-
northern Mexico along the Rio
Grande of
which Comecrudo is the best known.
These were
spoken by the
Comecrudo people. Very
little is
known about these languages...
-
Comecrudo is an
extinct Pakawan language of Mexico. The name
Comecrudo is
Spanish for "eat-raw". It was best
recorded in a list of 148
words in 1829 by...
-
Comecrudo people were an
Indigenous people of Mexico, who
lived in the
northern state of Tamaulipas. They were a Coa****ltecan people. The
Comecrudo lived...
- been home to
historic Native groups,
which today include the Carrizo/
Comecrudo tribe of Texas.
While not
recognized under the government, this tribe...
- The Carrizo/
Comecrudo Nation of Texas, Inc., is a
cultural heritage organization of
individuals who
identify as
descendants of the
Comecrudo people. Also...
-
linguistic diversity. A few
words are
known from
seven different languages:
Comecrudo, Cotoname, Aranama, Solano, Mamulique, Garza, and Coa****lteco or Pakawa...
- The
Garza may have been the same as the
Atanguaypacam tribe (of the
Comecrudo)
recorded in 1748. The
Garza were
called Meacknan or Miákan by the neighboring...
-
Albert Gatschet found the last
known survivors of Coa****ltecan bands: 25
Comecrudo, 1 Cotoname, and 2 Pakawa. They were
living near Reynosa, Mexico. The...
- awakening. Five
clear Pakawan languages are attested: Coa****lteco, Cotoname,
Comecrudo,
Garza and Mamulique. The
first three were
first proposed to be related...
-
formerly north and west, now
Oklahoma Coa****ltecan,
formerly southern Comecrudo,
formerly southern Ervipiame,
formerly south and
central Texas Geier,...