Classification
Coahuilteco was grouped in an eponymous Coahuiltecan family by John Wesley Powell in 1891, later expanded by additional proposed members by e.g. Edward Sapir. Ives Goddard later treated all these connections with suspicion, leaving Coahuilteco as aSounds
Consonants
Vowels
Coahuilteco has both short and long vowels.Syntax
Based primarily on study of one 88-page document, Fray Bartolomé García's 1760 ''Manual para administrar los santos sacramentos de penitencia, eucharistia, extrema-uncion, y matrimonio: dar gracias despues de comulgar, y ayudar a bien morir,'' Troike describes two of Coahuilteco's less common syntactic traits: subject-object concord and center-embedding relative clauses.Subject-Object Concord
In each of these sentences, the object ''Dios'' 'God' is the same, but the subject is different, and as a result different suffixes (''-n'' for first person, ''-m'' for second person, and ''-t'' for third person) must be present after the demonstrative ''tupo·'' (Troike 1981:663).Center-embedding Relative Clauses
Troike (2015:135) notes that relative clauses in Coahuilteco can appear between the noun and its demonstrative (NP --> N (Srel) Dem), leading to a center-embedding structure quite distinct from the right-branching or left-branching structures more commonly seen in the world's languages. One example of such a center-embedded relative clause is the following: The Coahuilteco text studied by Troike also has examples of two levels of embedding of relative clauses, as in the following example (Troike 2015:138):See also
*References
Bibliography
* Goddard, Ives (Ed.). (1996). ''Languages''. Handbook of North American Indians (W. C. Sturtevant, General Ed.) (Vol. 17). Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution. . * Mithun, Marianne. (1999). ''The languages of Native North America''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (hbk); . * Sturtevant, William C. (Ed.). (1978–present). ''Handbook of North American Indians'' (Vol. 1-20). Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution. (Vols. 1-3, 16, 18-20 not yet published). * Troike, Rudolph. (1996). Coahuilteco (Pajalate). In I. Goddard (Ed.), ''Languages'' (pp. 644–665). Handbook of North American Indians. Washington, D. C.: Smithsonian Institution.External links