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Encyclopedia > Mayan language

The Mayan languages are a family of related languages spoken from South-Eastern Mexico through northern Central America as far south as Honduras. They go back at least some 5000 years in the Pre-Columbian era of Mesoamerica. Although the Spanish language (and in Belize the English language) is the official language of the area today, dialects of Maya are still spoken as a primary or secondary language by over 3 million Maya people in the region today. The group is sometimes known as the Mayance languages, a coinage that reflects the belief that the current Maya languages bear the same relation to the speech of the classical Maya civilization as the Romance languages have to the speech of the Roman civilisation. In Classical times (600-800 AD) and as late as the Spanish Conquest, the language was written on buildings, pottery and bark-paper codices in a highly elaborate script now called Maya hieroglyphics.


The most used Maya language is often called Yucatec Maya by linguists but known simply as Maya to its speakers. It is spoken in the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico as well as in parts of northern Belize and the Peten region of Guatemala. It is documented in the ancient hieroglyphs in Pre-Columbian Maya civilization sites such as Chichen Itza, has a rich literature through the Spanish Colonial era, and remains common as the first language in rural areas in Yucatan today, where in many towns even Yucatecans of Spanish ancestry have a working knowledge of the tongue.


The second most historically important dialect or language is Chol, formerly widespread, but spoken only in pockets in Chiapas and Guatemala today. A closely related dialect, Chorti, is spoken in a region around the boundaries of the nations of Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador. These particular dialects are believed to be the most conservative in vocabulary and phonology, and are closely related to the language of the inscriptions of the ancient sites of the Classic era Central Lowlands.


The Classic Maya language is quite closely related to modern Chol and Yucatec, and the split between these two languages may be observed in Maya inscriptions.


In the Highlands of Guatemala are the Quichéan-Mamean Maya languages and dialects, including Quiché proper, Cachiquel, Kekchi, Tzutuhil, Pocomam, and Mam. The famous Popol Vuh is in Quiché. In the western highlands around Huehuetenango, Jacaltec is spoken.


The Huastec language, spoken in east-central Mexico, is part of the Mayan language family, although it is distant both linguistically and geographically from the rest of the language family.


Mayan languages

External links

  • Maya - English Dictionary (http://www.websters-online-dictionary.com/definition/Maya-english/)
  • Yucatec - English Dictionary (http://www.websters-online-dictionary.org/definition/Yucatec-english/)
  • The Mayan Languages- A Comparative Vocabulary (http://maya.hum.sdu.dk/) contains more than 40,000 entries for 31 Mayan languages
  • English Words and their Classic Maya Equivalents (http://www.mesoweb.com/resources/vocabulary/English-Maya.html)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Mayan languages: Information from Answers.com (2249 words)
The closest relatives of the Cholan languages are the languages of the Tzeltalan branch: Tzotzil and Tzeltal both spoken in Chiapas by large populations (Tzotzil 265,000 and Tzeltal 215,000 according to Ethnologue 1990 census).
The Awakatek language is native to 20,000 inhabitants of central Aguacatán, a municipality in the Department of Huehuetenango.
The Mayan languages are derived from the reconstructed Proto-Mayan and the different branches of the Mayan family each share common innovative changes to the structure of Proto Mayan which serves to distinguish them from the other branches.
Mayan Family (1263 words)
The Mayan language family comprises five sub-families and includes many languages that are spoken in Mexico, Guatemala and Belize.
In Chiapas, all the languages are Mayan (except Zoque), as are virtually all the indigenous languages of Guatemala.
The languages of this subfamily straddle the border between Chiapas and Guatemala.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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