Autonomous Indigenous People Who Speak Nahuatl]
Kier Salmon
k_salmon at ipinc.net
Tue Aug 28 16:10:14 UTC 2007
On Aug 28, 2007, at 8:05 AM, John F. Schwaller wrote:
> The top ten indigenous groups were:
> Náhuatl 2,563,000
> Maya 1,490,000
> Zapoteco 785,000
> Mixteco 764,000
> Otomí 566,000
> Tzetzal 547,000
> Tzotzil 514,000
> Totonaca 410,000
> Mazateco 339,000
> Chol 274,000
Looking at this strikes a question that has been in my mind.
I work as a spanish english medical and legal interpreter. In the
course of the last 18 months I have run into many people speaking one
of the mayan dialects, Yucatec and Quiche being the most common,
Zapotec and Mixtec as well as a few who speak Cora and Tarascan (or
was it Tarahumara or was it Huichol *NW mountain range*?). But never
have I found people who are bilingual spanish nahuatl. I wondered if
it was because most nahuatl speakers ARE bilingual and thus I don't
know about it. But people chat with me and I find out from names and
in general conversation about where they've come from. The other
explanation that comes to mind is that the nahua don't want to come
to the USA... but then, why would the maya come in such numbers?
This is the rankest curiosity; since I am interested in learning to
speak nahuatl, I've been paying attention and asking questions. Does
anybody have a hypothesis?
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