- The
Triqui (Zapotec pronunciation: [triki], Spanish: [ˈtɾiki]) or
Trique (Spanish: [ˈtɾike]) are an
Indigenous people of the
western part of the Mexican...
- The
Triqui (/ˈtriːki/), or
Trique,
languages are a
family of Oto-Manguean
spoken by 30,000
Trique people of the
Mexican states of
Oaxaca and the state...
-
preying on
tadpoles of the
Scinax catharinae species group. Lezama, A. Q.;
Triques, M.L. & Santos, P.S. (2012). "Trichomycterus
argos (Teleostei: Siluriformes:...
-
other languages of the Oto-Manguean
languages are
spoken in Oaxaca: The
Triques, Amuzgos, and
Cuicatecs are
linguistically most
closely related to the...
-
speakers in the US.
There are
thousands of Nahuatl, Mixtec,
Zapotec and
Trique speakers in
communities established mainly in the
southern states. Although...
-
fricative [ɹ̝-] or as a
sibilant retroflex fricative [ʐ].
Chicahuaxtla Trique raꞌa [rᶾa˧ʔaː˧] or [r̥ᶴa˧ʔaː˧] 'hand'
Initial allophone of /r/. Tsakonian...
- Guerrero,
Amuzgo de
Oaxaca Mixtecan branch:
Mixtecan languages,
Cuicatec and
Trique language.
Zapotecan branch:
Chatino languages,
Zapotec languages. Chinantec...
-
Rhamphichthys atlanticus Triques, 1999
Rhamphichthys drepanium Triques, 1999
Rhamphichthys hahni Meinken, 1937
Sternarchorhamphus hahni Triques, 1999 Rhamphichthys...
-
branch of the Oto-Manguean
language family of Mexico. They
include the
Trique (or Triqui) languages,
spoken by
about 24,500 people; Cuicatec,
spoken by...
- Law of
Spring (1942) The Lost
Woman (1942)
Tomorrow Is Too Late (1950)
Trique,
gamin de
Paris (1962)
Wlaschin p.149
Goble p.299 Goble, Alan. The Complete...