MIXE LANGUAGES
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The 'Mixe languages' are languages of the Mixean branch of the Mixe-Zoquean language family indigenous to southern Mexico. The languages of this branch that are spoken in Oaxaca are called 'Mixe' while their relatives in Veracruz are called Popoluca. The other languages of the Mixean branch are Olutec Mixe and Sayultec Mixe both also called Popoluca and the extinct language Tapachultec. This article is about the Oaxaca Mixean languages.
Mixe is spoken in the ''Sierra Mixe'' of eastern Oaxaca by around 188,000 indigenous Mixe people. The Mixe themselves call their language ''Ayuujk'', ''Ayüük'' or ''Ayuhk''.
The Mixe languages of Oaxaca can be subdivided into three dialect areas: Highland Mixe (northern Highland spoken around Totontepec and Southern Highland spoken around Tlahuitoltepec, Ayutla and Tamazulapan), Midland Mixe (spoken around Juquila and Zacatepec) and Lowland Mixe (Spoken around Guichicovi).
Mixe phonology is complicated and not very well documented or analysed presently. Uncommon features include palatalised series of all consonant phonemes and possibly a fortis/lenis distinction in the stop series, the recognition of which however is obscured by a tendency of allophonic voicing of consonants in voiced environments. Most descriptions report three contrastive vowel lengths. Syllable nuclei are notoriously complex in Mixe and apart from the three lengths they can consist of on of two kinds of glottalization or aspiration, these vowel qualities are sometimes described as checked vowels, creaky voice vowels and breathy voice vowels.
Some Mixe variants are vowel innovative and some, notably North Highland Mixe, have complicated umlaut systems raising vowel qualities in certain phonological environments.
The practical orthographies developed for Mixe
The Mixe verb is complex and inflects for many categories and also shows a lot of derivational morphology. It makes a basic distinction between verbs of dependent and independent clauses the two kinds of verbs take different sets of affixes and also show ablaut in the stem. 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. While basically a polysynthetic, agglutinative language Mixe only marks 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.
The Mixe noun does not normally inflect, only animate human nouns inflect for plural, but compound nouns are common, and a lot of derivational morphology allows for creation of new nouns with different meanings both from verbs and other nouns.
Mixe is a SOV language with prepositions and genitives before the noun heads and relativ clauses after their noun head.
The example below is from lowland or Guichicovi Mixe and comes from Dieterman, 1995 pg. 110.
★ Online resources for Mixe of Chuxnabán (Midlands) by Carmen Jany
★ Bachillerato bilingüe Mixe de Tlahuitoltepec
★ Dieterman, Julia Irene, 1995, Participant reference in Isthmus Mixe Narrative Discourse, MA. Thesis in linguistics presented to the Faculty of the Graduate school of the University of Texas at Arlington.
★ Hoogshagen, Searle & Hilda Halloran Hoogshagen, 1993, Diccionario Mixe de Coatlán, Serie de Vocabularios Indigénas "Mariano Silva y Aceves" Num. 32. SIL, Mexico, D.F.
★ Schoenhals, Alvin & Louise Schoenhals, 1965, Vocabulario Mixe de Totontepec, Serie de Vocabularios Indigénas "Mariano Silva y Aceves" Num. 14. SIL, Mexico, D.F.
★ Wichmann, Søren, 1995, The Relationship Among the Mixe-Zoquean Languages of Mexico. University of Utah Press. Salt Lake City. ISBN 0-87480-487-6

The Mixe region within the state of Oaxaca in southern Mexico
The 'Mixe languages' are languages of the Mixean branch of the Mixe-Zoquean language family indigenous to southern Mexico. The languages of this branch that are spoken in Oaxaca are called 'Mixe' while their relatives in Veracruz are called Popoluca. The other languages of the Mixean branch are Olutec Mixe and Sayultec Mixe both also called Popoluca and the extinct language Tapachultec. This article is about the Oaxaca Mixean languages.
Mixe is spoken in the ''Sierra Mixe'' of eastern Oaxaca by around 188,000 indigenous Mixe people. The Mixe themselves call their language ''Ayuujk'', ''Ayüük'' or ''Ayuhk''.
The Mixe languages of Oaxaca can be subdivided into three dialect areas: Highland Mixe (northern Highland spoken around Totontepec and Southern Highland spoken around Tlahuitoltepec, Ayutla and Tamazulapan), Midland Mixe (spoken around Juquila and Zacatepec) and Lowland Mixe (Spoken around Guichicovi).
| Contents |
| Phonology of Mixe |
| Orthography |
| Grammar of Mixe |
| The Verb |
| The Noun |
| Syntax |
| Text example of Mixe |
| External Links |
| References |
Phonology of Mixe
Mixe phonology is complicated and not very well documented or analysed presently. Uncommon features include palatalised series of all consonant phonemes and possibly a fortis/lenis distinction in the stop series, the recognition of which however is obscured by a tendency of allophonic voicing of consonants in voiced environments. Most descriptions report three contrastive vowel lengths. Syllable nuclei are notoriously complex in Mixe and apart from the three lengths they can consist of on of two kinds of glottalization or aspiration, these vowel qualities are sometimes described as checked vowels, creaky voice vowels and breathy voice vowels.
Some Mixe variants are vowel innovative and some, notably North Highland Mixe, have complicated umlaut systems raising vowel qualities in certain phonological environments.
Orthography
The practical orthographies developed for Mixe
Grammar of Mixe
The Verb
The Mixe verb is complex and inflects for many categories and also shows a lot of derivational morphology. It makes a basic distinction between verbs of dependent and independent clauses the two kinds of verbs take different sets of affixes and also show ablaut in the stem. 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. While basically a polysynthetic, agglutinative language Mixe only marks 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.
The Noun
The Mixe noun does not normally inflect, only animate human nouns inflect for plural, but compound nouns are common, and a lot of derivational morphology allows for creation of new nouns with different meanings both from verbs and other nouns.
Syntax
Mixe is a SOV language with prepositions and genitives before the noun heads and relativ clauses after their noun head.
Text example of Mixe
The example below is from lowland or Guichicovi Mixe and comes from Dieterman, 1995 pg. 110.
| Orthography: ''pwes hadu'n idaa yyoop jyäj idaa aldeano mt ytöxyijk ytkoy y mkü'' |
| Pronunciation: '' |
| Gloss: Well there this 3p-poor person this ranch-hand with 3p.poss-woman 3p-CAUS/PAS-lose-DEP the devil |
| Translation : "Well that's how this poor person, this ranch hand with his wife, made the devil lose" |
External Links
★ Online resources for Mixe of Chuxnabán (Midlands) by Carmen Jany
★ Bachillerato bilingüe Mixe de Tlahuitoltepec
References
★ Dieterman, Julia Irene, 1995, Participant reference in Isthmus Mixe Narrative Discourse, MA. Thesis in linguistics presented to the Faculty of the Graduate school of the University of Texas at Arlington.
★ Hoogshagen, Searle & Hilda Halloran Hoogshagen, 1993, Diccionario Mixe de Coatlán, Serie de Vocabularios Indigénas "Mariano Silva y Aceves" Num. 32. SIL, Mexico, D.F.
★ Schoenhals, Alvin & Louise Schoenhals, 1965, Vocabulario Mixe de Totontepec, Serie de Vocabularios Indigénas "Mariano Silva y Aceves" Num. 14. SIL, Mexico, D.F.
★ Wichmann, Søren, 1995, The Relationship Among the Mixe-Zoquean Languages of Mexico. University of Utah Press. Salt Lake City. ISBN 0-87480-487-6
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