Tataltepec Chatino Explained

Tataltepec Chatino
Nativename:Lowland Chatino
States:Mexico
Region:Oaxaca
Speakers:540
Date:2015
Ref:[1]
Familycolor:American
Fam1:Oto-Manguean
Fam2:Zapotecan
Fam3:Chatino
Iso3:cta
Glotto:tata1258
Glottorefname:Tataltepec Chatino

Tataltepec Chatino, also known as Lowland Chatino and Chatino Occidental Bajo, is an indigenous Mesoamerican language, one of the Chatino family of the Oto-Manguean languages.[2] It is not intelligible with other Chatino languages. It is named after the town of Tataltepec de Valdés, and is also spoken in San Pedro Tututepec.

Status

Tataltepec de Valdés is divided between Chatinos, only a few of whom know Chatino, and Mestizos, none of whom know Chatino. Spanish is the dominant language of Tataltepec de Valdés, and is the only language used in all domains of public life except for conversations between speakers of Tataltepec Chatino. Unlike in other Chatino-speaking towns, loudspeakers used for public announcements broadcast exclusively in Spanish. Spanish is the only language used for government, but Chatino-speaking officials use the language when no monolingual Spanish-speakers are present. Unlike other Chatino communities, ceremonies welcoming new officials to local government are conducted entirely in Spanish.

Chatino speakers know that their numbers are in decline, but there are some movements towards revitalization. There are signs of nostalgia among all community members for the language, including among the younger generation, and public events feature young Chatinos (typically semi-speakers) who are using the language in various ways. Proficiency in Tataltepec is increasingly no longer being taken for granted, who increasingly view even some knowledge of Tataltepec Chatino as praiseworthy.[3]

Phonology

Vowels

There are five vowels: /a, e, i, o, u/. All vowels except for /u/ can be nasalized, and all vowels (oral and nasal) can be lengthened.

Consonants

LabialAlveolarVelarLaryngeal
plainlaminalplainlabialized
Stopptkʔ
Affricatet͡st͡ʃ
Fricative(f)sʃh
Nasalmn
Approximantcentral(β̞)j̊ jw
laterall
Flapɾ
All labial consonants occur more rarely than other consonants, and /β̞/ and /f/ occur mainly in nativized loanwords.

Tones

Tataltepec Chatino has a complex tone system consisting of eight tone sequences, of which each has up to two constituent tones. These tones are characterized as being low, high, mid-level falling, and superhigh rising. The falling tone displays a very minimal contour.

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Chatino, Tataltepec. Ethnologue. 2018-07-27. en.
  2. Web site: OLAC resources in and about the Tataltepec Chatino language. 2013-09-18.
  3. Sullivant. John Ryan. May 2015. The phonology and inflectional morphology of Cháʔknyá, Tataltepec de Valdés Chatino, a Zapotecan language. University of Texas at Austin. en. 10.15781/T2FK5V. 2152/31493.