Zacatepec Chatino
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Zacatepec Chatino is an indigenous Mesoamerican language, a dialect of Eastern Chatino of the Oto-Manguean language family. It is often referred to as , , or as it is distinct from other Eastern Chatino dialects in the region. Zacatepec Chatino is spoken in the town of San Marcos Zacatepec, a town of approximately 1,000 people and inhabited by the Chatino people. The language was once spoken in the village of
Juquila Santa Catarina Juquila is a town in the State of Oaxaca, Mexico, and is the seat of the municipality also called Santa Catarina Juquila. It is part of the Juquila District in the center of the Costa Region. The name "Juquila" comes from "Xuhquilill ...
, but is now virtually extinct there with only two surviving speakers in the area (Villard 2015). Zacatepec Chatino is a highly endangered language as it is spoken by about 300 Chatinos whom are all above 50 years of age.


Classification

Chatino refers to three closely related modern languages; the three being Eastern Chatino,
Tataltepec Tataltepec may refer to: * Tataltepec de Valdés, Oaxaca * Santa María Tataltepec, Oaxaca * Tataltepec Chatino language {{dab ...
Chatino, and Zenzontepec Chatino of the Zapotecan branch. Zacatepec Chatino falls under the Eastern Chatino branch. Zacatepec Chatino, being part of Chatino language family, has shallow
orthography An orthography is a set of convention (norm), conventions for writing a language, including norms of spelling, punctuation, Word#Word boundaries, word boundaries, capitalization, hyphenation, and Emphasis (typography), emphasis. Most national ...
. It is more conservative than many other varieties of Eastern Chatino as it conserves many non-final unstressed vowels which have been lost in other varieties.


History

Little is known about the history of Zacatepec Chatino but according to Stéphanie Villard who studied and presented her thesis on the language, it has been on a decline for the past 40 years as natives continue to expand their ties with non-Chatino communities. With the help of the Zacatepec Chatino Documentation Project, Villard has uncovered some of the remnants of the language with the help of many natives from the area. The project includes visits in 2005 and 2006 by Hilaria Cruz, Emiliana Cruz, Megan Crowhurst as well as preliminary analysis of tones in H. Cruz y Woodbury in 2006. It also includes intensive work since 2006 by Stéphanie Villard, including 150 hours of audio, a sketch, papers on sandhi and inflection and grammar as well as short visits concentrating on textual documentation, tone, & morphology Although Spanish is the
official language An official language is defined by the Cambridge English Dictionary as, "the language or one of the languages that is accepted by a country's government, is taught in schools, used in the courts of law, etc." Depending on the decree, establishmen ...
in San Marcos Zacatepec, Oaxaca, many government officials communicate in Zacatepec Chatino. A study conducted by Villard revealed that majority of the younger population are monolingual Spanish speakers.


Geographic distribution

Zacatepec Chatino is only spoken in San Marcos Zacatepec, Oaxaca in the Sierra Madre region of Mexico.


Dialects/Varieties

Since Zacatepec Chatino is unintelligible with other Chatino varieties, it does not have any other dialects or varieties associated with it.


Phonology

There are nine vowel sounds both oral and nasal: * /o/ can be heard as when followed by a glottal /ʔ/. * Consonants in parentheses only exist as a result of Spanish loanwords. * When following a nasal segment, the consonants /p, t, t̻, t͡s, t͡ʃ, k, kʷ/ can be voiced to , d, d̻, d͡z, d͡ʒ, ɡ, ɡʷ * /l, l̻/ have rare voiceless allophones of ̥, l̻̥ when following a glottal /h/. * /w/ can have allophones of , b, ʍ before front vowels, before a /j/, and when following a /h/. * /n/ can assimilate to a velar when preceding a velar /k, kʷ/.


Vowels

Villard (2015) reports that Zacatepec Chatino presents voicing of non-continuant after nasals, vowel harmony, and contrastive nasal vowels. It also lacks labial phonemes and has 4 levels of pitch ranging from low to high. It also presents 15 specific tonal sequences that can define 15 Lexical classes. Its phonology presents a rich tonal system with a large inventory of phonemic tonal sequences as well as intricate
sandhi Sandhi ( ; , ) is any of a wide variety of sound changes that occur at morpheme or word boundaries. Examples include fusion of sounds across word boundaries and the alteration of one sound depending on nearby sounds or the grammatical function o ...
patterns. The vowels in Zacatepec Chatino are and may be oral or nasal. does not present any restrictions in its distribution. is pronounced and may be slightly nasalized. Here are some examples: thing dad already godfather Santos Reyes Nopala, Oaxaca word does not occur after the nasal stop . can be long in final syllables and short in non final syllables. Here are some examples: middle   aroused dressed up good it got deflated he/she sprayed it it got split occurs in final as well as non-final syllables of roots followed by a . It is slightly restricted in its distribution. Here are some examples: poult fair skinned, pale parrot dram fire The distribution of is highly restricted. in monosyllabic words is rare. can be long in final syllables but is always short in non-final syllables. Here are some examples: oldster Jesus issue (from Spa. asunto) donkey (from Spa. burro) drunk his/her father his/her mouth is restricted as well. It does not occur after the nasal stop and similarly to , does not occur after the labiovelars or . Here are some examples Pedro fog guy soil peso


Tones


Grammar


Morphology

San Marcos Zacatepec is considered a
head-marking language A language is head-marking if the grammatical marks showing agreement between different words of a phrase tend to be placed on the heads (or nuclei) of phrases, rather than on the modifiers or dependents. Many languages employ both head-marki ...
as it is synthetic and analytic. Some functions are the language are mixed; for example, person marking can be signaled through tone contrast and/or
nasalization In phonetics, nasalization (or nasalisation in British English) is the production of a sound while the velum is lowered, so that some air escapes through the nose during the production of the sound by the mouth. An archetypal nasal sound is . ...
, encliticization, or also by a separate word. Its verbal morphology features a large inventory of
allomorph In linguistics, an allomorph is a variant phonetic form of a morpheme, or in other words, a unit of meaning that varies in sound and spelling without changing the meaning. The term ''allomorph'' describes the realization of phonological variatio ...
s of its aspectual morphemes, which makes its verbal paradigms appear extremely irregular. The sequence classes are "morphological"—some are specialized by part-of-speech, by inflectional category, or loan provenance, while others are open-ended and general.


Syntax

The basic word order is VSO but there are other orders present. Here is an example of the Chatino Language VSO: Some morphemes, such as the marker have various functions in the grammar as it is a
dative In grammar, the dative case (abbreviated , or sometimes when it is a core argument) is a grammatical case used in some languages to indicate the recipient or beneficiary of an action, as in "", Latin for "Maria gave Jacob a drink". In this exampl ...
marker. The dative marker introduces human direct objects, indirect objects, and also marks alienable possession. Compounding patterns play an important role and word formation. the use of combinations of "light nouns" or semantically poor nouns and semantically rich adjectives (or nouns, although very rarely) is very prolific in the language. Villard provides us with an example of such formations: the light noun 'the one who', often occurs as a head noun in noun phrases, as in 'man' (the one who is male) or 'woman' (the one who is female).


Vocabulary

There are 15 lexical tone classes defined by 15 tone sequences. The sequences pertain to any noncompound stem but have different realizations depending on the number of
moras Moras is a commune in the Isère department in southeastern France. Population See also *Communes of the Isère department The following is a list of the 512 communes in the French department of Isère. The communes cooperate in the ...
in the stem. The sequence classes are "morphological"—some are specialized by part-of-speech, by inflectional category, or loan provenance, while others are open ended and general. Sequence class identity—not tones—determines tonal
ablaut In linguistics, the Indo-European ablaut ( , from German ) is a system of apophony (regular vowel variations) in the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE). An example of ablaut in English is the strong verb ''sing, sang, sung'' and its relate ...
behavior and tonal inflectional classes. The progressive aspect is associated with an M tone which generates composed sequences beyond the original 15


References


Bibliography

* * Villard S. Zacatepec Chatino verb classification and aspect morphology. Archive of the Languages of Latin America. 2010. * * * {{Citation , last=Woodbury , first=Anthony C. , title=The exuberant tonal system of San Marcos Zacatepec Eastern Chatino , date=2018-03-17 , url=https://dataverse.tdl.org/dataset.xhtml?persistentId=doi:10.18738/T8/BGPA1O , publisher=Texas Data Repository , language=en , doi=10.18738/t8/bgpa1o , access-date=2023-01-20


External links

* ELAR archive o
Documentation of Zacatepec Chatino language

Chatino (Zacatepec variety)
(
Intercontinental Dictionary Series The Intercontinental Dictionary Series (commonly abbreviated as IDS) is a large database of topical vocabulary lists in various world languages. The general editor of the database is Bernard Comrie of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary An ...
) Indigenous languages of Mexico Chatino languages