepec
Child2:Tlahuitoltepec
Child3:Midland
Child4:Isthmus
Child5:Ulterior Mixe
Glotto:oaxa1241
Glottorefname:Oaxaca Mixe
Map:Sierra Mixe.svg
Mapcaption:The Mixe region within the state of Oaxaca in southern Mexico
People:Ayuujkjä'äy (Mixe)
Language:Ayöök (Mixe)

The Mixe languages are languages of the Mixean branch of the Mixe–Zoquean language family indigenous to southern Mexico. According to a 1995 classification, there are seven of them (including one that is extinct). The four that are spoken in Oaxaca are commonly called Mixe while their two relatives spoken in Veracruz are commonly called "Popoluca", but sometimes also Mixe (these are "Oluta Popoluca" or "Olutec Mixe" and "Sayula Popoluca" or "Sayultec Mixe"). This article is about the Oaxaca Mixe languages, which their speakers call Ayöök, Ayuujk, Ayüük or Ayuhk.

140,000 people reported their language to be "Mixe" in the 2020 census.[1]

Classification

Oaxaca Mixe languages are spoken in the Sierra Mixe of eastern Oaxaca. These four languages are: North Highland Mixe, spoken around Totontepec (the most divergent); South Highland Mixe, spoken around Santa María Tlahuitoltepec, Ayutla and Tamazulapan); Midland Mixe, spoken around Juquila and Zacatepec; and Lowland Mixe, spoken in San Juan Guichicovi (this language is also known as "Isthmus Mixe").

The following classification is from Wichmann (1995:9).

Mixe (Oaxacan Mixean)

Wichmann (2008) adds Ulterior Mixe as an additional branch:

Mixe

Phonology

The phonology of Mixe languages is remarkable due to their complex system of vowel duration contrasts in addition to glottalization. There is a palatalized series of all consonant phonemes (as in Russian, Polish or Irish) and possibly a fortis/lenis distinction in the plosive series, the recognition of which however is obscured by a tendency towards allophonic voicing of consonants in voiced environments.

Vowels

Syllable nuclei vary in length and phonation. Most descriptions report three contrastive vowel lengths.[2] The other types of phonation have been variously termed checked vowels, creaky voice vowels and breathy voice vowels.

The table below illustrates the vowel phonemes for Ayöök (Totentepec) Mixe: https://realin.upnvirtual.edu.mx/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=44:ayoeok-mixe-de-totontepec&catid=10:fonologia-y-alfabetos&Itemid=187

ShortLong
FrontCentralBackFrontCentralBack
i pronounced as /link/ï /ɨ/u pronounced as /link/ii pronounced as /link/ïï /ɨ/uu /uː/
Close-mide /e/ë /ə/ o /o/ee pronounced as /link/ëë /əː/ oo /oː/
Open-midä /æ/ää /æː/
Low (open)a pronounced as /link/aa pronounced as /link/

Grammar

Verbs

The morphosyntactic alignment of Mixe is ergative and it also has an obviative system which serves to distinguish between verb participants in reference to its direct–inverse system. The Mixe verb is complex and inflects for many categories and also shows a lot of derivational morphology. One of the parameters of verb inflection is whether a verb occurs in an independent or dependent clause; this distinction is marked by both differential affixation and stem ablaut. Unlike Sayultec Mixe[3] (spoken in the neighboring state of Veracruz), Mixe languages of Oaxaca only mark one argument on the verb: either the object or the subject of the verb depending on whether the verb is in the direct or inverse form. Mixe shows a wide variety of possibilities for noun incorporation.

Nouns

The Mixe noun does not normally inflect, except that human nouns inflect for plural. Noun compounding is a very productive process, and the profuse derivational morphology allows for creation of new nouns both from verbs and from other nouns. To indicate the plural an enclitic, ëch, is added to the noun.[4]

Syntax

Mixe languages have SOV constituent order, prepositions and genitives precede the noun. But relative clauses follow the noun.

Sample

This sample is from Lowland Mixe:[5]

Radio

Mixe-language programming is carried by the CDI's radio station XEGLO, based in Guelatao de Juárez, Oaxaca.

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Diferentes lenguas indígenas . 2022-07-02 . cuentame.inegi.org.mx.
  2. Book: The sounds of the world's languages. Ladefoged. Maddieson. Blackwell. 1996. 978-0631198154. 320.
  3. Kroeger 2005: 286
  4. Jany, 2013 p.538
  5. Dieterman, 1995 pg. 110