<div dir="ltr"><b><font size="4">Sixty Languages at Risk of Extinction in Mexico—Can They Be Kept Alive?<br></font></b><br>Online dictionaries and smartphones may help with preservation, experts say.<br><br>Christine Dell'Amore<br>
National Geographic<br>PUBLISHED APRIL 10, 2014<br><br>Of the 143 native languages in Mexico, 60 are at risk of being silenced forever, linguists say.<br><br>One language, Ayapenaco, is spoken fluently by just two elderly menwho aren't even on speaking terms. Another indigenous language, Kiliwa, is spoken by only 36 people.<br>
<br>While 60 of Mexico's native tongues are at risk, 21 are critically endangered, with only a few elderly speakers left, according to a statement released recently by Mexico's Centre of Research and Higher Studies in Social Anthropology (CIESAS). (Read about vanishing languages in National Geographic magazine.)<br>
<br>The languages most at risk in Mexico—including the Zapotec, the Chatino, and the Seri tongues—are undergoing "rapid change" for a number of reasons, says Lourdes de León Pasquel, a linguist at CIESAS. Among them are "migration, social instability, [and] economic and ideological factors that push speakers to adopt Spanish."<br>
<br>Access full article below: <br><a href="http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/04/140410-mexico-languages-speaking-cultures-world-zapotec/">http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/04/140410-mexico-languages-speaking-cultures-world-zapotec/</a></div>