Tzotzil language

Tzotzil
Bats'i k'op
Native to Mexico
Region Chiapas, Oaxaca, Veracruz
Ethnicity Tzotzil
Native speakers
400,000 (2010 census)[1]
Mayan
Language codes
ISO 639-3 tzo
Glottolog tzot1259[2]

Tzotzil /ˈstsɪl, ˈtst-/[3] (native name: Bats'i k'op [ɓatsʼi kʼopʰ]) is a Maya language spoken by the indigenous Tzotzil Maya people in the Mexican state of Chiapas. Most speakers are bilingual in Spanish as a second language. In Central Chiapas, some primary schools and a secondary school are taught in Tzotzil.[4] Tzeltal is the most closely related language to Tzotzil and together they form a Tzeltalan sub-branch of the Mayan language family. Tzeltal, Tzotzil and Ch'ol are the most widely spoken languages in Chiapas.

There are six dialects of Tzotzil with varying degrees of mutual intelligibility, named after the different regions of Chiapas where they are spoken: Chamula, Zinacantán, San Andrés Larráinzar, Huixtán, Chenalhó, and Venustiano Carranza.[5] Centro de Lengua, Arte y Literatura Indígena (CELALI) suggested in 2002 that the name of the language (and the ethnicity) should be spelled Tsotsil, rather than Tzotzil. Native speakers and writers of the language are picking up the habit of using s instead of z.

Phonology

Vowels

Tzotzil has five vowels. As o and u fluctuate between rounded and unrounded, some have proposed spelling the unrounded vowels as ö and ü respectively.

Front Central Back
Close i [i] u [ü ɯ]
Mid e [e̞] o [o̞ ɤ̞]
Open a [ä]

Before a glottalized consonant, a vowel appears to lengthen and tense, such as a in tak'in "money".

Consonants

  Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
aspirated ejective aspirated ejective aspirated ejective aspirated ejective
Nasal   m  [m]   n  [n]      
Plosive b  [b̪] p'  [pʼ] t   [tʰ] t'  [tʼ] k  [kʰ] k'  [kʼ]  '   [ʔ]
Affricate p  [ɸʰ] tz  [tsʰ] tz'  [tsʼ] ch  [tʃʰ] ch'  [tʃʼ]      
Fricative v  [v], [f] s  [s] x  [ʃ]   j  [ħ]
Approximant   l  [l]   y  [j]    
Flap   r  [ɾ]      

/v/ may be unvoiced to [f] in a consonant cluster or in fast speech.

/b/ is frequently implosive [ɓ], especially in intervocalic or in initial position. It is also weakly glottalized in initial position.

/kʰ pʰ tʰ/ are more strongly aspirated in final position.

/w d f ɡ/ occur but only in loanwords, such as bweno from Spanish bueno.

Aspirated and ejective consonants form phonemic contrasts: kok, kok', and k'ok' all have different meanings: ('my leg', 'my tongue', and 'fire', respectively).

Syllable structure

All words in Tzotzil begin with a consonant, which may be a glottal stop. Consonant clusters are almost always at the beginning of a word, with a prefix and a root. Roots in Tzotzil occur in the forms CVC (t'ul "rabbit"), CV (to "still"), CVCVC (bik'it "small"), CV(C)VC (xu(v)it "worm", the second consonant disappears in some dialects), CVC-CVC (’ajnil "wife"), CVCV (’ama "flute") or CVC-CV (vo'ne "long ago"). The most common root is CVC.

Almost all Tzotzil words can be analyzed as a CVC root together with certain affixes.

Stress and intonation

In normal speech, stress falls on the first syllable of the root in each word, and the last word in a phrase is heavily stressed. For words in isolation, primary stress falls on the final syllable except in affective verbs with -luh, first person plural exclusive suffixes, and reduplicated stems of two syllables. Then, the stress is unpredictable and so is indicated with an acute accent. The Tzotzil variant of San Bartolomé de Los Llanos, in the Venustiano Carranza region, was analyzed as having two phonemic tones by Sarles 1966.[6] Research by Heriberto Avelino in 2009 was not able to confirm more than an unstable and incipient tone contrast.[7]

Phonological processes

Morphology

In Tzotzil, only nouns, verbs, and attributives can be inflected.

Nouns

Nouns can take affixes of possession, reflexive relation, independent state (absolutive suffix), number, and exclusion, as well as agentives and nominalizing formatives. Compounds can be formed in three ways:

An example of a prefix for nouns is x-, an indicator of a non-domesticated animal: x-t'el "large lizard"

The plural suffixes for a noun change based on whether or not the noun is possessed:

Some nouns, such as words for body parts and kinship terms, must always be possessed. They cannot be used without a possessive prefix, or otherwise must be used with an absolute suffix to express an indefinite possessor. The possessive prefixes are:

Singular Plural
k- / j- k- / j-...-t-ik
av- / a- av- / a-...-ik
y- / s- y- / s-...-ik

The prefix listed first is the one used before a root starting with a vowel, the prefix listed second is the one used before a root starting with a consonant. For example, k+ok kok "my foot", j+ba jba "my face"

The absolute suffix is usually il but can also have the form el, al, or ol: k'ob-ol "hand (of some unspecified person)"[8]

Verbs

Verbs receive affixes of aspect, tense, pronominal subject and object and formatives of state, voice, mood and number. They can also form compounds in three ways:

Attributives

Attributives are words that can function as predicates, but are neither verbs nor nouns. Often they can be translated into English as adjectives. Unlike verbs, they do not inflect for aspect, and unlike nouns, they cannot head a noun phrase or combine with possessive affixes. The composition of attributives occurs in three ways:

For colors:

Syntax

The basic word order of Tzotzil is VOS (verb-object-subject). Subjects and direct objects are not marked for case. The predicate agrees in person, and sometimes in number, with its subject and direct object. Non-emphatic personal pronouns are always left out.[9]

Verb agreement

Since the agreement system in Tzotzil is ergative-absolutive, the subject of an intransitive verb and the direct object of a transitive verb are marked by the same set of affixes, while the subject of a transitive is marked with a different set of affixes. For example, compare the affixes in the following sentences:

In the first sentence, the intransitive verb tal ("come") is affixed by -i-...-otik to show that the subject is the 1st person plural inclusive "we," but in the second sentence, since the verb pet ("carry") is transitive, it is affixed by j-...-tik to mark the subject as the 1st person plural inclusive "we."

From this sentence we can see that the 1st person plural inclusive object "us" is being marked the same as the 1st person plural inclusive intransitive subject "we" using -i-...-otik. Thus, -i-...-otik is the absolutive marker for 1st person plural inclusive and j-...-tik is the ergative marker for 1st person plural inclusive.

Also from the sentence l- i- s- pet -otik "He carried us (inclusive)" it is possible to see the 3rd person ergative marking s-, which contrasts with the 3rd person absolutive marking Ø in the sentence 'i- tal "He/she/it/they came."[9]

Enumeration

With many nouns, numbers must be compounded to numeral classifiers that correspond to the physical nature of the object being counted. This precedes the noun being counted. For example, in vak-p'ej na "six houses" the classifier -p'ej "round things, houses, flowers, etc." is compounded to the number vak "six" and precedes the noun na "house(s)."[10]

Sample lexicon

English Tzotzil
one jun
two chib
three 'oxib
money tak'in
tortilla vaj
face satil
house na
water vo'
tree te'
river 'uk'um

There are also many Spanish loanwords in Tzotzil, such as:

Dictionaries and grammars

In 1975, the Smithsonian Institution produced a dictionary of Tzotzil,[12] containing some 30,000 Tzotzil-English entries, and half that number of English-Tzotzil entries, the most comprehensive resource on Tzotzil vocabulary to that date. Tzotzil word-lists and grammars date back to the late 19th century, most notably in Otto Stoll's Zur Ethnographie der Republik Guatemala (1884).[13]

Liturgical use

In 2013, Pope Francis approved translations of the prayers for Mass and the celebration of sacraments into Tzotzil and Tzeltal. The translations include "the prayers used for Mass, marriage, baptisms, confirmations, confessions, ordinations and the anointing of the sick ... Bishop Arizmendi said Oct. 6 that the texts, which took approximately eight years to translate, would be used in his diocese and the neighboring Archdiocese of Tuxtla Gutiérrez. Mass has been celebrated in the diocese in recent years with the assistance of translators except during homilies Bishop Arizmendi said in an article in the newspaper La Jornada.[14]

Media

Tzotzil-language programming is carried by the CDI's radio stations XEVFS, broadcasting from Las Margaritas, Chiapas, and XECOPA, based in Copainalá, Chiapas.

Document established a brotherhood in the language, dated sometime during the colonial period.

Notes

  1. INALI (2012) México: Lenguas indígenas nacionales
  2. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Tzotzil". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
  3. Laurie Bauer, 2007, The Linguistics Student’s Handbook, Edinburgh
  4. http://www.webs.uvigo.es/weba575/ldm/resumos/TZOTZIL.PDF Resumen Gramatical
  5. Ethnologue report for Mexico
  6. Sarles, Harvey B. 1966. A descriptive grammar of the Tzotzil language as spoken in San Bartolomé de Los Llanos, Chiapas, México. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago.
  7. Avelino, Heriberto; Shin, Eurie; Tilsen, Sam (2011). "Chapter I The Phonetics of Laryngealization in Yucatec Maya". In Avelino, Heriberto; Coon, Jessica; Norcliffe, Elisabeth. New perspectives in Mayan linguistics. Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  8. 1 2 3 García de León (1971). op. cit..
  9. 1 2 Aissen (1987). op. cit..
  10. 1 2 Haviland (1981). op. cit..
  11. Laughlin (1975). op. cit..
  12. The work in question is Laughlin (1975); a revised and enlarged edition is Laughlin (1988).
  13. See Dienhart (1997), "Data Sources Listed by Author".
  14. Catholic News Service. "In Chiapas, Mayans get Mass, sacraments in two of their languages". Catholic Sentinel. Portland, OR. Retrieved 2013-10-24.

References

Aissen, Judith (1987). Tzotzil Clause Structure. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 90-277-2365-6. 
Dienhart, John M. (1997). "The Mayan Languages- A Comparative Vocabulary" (electronic version). Odense University. Retrieved 2007-08-20. 
García de León, Antonio (1971). Los elementos del Tzotzil colonial y moderno (in Spanish). México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. 
Haviland, John (1981). Sk'op Sotz'leb: El Tzotzil De San Lorenzo Zinacantan (in Spanish). México: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. ISBN 968-5800-56-1. 
Laughlin, Robert M. (1975). The Great Tzotzil Dictionary of San Lorenzo Zinacantán. Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology series, #19. Washington D.C: Smithsonian Institution Press; U.S. Government Printing Office. OCLC 1144739. 
Laughlin, Robert M. (1988). The Great Tzotzil dictionary of Santo Domingo Zinacantán: with grammatical analysis and historical commentary. Smithsonian Contributions to Anthropology series, #31. Washington D.C: Smithsonian Institution Press; U.S. Government Printing Office. 
Stoll, Otto (1884). Zur ethnographie der republik Guatemala. Zürich: Orell Füssli. OCLC 785319. 
Stoll, Otto (2001) [1886]. Guatemala. Reisen und Schilderungen aus den Jahren 18781883. Elibron Classics series (Replica of 1886 edition by F. A. Brockhaus, Leipzig (unabridged) ed.). Boston: Adamant Media Corporation. ISBN 1-4212-0766-4. OCLC 2369330. 
Vázquez López, Mariano Reynaldo (2004). Chano Bats'i K'op: Aprenda Tsotsil (in Spanish) (["Learn Tzotzil"] ed.). Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas: Centro Estatal de Lenguas, Arte y Literatura Indígenas (CELALI); Gobierno del Estado de Chiapas. ISBN 970-697-097-5. OCLC 76286101. 
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