- The
Zoque (/ˈsoʊkeɪ/)
languages form a
primary branch of the Mixe–
Zoquean language family indigenous to
southern Mexico by the
Zoque people.
Central (Copainalá)...
- The Mixe–Zoque /ˌmiːheɪˈsoʊkeɪ/ (also Mixe–
Zoquean, Mije–Soke, Mije–Sokean)
languages are a
language family whose living members are
spoken in and around...
- this
theory on the
basis that most of the Mixe–
Zoquean loans seemed to
originate only from the
Zoquean branch of the family. This
implied the loanword...
- Proto-Mixe–
Zoquean or Proto-Mixe–Zoque is a
language that
language scholars and
Mesoamerican historians believe was
spoken on the
Isthmus of Tehuantepec...
-
comparisons between Mayan and Mixe-
Zoquean languages, and
Radin (1916, 1919, 1924), who did the same for Mixe-
Zoquean, Huave, and Mayan.
McQuown (1942,...
-
Osnaya 1953), and the
vowels are not
unlike those proposed for proto-Mixe–
Zoquean (Wichmann 1995). A
parallel set of
laryngealized but
otherwise identical...
-
Chiapas Zoque is a
dialect cluster of
Zoquean languages indigenous to
southern Mexico (Wichmann 1995). The
three varieties with ISO codes,
Francisco León...
-
coined by
archaeologists to mean "corn people" in an
early form of the Mixe–
Zoquean language,
which the
Mokaya supposedly spoke. The
Mokaya are
likely contemporaneous...
- linguistics. The
three earliest known families of
Mesoamerica are the Mixe–
Zoquean languages, the Oto-Manguean
languages and the
Mayan languages. Proto-Oto-Manguean...
- branch: Chiapaneco* Mixe–
Zoquean languages:
Zoque languages Mixe
languages Popoluca (Texistepec Popoluca,
Sierra Popoluca (Both
Zoquean) and
Sayula Popoluca...