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The Huastec (also spelled Wasteko or Huasteco) language, now commonly known by the endonym Téenek, of Mexico is spoken by the people living in rural areas of San Luis Potosí and northern . Though relatively isolated from them, it is related to the Mayan languages spoken further south and east in Mexico and Central America. Huastec is remarkable among Mayan languages for having tone, much like its Otomanguean and Totonac neighbors.

According to the 2005 population census, there are about 200,000 speakers of Huasteco in Mexico (some 120,000 in San Luis Potosí and some 80,000 in ).INEGI, 2005 The language and its speakers are also called Teenek, and this name has gained currency in Mexican national and international usage in recent years.

The now-extinct Chicomuceltec language, spoken in and , was most closely related to Wasteko.

The first linguistic description of the Huastec language in a European language was written by Andrés de Olmos, who also wrote the first grammatical descriptions of and Totonac.

Huastec-language broadcasting is carried out by the CDI's radio station , based in Tancanhuitz de Santos, San Luis Potosí.


Dialects
Huastec has three dialects, which have a time depth of no more than 400 years (Norcliffe 2003:3). It is spoken in a region of east-central Mexico known as the Huasteca Potosina.

  1. Western (Potosino) — 48,000 speakers in the 9 San Luis Potosí towns of Ciudad Valles (Tantocou), Aquismón, Huehuetlán, Tancanhuitz, Tanlajás, San Antonio, Tampamolón, Tanquian, and Tancuayalab.
  2. Central (Veracruz) — 22,000 speakers in the 2 northern towns of and Tantoyuca.
  3. Eastern (Otontepec) — 12,000 speakers in the 7 northern towns of Chontla, Tantima, Tancoco, Chinampa, Naranjos, Amatlán, and Tamiahua. Also known as Southeastern Huastec. Ana Kondic (2012) reports only about 1,700 speakers, in the municipalities of Chontla (San Francisco, Las Cruces, Arranca Estacas, and Ensinal villages), Chinampa, Amatlan, and Tamiahua.


Phonology

Vowels
+ Short vowels ! ! ! !

+ Long vowels ! ! ! !

  • can be realized as laryngealized after a glottalized consonant.
  • in unstressed syllables can also be heard as .


Consonants

  • Unaspirated sounds of both plosives and affricates, only occur as realizations of sounds occurring word-medially. They are realized elsewhere as aspirated. can also become voiced in word-final positions.
  • Sounds may appear from Spanish loanwords.
  • The affricate sounds can also be realized as .
  • can also be realized as a fricative , and also as a voiceless fricative in word-final positions.
  • Ejective velar sounds can be realized as voiced in word-medial positions.
  • Approximant sounds can be realized as voiceless in word-final positions.
  • before velar sounds is realized as a palatal nasal .
  • before can be realized as a velar sound .


Notes
Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Geografía, e Informática (INEGI) (an agency of the government of Mexico). 2005. 2005 Mexican population census, last visited 22 May, 2007


Further reading


External links

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