Tetelcingo Nahuatl

Tetelcingo Nahuatl
Mösiehuali
Pronunciation [mɔᵃsⁱeˈwalɪ]
Native to Mexico
Region Morelos
Native speakers
(3,500 cited 1990 census)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3 nhg
Glottolog tete1251[2]

Tetelcingo Nahuatl, called Mösiehuali by its speakers, is a Nahuatl variety of central Mexico. It is one of the core varieties closely related to Classical Nahuatl. It is spoken in the town of Tetelcingo, Morelos, and the adjacent Colonia Cuauhtémoc and Colonia Lázaro Cárdenas. These three population centers lie to the north of Cuautla, Morelos and have been largely absorbed into its urban area; as a result the Tetelcingo language and culture are under intense pressure.

In 1935 William Cameron Townsend published a study of Mösiehuali, and a number of other studies have been published since then.

Phonology

Vowels

Tetelcingo Nahuatl has converted the distinction of vowel quantity found in more conservative varieties into one of vowel quality. The short vowels /i e a o/ are reflected as [ɪ e a o] (orthographically i e a o) in Tetelcingo, while the long vowels /iː eː aː oː/ become [i ⁱe ɔᵃ u] (orthographically i, ie, ö, u).

“Short” Vowels Front Central Back
Close [ɪ]
Mid e [e] o [o]
Open a [a]
“Long” Vowels Front Central Back
Close i [i] u [u]
Mid ie [ⁱe]
Open ö a]

Consonants

Bilabial Apical Palato-alveolar Velar Glottal
Central Lateral Unrounded Rounded
Stops p/p/ t/t/ c ~ qu /k/ cu /kʷ/
Affricates tz/ts/ tl/tɬ/ ch /tʃ/
Fricatives s /s/ x /ʃ/ j /h ~ χ/
Nasals m /m/ n /n ~ ŋ/
Approximants hu/u/b/f/ /w ~ ʋ ~ β ~ v ~ ɸ ~ w̥/ r /ɾ/ l /l ~ ɬ/ y /j/

Tetelcingo Nahuatl, like many dialects of Nahuatl, does not have voiced obstruent consonants (with one clear exception: the stem /maga/, meaning 'fight' is derived from /maka/ 'give, hit'). Voiced obstruents and other non-native consonants do occur in loanwords from Spanish, however, and there are many such words in the language.[3]

Honorifics

Another striking characteristic of Tetelcingo Nahuatl is the pervasiveness and complexity of its honorifics. Generally every 2nd or 3rd person verb, pronoun, postposition or possessed noun must be marked honorifically if its subject or object, designatum, object or possessor (respectively) is a living adult (the speaker's wife or adult children being exceptions). Extra-honorific forms of several kinds exist, especially for addressing or referring to godparental relations, high officials or God. Many third person honorifics use morphemes that in Classical Nahuatl were used to mark non-active (passive) verbs or unspecified or plural participants. Not infrequently a different (suppletive) stem is used for honorifics, or the honorific form is in some other way irregular.

A few examples are given below, using the orthography of Brewer and Brewer 1962. Where more than one form is listed, the second is more highly honorific.

Stem Meaning 2nd person sg 2nd person sg honorific 3rd person sg 3rd person sg honorific
pronoun taja tejuatzi yaja yejuatzi
one's house mocal mocaltzi ical tiecal, tiecaltzi
before mixpa mixpantzinco ixpa tieixpa, tieixpantzinco
go tiya tomobica yabi biloa, mobica
come tibitz timobicatz, tihualmobica ibitz biloatz, hualmobica
notice it, get it (a point) tiquijtilia tomojtililia quijtilia quijtililo
say it tiquijtoa tomojtalfia quijtoa quijtulo

References

  1. Tetelcingo Nahuatl at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Tetelcingo Nahuatl". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. http://www.sil.org/mexico/nahuatl/tetelcingo/25i-Borrowings-nhg.htm

Literature

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