Tepecano language

The Tepecano language is an extinct indigenous language of Mexico belonging to the Uto-Aztecan language-family. It was formerly spoken by a small group of people in Azqueltán (earlier Atzqueltlán), Jalisco, a small village on the Río Bolaños in the far northern part of the state, just east of the territory of the Huichol people. Most closely related to Southern Tepehuán of the state of Durango, Tepecano was a Mesoamerican language and evinced many of the traits that define the Mesoamerican Linguistic Area. So far as is known, the last speaker of Tepecano was Lino de la Rosa (born September 22, 1895), who was still living as of February 1980.[2]

Map of Tepecano and neighboring Chichimeca nations during the 16th century
Tepecano
RegionMexico: Jalisco
Extinct19802000
Uto-Aztecan
Language codes
ISO 639-3tep
Glottologtepe1278[1]

Research on Tepecano was first carried out by the American linguistic anthropologist John Alden Mason in Azqueltán from 1911 to 1913. This work led to the publication of a monographic grammatical sketch in 1916 as well as an article on native prayers in Tepecano that Mason had collected from informants in 1918. Later field-research was conducted by American linguist Dennis Holt in 1965 and from 1979 to 80, but none of his results have so far been published.[3]

Morphology

Tepecano is an agglutinative language, where words use suffix complexes for a variety of purposes with several morphemes strung together.

Notes

  1. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2017). "Tepecano". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  2. Holt 2001: 30
  3. Dennis Holt, personal communication

Bibliography

Campbell, Lyle (1997). American Indian Languages: The Historical Linguistics of Native America. Oxford Studies in Anthropological Linguistics, no. 4. William Bright (series general ed.) (OUP paperback [2000] ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509427-1. OCLC 32923907.
Holt, Dennis (Spring 2001). "Valedictory: Lino de la Rosa" (PDF online facsimile). Ogmios Newsletter. Bath, England: Foundation for Endangered Languages. 2.4 (16): 30. ISSN 1471-0382. OCLC 223025309.
Mason, J. Alden (June 1916). "Tepecano, a Piman Language of Western Mexico" (digitized reproduction online at Internet Archive). Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. New York: the Academy. 25 (2): 309–416. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1916.tb55171.x. hdl:2027/iau.31858003180399. ISSN 0077-8923. OCLC 1946633.
Mason, J. Alden (May 1918). "Tepecano Prayers" (digitized reproduction online at Wikisource). International Journal of American Linguistics. New York: Douglas C. McMurtrie. 1 (2): 91–153. doi:10.1086/463718. ISSN 0020-7071. OCLC 31838203.
gollark: No, lambda calculus is a relatively simple model you can understand fairly easily.
gollark: And with neural networks, you don't actually know *how* the network does its job, just that you feed in pixels and somehow get classification data out.
gollark: There is still not, as far as I know, an approach to detect what an object is other than just training neural networks on the task.
gollark: It's simple to say, for example, "the program should detect if something is a bird", but incredibly hard to actually explain how to detect birds.
gollark: Yes. A lot of the time something can be simple to *vaguely describe* but really hard to describe precisely enough for you to actually program it.
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