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Chocho (also Chocholtec, Chocholteco Chochotec, Chochon, or Ngigua) is a language of the Popolocan branch of the Oto-Manguean language family spoken in Mexico in the following communities of Oaxaca: San Miguel Chicahua (settlement of Llano Seco), Teotongo (settlements of El Progreso, El Tecomate, Guadalupe, and La Luz), San Miguel Huautla (settlement of Ocotlán), Santa Magdalena Jicotlán (settlements of San Mateo Tlapiltepec, and Santiago Tepetlapa), San Pedro Nopala (settlements of San Mateo Tlapiltepec, and Santa María Jicotlán), San Miguel Tequixtepec (settlement of Los Batos), San Francisco Teopan (settlements of Concepción Buenavista, Santiago Ihuitlán Plumas, Tepelmeme Villa de Morelos, and Tlacotepec Plumas), Ocotlán (settlements of Boquerón, San Antonio Nduayaco, Tierra Colorada, and Unión Palo Solo), Santa María Nativitas (settlements of Barrio Nicolás, Barrio Santiago, El Mirador, El Porvenir, Loma del Tepejillo, Pie del Cordoncillo, Primera Sección (Santa Cruz), San José Monte Verde, San Pedro Buenavista, and Santa María Nativitas), San Juan Bautista Coixtlahuaca (settlements of El Capulín (Sección Primera), El Tepozón (Sección Segunda), El Zapotal (Sección Tercera), La Mulata, and Santa Catarina Ocotlán), and San Miguel Tulancingo (settlements of Agua Dulce, Buena Vista, El Coatillo, El Español, Gasucho, Loma Larga, Rancho Marino Sánchez, and San Miguel Tulancingo).[2] Chocho is Spoken by 770 speakers (1998 Ethnologue Survey).

Chocho
Chochotec
Ngigua (Ngiwa)
Native toMexico
RegionOaxaca
EthnicityChochos
Native speakers
850 (2020 census)[1]
Language family
Oto-Manguean (MP)
  • Popolocan
    • Chocho–Popoloca
      • Chocho
Language codes
ISO 639-3coz
Glottologchoc1279
ELPChocho
The Chocho language, number 8 (dark blue), center.
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Phonology



Consonants


Labial Dental Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Retroflex Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal voiced m n ɲ
voiceless
Plosive voiceless p t c k ʔ
voiced b d ɟ ɡ
Affricate t͡s t͡ʃ t͡ʂ
Fricative voiceless f θ s ʃ ʂ x
voiced β ð z ʒ ʐ ɣ
Rhotic ɾ r ɽ
Lateral l
Approximant w j

Vowels


Oral vowels
Front Central Back
Close i, ĩ u, ũ
Mid e, o, õ
Open a, ã
Laryngealized vowels
Front Central Back
Close , ḭ̃ , ṵ̃
Mid , ḛ̃ , õ̰
Open , ã̰
Glottalized vowels
Front Central Back
Close , ĩʔ , ũʔ
Mid , ẽʔ , õʔ
Open , ãʔ

Chocho is a tonal language distinguishing low, mid and high tones.


Grammar


Carol Mock (1982) argues that Chocho distinguishes morphosyntactically between subjects of willful actions whether they are transitive or intransitive and subjects of unwillful actions. This results in her analysing Chocho as an active–stative language.

As an example of how this works here is an example showing that the subject is marked with a different suffix depending on whether the action of the verb is active or inactive

In an active/voluntary transitive phrase the agent/subject is marked by the active suffix "-á" and the patient by the inactive clitic "-mī". The patient/subject of an intransitive active/voluntary phrase is marked by the same suffix.

bì-kų̄-ámī

bì-

ASP-

kų̄

see

-ámī

-1.EXCL.ACT/2.INFORM.INACT

bì- kų̄ -ámī

ASP- see -1.EXCL.ACT/2.INFORM.INACT

"I saw you"

d-àsǭ-á

d-

ASP-

àsǭ

arrive

-1.EXCL.ACT

d- àsǭ -á

ASP- arrive -1.EXCL.ACT

"I arrive"

However in an involuntary/inactive intransitive phrase the subject/patient is marked with the inactive clitic "má" like an object/patient of a transitive phrase.

d-ą́tʰē-má

d-

ASP-

ą́tʰē

fall

-má

-1.EXCL.ACT

d- ą́tʰē -má

ASP- fall -1.EXCL.ACT

"I fall"

This morphosyntactic alignment would imply Chocho is a Split-S type active language. However, some intransitive verbs can use either the active person suffixes or the inactive enclitic, this suggests that it does in fact belong to the Fluid-S type active language.


References





На других языках


- [en] Chocho language

[es] Idioma chocholteco

El idioma chocholteco, chocho, chuchon o chochon, es una lengua otomangueana que se habla en las localidades oaxaqueñas de Santa María Nativitas, San Juan Bautista Coixtlahuaca, San Martín Toxpalán y San Miguel Tulancingo. Existen 729 hablantes de chocholteco.[2]

[fr] Chocho

Le chocho (également chochon, ou improprement chocholtèque, chocholtec, chochotèque ou chochotec) est une langue popolocane parlée dans l'État d'Oaxaca, au Mexique.

[ru] Чочо (язык)

Чочо (чочольтек) – один из индейских языков Мексики, относится к пополокской группе ото-мангской семьи языков. Распространён в муниципалитетах: Санта-Мариа-Нативитас, Сан-Хуан-Баутиста-Коикстлатуака и Сан-Мигель-Туланкинго штата Оахака. Число носителей – около 770 человек (на 1998 год).



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