-
Aztec empire. The main
Tlapanec city was
Tlapan and the name
Tlapanec is the
Nahuatl for "Inhabitant of Tlapan". The
Tlapanecs explain natural phenomena...
-
Tlapanec, Tlappanec,
Tlapaneco or Meꞌphaa may
refer to:
Tlapanec people, an
indigenous people of
Mexico Tlapanec language, an
indigenous Mesoamerican language...
-
Tlapanec /ˈtlæpənɛk/, or Meꞌphaa, is an
indigenous Mexican language spoken by more than 98,000
Tlapanec people in the
state of Guerrero. Like
other Oto-Manguean...
- The
Supanecan or
Tlapanecan languages are
Tlapanec (Me'phaa) of
Guerrero and the
extinct Subtiaba of Nicaragua. The
family was
recognized in 1925 by Edward...
- 1990.
Others such as Subtiaba,
which was most
closely related to Me'phaa (
Tlapanec), have been
extinct longer and are only
known from
early 20th
century descriptions...
-
Tlapanec,
Amuzgo Postcolonial 1821–present Nahuas, Maya, Mixtec, Lenca, Zapotec, Purépecha, Chinantec, Otomi, Tepehua, Totonac, Mazatec,
Tlapanec, Amuzgo...
- Ch'ol
Huastec Mazahua Mazatec Mixe
Mixtec Nahua Otomi Purépecha Rarámuri
Tlapanec Totonac Tzeltal Tzotzil Yucatec Maya
Zapotec 20,000–100,000
people Amuzgo...
-
writing the
glottal stop is the
saltillo ⟨Ꞌ ꞌ⟩, used in
languages such as
Tlapanec and Rapa Nui.
Other scripts also have
letters used for
representing the...
- H****ig 1988, p. 227. Vega Sosa,
Constanza (1992). "The
Annals of the
Tlapanecs".
Supplement to the
Handbook of
Middle American Indians. 5. Austin: University...
- Meghalaya)
Hinduism Tiwi Tiwi
Australia (Tiwi Islands)
Alcheringa Tlapanec Oto-Manguean →
Tlapanec Mexico (Guerrero)
Christianity →
Catholicism Tlingit Na-Dene...