Nahuatl - An Indigenous Language of Mexico

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  • čas přidán 11. 05. 2024
  • This video is all about Nahuatl, the most widely spoken indigenous language of Mexico.
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    ►Consultant and voice in the Nahuatl audio samples: Regulo Castro Hernandez
    ► The Nahuatl dialect map is from the following textbook:
    "Escribo mi lengua. Nahuatl de Guerrero" MIBES 7.
    Instituto Nacional para la Educación de los Adultos, INEA.
    www.cursosinea.conevyt.org.mx/...
    ► Major source for the content of this video:
    "Lecciones para un curso del náhuatl moderno" by David Tuggy T.
    scholars.sil.org/david_h_tugg...
    ► Full list of sources: docs.google.com/document/d/1j...
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    Outro music: "January Thirteenth" by JCSD, licensed from Storyblocks.com

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @Langfocus
    @Langfocus  Před 2 lety +485

    Hi, everyone! I hope you like this video on Nahuatl. To learn more about Nahuatl, check out the major source I used for this video:
    "Lecciones para un curso del náhuatl moderno", by David Tuggy T. scholars.sil.org/david_h_tuggy/es/publicaciones/nahuatl_lecciones/indice (in Spanish)
    Also check out my video about MEXICO: czcams.com/video/ATBtwveHx74/video.html (on The GEOfocus Channel)

    • @InhigoAlai
      @InhigoAlai Před 2 lety +2

      You are not talking about the fact that the Spaniards (specifically Andrés de Olmos) systematized the Nahuatl language (and hundreds of other indigenous languages), created a grammar, compiled its literature and made it a fully developed language of culture. Nahuatl has had a grammar since 1547, three years before the first French grammar (1550). The first grammar written in the world was that of Spanish (Castilian) in 1492; then came the Italian (1515), Portuguese (1536), French (1550), German (1573), English (1586) or Russian (1757).
      I am clarifying this for you to dispel a little of this black legend against the Spanish past in America and I hope to lessen a little the widespread HISPANOPHOBIA in the USA.

    • @pragmaths
      @pragmaths Před 2 lety +13

      [11:31] This is a great explanation to know the correct meaning of one of the highest mountains in México (Iztaccihuatl = Istak + siwatl = white woman).

    • @marcusknutsson2714
      @marcusknutsson2714 Před 2 lety +4

      Nahuatl is awesome, thanks for this video!

    • @Alex-fv2qs
      @Alex-fv2qs Před 2 lety +19

      BTW David Tuggy recently started a YT channel, and also has quite a few videos on hos daughter's channel Superholly, a fairly big (mostly) Spanish language channel (including her latest video as of the writing of this comment)

    • @danymann95
      @danymann95 Před 2 lety +15

      David Tuggy T is Superholly’s Father 🙌🏻

  • @andrewg.carvill4596
    @andrewg.carvill4596 Před 2 lety +2529

    Many years ago I was employed by a school teaching English to non English-speaking kids in Dublin. One time I tried a few words of Irish (Gaeilge) on some Mexican kids. I heard one asking another "que es eso?" (what's that?). Without hesitation the other answered "es el Nahuatl de Irlanda" (it's the Irish Nahuatl). Astute kid.

    • @harryxxx19
      @harryxxx19 Před 2 lety +191

      Lol this made me laugh a lot 🤣, what a funny experience you had!

    • @harryxxx19
      @harryxxx19 Před 2 lety +113

      Btw I am mexican, from Monterrey.

    • @just1frosty516
      @just1frosty516 Před 2 lety +25

      😭😭😭

    • @uzoma1541
      @uzoma1541 Před 2 lety +35

      I love that..... Intelligent kid.

    • @ad-fz9kx
      @ad-fz9kx Před 2 lety +85

      wow, this made me smile. born and raised in usa… when mom sent me to mexico for a few years we had a new kid in my 2nd grade class, he spoke dutch and the kids looked at me and said oh cool another kid that speaks english for you to play with lol. i was like that’s not english i don’t understand what he is saying. the rest of the kids said it sounds the same to us lol

  • @julianxiu2032
    @julianxiu2032 Před 2 lety +1201

    I am from the far Asia and I have learned Nahuatl by myself for two years due to my great interest in mesoamerican civilization. It's absolutely interesting! But I do recommend you all to learn Classical Nahuatl. Not only because it has many study resources to be found, But also through my own observation, the intelligibility between different Nahuatl branches isn't as low as you think, because most of them stay generally the same with grammar and vocabulary . Never consider Classical Nahuatl is like Latin, and modern Nahuatl languages are like modern romance languages, they haven't been so different like that. I learned Classical Nahuatl, and I understood everything in the video very well! Also I am able to generally understand Huastec Nahuatl(the northern branch in the video). However, the Nawat variety spoken in far El Salvador is almost not intelligible due to a lot of phonotic changes! However the Huastec branch has the largest speaking population, so it would be a good choice too.

    • @brunoandremonjarasvera8686
      @brunoandremonjarasvera8686 Před 2 lety +148

      Im so surprised by how people from so far away can be interested in a language thats from my region while here is dying, if you can at some point please come to Huasteca Potosina, look at the pictures if the waterfalls, lakes and rivers, ir is mexico's hidden gem

    • @julianxiu2032
      @julianxiu2032 Před 2 lety +54

      @@brunoandremonjarasvera8686 Para mí México es muy intrigante y estimulante. Desde mi infancia me han encantado las civilizaciones que se contaban en libros. Que sorprendido sus culturas antiguas siguen vivir después de la colonización. La región Huasteca fue el parte más norte entre mesoamerica al lado de Atlántico. Tiene paisaje maravilloso y cultura rica. Seguro que voy a visitar!

    • @sofiadavies5424
      @sofiadavies5424 Před 2 lety +73

      I am also very happy that someone from far away has taken such an interest! Thank you for keeping our beautiful language alive, and please see Mexico's beauty!

    • @makalribera6742
      @makalribera6742 Před 2 lety +25

      Actually according to science we migrated from north asia (siberia) to the americas 40 or 50,000 thousand years ago ,

    • @sofiadavies5424
      @sofiadavies5424 Před 2 lety +10

      @@makalribera6742 that's right xD

  • @fernandorobles8980
    @fernandorobles8980 Před 2 lety +140

    I am proudly indigenous Nahuatl🇲🇽

    • @sornehdoty6691
      @sornehdoty6691 Před 5 měsíci +6

      me too! Tiahui Nahuatlahtolli🇲🇽

    • @brendan657
      @brendan657 Před 4 měsíci +5

      No somos indígenas somos LAS NACIONES ORIGINARIAS DE MÉXICO.

    • @KingMacuilmiquiztli
      @KingMacuilmiquiztli Před 2 měsíci

      The most powerful ruler in Nicaragua was Nahua, King Macuilmiquiztli. Proud of my Nahua heritage 💪🇳🇮

    • @brendan657
      @brendan657 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@KingMacuilmiquiztli no somos indios, porque ese es otro país y como en aquellos tiempos no había GPS, Cristóbal Colón se equivocó.
      El nombre correcto es: "NACIONES ORIGINARIAS DE AMÉRICA". 🇲🇽

    • @darioussmith3450
      @darioussmith3450 Před dnem

      @@sornehdoty6691do you speak the language?

  • @historywithhilbert146
    @historywithhilbert146 Před 2 lety +542

    Great to learn a bit more about this language from you!

    • @basedbartholomew3968
      @basedbartholomew3968 Před 2 lety +6

      Yeah it’s a really nice one

    • @NoName-yw1pt
      @NoName-yw1pt Před 2 lety +9

      Hilbert! Well met!

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 2 lety +58

      Thanks, Hilbert! And great job with your channel. You obviously put a ton of effort into your videos.

    • @historywithhilbert146
      @historywithhilbert146 Před 2 lety +25

      @@Langfocus Many thanks for the compliment, and I may I say quite the same about your own wonderful channel! Do let me know if you'd ever be interested in working together on something in the future :)

    • @aaronmarks9366
      @aaronmarks9366 Před 2 lety +2

      Hi Hilbert!!

  • @gaymoder
    @gaymoder Před 2 lety +743

    so glad you're covering a native american language! nahuatl, quechua and mapudungun are languages that definitely don't get the attention they deserve

    • @someonerandom704
      @someonerandom704 Před 2 lety +47

      Also none of the Mayan languages

    • @davidtuggyt
      @davidtuggyt Před 2 lety +25

      Though I would want to add Chinanteco and Huave and Tarasco and Otomí and Zapoteco and Lacandón and Seri … all the other Mexican languages, 68 or 300 of them depending on how you count things. They are all fascinating, little though I know of most of them, and I feel jealous on their behalf when everybody gets excited about Nahuatl and Maya and leaves out the rest. (And of course languages in other parts of the world are just as beautiful and fascinating, if our taste-buds are rightly primed.)

    • @j.obrien4990
      @j.obrien4990 Před 2 lety +37

      Given that Paul is Canadian he should also cover some languages from the far north like Cree, Inuit, and Miqmac for example

    • @mahatmaniggandhi2898
      @mahatmaniggandhi2898 Před 2 lety +3

      @Hernando Malinche or my man chinook jargon 😔

    • @hakonymitznotzak2066
      @hakonymitznotzak2066 Před 2 lety +5

      Hellow, i from México and i speek náhuatl

  • @ramonzitoito
    @ramonzitoito Před 2 lety +352

    For those interested in listen to more nahuatl, I recommend search 68 Voces: Cuando Muere una Lengua: Náhuatl, a really beautiful poem about languages, readed in nahuatl. 68 voces is an project relationed to the indiginous mexican languages.

    • @danymann95
      @danymann95 Před 2 lety +21

      I just realized it is called 68 voices because of the 68 national languages + Spanish

    • @noneofyourneps7304
      @noneofyourneps7304 Před 2 lety +12

      I've never been so happy to follow a recommendation from a CZcams comment. Thank you for introducing me to this!

    • @JohnLeePettimoreIII
      @JohnLeePettimoreIII Před 2 lety +8

      Thank you for helping us become aware of this!

    • @QuantumNoir
      @QuantumNoir Před 2 lety +2

      Suena Chingon!

    • @alyanahzoe
      @alyanahzoe Před měsícem

      ​@@QuantumNoir 3:08 censored

  • @davidtuggyt
    @davidtuggyt Před 2 lety +317

    Langfocus: I am blown away by all the languages you tackle. It is amazing! Thanks for bringing so much, and such well-constructed, information to the CZcams world.

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 2 lety +60

      Thank you, sir! And thanks for all of your work and materials, which I couldn’t have made this video without.
      I actually didn’t know you appeared in CZcams videos, but lots of people have been mentioning you and Superholly in the comments. 😎

    • @nekozombie
      @nekozombie Před 2 lety +11

      @@Langfocus Woah, I love how you recognized this person as someone specific :O
      I don't know why but I got chills from it, I love this channel, you're awesome:)
      Same goes to David Tuggy!

    • @brk5590
      @brk5590 Před 2 lety +11

      @@Langfocus My favorite crossover of the year!

    • @harunmusa8693
      @harunmusa8693 Před rokem +5

      He's a language master mind... 🧠

    • @matthewheald8964
      @matthewheald8964 Před rokem +1

      This

  • @treewalker1070
    @treewalker1070 Před 2 lety +260

    Our word "chocolate" also comes from Nahuatl, from a phrase literally meaning "bitter water."

    • @VENAT0RUM
      @VENAT0RUM Před rokem +30

      Eso es por una bebida azteca que se elaboraba con cacao, miel y chiles, era una bebida muy popular entre la nobleza ya que se consideraba que el pulque era solo para los plebeyos.

    • @Ocelopilli
      @Ocelopilli Před rokem +10

      @@VENAT0RUMpa que le explicas al wey si obviamente no entiende el español 😂

    • @eth1111
      @eth1111 Před rokem +4

      @@Ocelopilli capaz sí, quien sabe

    • @maryocecilyo3372
      @maryocecilyo3372 Před rokem +3

      Tomate, abacate

    • @me-hc4bv
      @me-hc4bv Před rokem +3

      “Bitter?!? Have you tried putting sugar in your xocolatl?”

  • @alioth7403
    @alioth7403 Před 2 lety +358

    This is great. I would love to see one on Yucatec Mayan, the most widely spoken indigenous language in Mexico (if we consider the different mutually unintelligible Nahuatl dialects separate languages). What's also interesting about Yucatec Maya is that it covers a very large area (three Mexican states and parts of northern Belize and Guatemala, and it's still the same variety of Maya) the one that spans the most territory of all Mayan varieties).

    • @rodrigoe.gordillo2617
      @rodrigoe.gordillo2617 Před 2 lety +7

      @W. Redburn But this nahuatl dialects are very different to eachother not a single language also the yukatec maya he is talking about is a single language part of the mayan language family

    • @alioth7403
      @alioth7403 Před 2 lety +4

      @W. Redburn In Mexico, Nahuatl as a language encompassing many dialects (some of them mutually unintelligible) has more speakers. On the other hand, Yucatec Maya, as a single variant of Maya has more speakers than any variant of Nahuatl.
      Also, there are many variants of Maya spoken in Mexico, Guatemala, and Belize.

    • @bupirochi
      @bupirochi Před 2 lety +7

      @W. Redburn
      Huasteca Náhuatl - 500,000 speakers (approx).
      Maya yucateco - 770,000 speakers (approx)
      I took Huasteca Náhuatl because is the variety most widely spoken.

    • @makalribera6742
      @makalribera6742 Před 2 lety +4

      @@bupirochi
      Not even close to that number
      Huastecos zapoteca totonaca Nahuatl is much higher , on the huastecos alone is close to a million

    • @makalribera6742
      @makalribera6742 Před 2 lety

      @W. Redburn .
      Where you getting that number from?
      Can you share your official number from the government a link ?

  • @sulien6835
    @sulien6835 Před 2 lety +19

    Classical Nāhuatl truly is the most beautiful language in sound and most elegant in grammar; we really ought to cherish it and its surviving literature as much as Greek or Latin and its modern varieties deserve wider recognition.

  • @Steven_Flores2112
    @Steven_Flores2112 Před 2 lety +244

    Glad you talked about Nahuatl there's a lot of languages here in Mexico, like Mayan or Mixteco

    • @jamescook2412
      @jamescook2412 Před 2 lety +25

      They're languages, not dialects. Mexican say dialects to look down on Nahuatl, Maya etc. or out of ignorance.

    • @Steven_Flores2112
      @Steven_Flores2112 Před 2 lety +3

      @@jamescook2412 yeah, usually here we say dialects, already edited tho

    • @killersg.8290
      @killersg.8290 Před 2 lety +12

      @Weasel I can’t believe this, we also have the same issue in Philippines

    • @johnsmith-ir1ne
      @johnsmith-ir1ne Před 2 lety +17

      @@jamescook2412 Chinese do the same thing against Chinese "dialects" when in fact they're languages as well

    • @makalribera6742
      @makalribera6742 Před 2 lety +4

      @@jamescook2412
      Mexicans are the same as those Indigenous people,

  • @lukko6714
    @lukko6714 Před 2 lety +238

    I love how the grammar is covered and the examples give you a basic idea of the grammar. It's fascinating how they adopted SVO from Spanish and have some similar pronunciations to Spanish.

    • @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014
      @saguntum-iberian-greekkons7014 Před 2 lety +6

      Interesting right? The linguistic clashes, new ways of expressing with different linguistic groups. I had no idea about nahualt

    • @TheZenytram
      @TheZenytram Před 2 lety +20

      i think it is really sad

    • @strange4107
      @strange4107 Před 2 lety +2

      icelandic name pog

    • @johnsmith-ir1ne
      @johnsmith-ir1ne Před 2 lety +4

      @Tuscan417 correct.
      Languages constantly change over time, to resemble its neighbors in some way, while simultaneously becoming more different in other ways.
      No language has ever been immune to this process, albeit minority languages are obviously far more susceptible
      All you complainers who daydream about the purity of a language in some distant past? You're engaging in social construct, a fantasy

    • @feryneimrios3145
      @feryneimrios3145 Před 2 lety +1

      Hey friend. I can tell from your name that you're Icelandic. Correct me if I'm wrong but I think that the TL sound in Nahuatl also exists in your language. Does it? Kind regards

  • @cesara.hernan4650
    @cesara.hernan4650 Před 2 lety +42

    *Langfocus nimistaskamatiliya miak ten tihteneshtiliya pan ni taishyekalisti. Na nihuechiua nahuatl, onka tamanti ten amo nikishmati, pampa miak tamanti nikihtoua ka español.*
    Yes, we can understand each other with other varieties of the modern Nahuatl language, only a few words change. I speak Nahuatl from the Huasteca Hidalguense region.

    • @luisorozco4370
      @luisorozco4370 Před 2 lety +1

      I wonder if the Nahuatl spoken in the furthest points is still mutually intelligible, that is, is a Nahuatl speaker from Nayarit able to understand a speaker from Tabasco? They're over 1500 kilometers apart!

    • @cesara.hernan4650
      @cesara.hernan4650 Před 2 lety +5

      @@luisorozco4370 Well, I don't know anyone from Nayarit who speaks Nahuatl, but for example, the speakers from Puebla can understand each other without much problem, as well as with the speakers from Veracruz.

    • @regulocastrohernandez2644
      @regulocastrohernandez2644 Před 2 lety +1

      Ne nitlapowa kemin nahuatl pero como tehwan ya titlapowa iga miage castellano pues ihkone amo nikagi miak modialecto

    • @chibiromano5631
      @chibiromano5631 Před 2 lety +4

      Orale ! Si.. Huastec Nahuatl is the purest form of Nahuatl. Classical nahuatl is littered with Catholic/ Indo European influence from 1600s.. I highly doubt anybody spoke Classical but Tlaxcallan missionaries. What you wrote is awesome.. Notice how none of the suffixes end in O and A , it's almost like russian. Here is the trasnaltion of what you said in cyrillic.
      Langfocus нимистаскаматиляа миак тен титенестлия пан ни таишьекалисти. на нинхуекиуа нахуатл , онка таманти тен амо никишмати, пампа миак таманти никитоа ка ешпанол.

    • @masacatior
      @masacatior Před 2 lety +1

      @@chibiromano5631 adopting a different alphabet would be quite interesting, many did in North american native languages like Cherokee.

  • @FelixGalvanArt
    @FelixGalvanArt Před 2 lety +18

    Nahuatl is coming back in a big way. I have met a considerable amount of people who not only speak the language but also teach it.

    • @citrusblast4372
      @citrusblast4372 Před 2 lety +2

      In mexico?

    • @FelixGalvanArt
      @FelixGalvanArt Před 2 lety +5

      @@citrusblast4372 in Mexico and in California as well. My father also taught me classical nahuatl when I was young and his brothers and sisters successfully passed it down to my cousins (mostly huastec).

    • @zimriel
      @zimriel Před rokem

      @@FelixGalvanArt i keep hearing about huastec nahua in this thread but i thought huastec was a maya relative

  • @Erisarrt
    @Erisarrt Před 2 lety +147

    My family speaks nahuatl, thank you for giving me more insight on their language

    • @calebf3655
      @calebf3655 Před 2 lety +2

      Do you not speak it?

    • @Erisarrt
      @Erisarrt Před 2 lety +11

      @@calebf3655 nope, only know a few words, i grew up learning Spanish from them, wish they had taught me though

    • @calebf3655
      @calebf3655 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Erisarrt ¿Es desmaciado tarde para aprender?

    • @caimaccoinnich9594
      @caimaccoinnich9594 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Erisarrt That's so sad... Why didn't they teach you?

    • @Erisarrt
      @Erisarrt Před 2 lety +5

      @@calebf3655 no creo que es tan tarde pero estoy ocupado con la escuela y ellos con el trabajo

  • @mexicounexplained
    @mexicounexplained Před 2 lety +156

    Excellent. I use Nahuatl a lot on my channel. I’ve also covered Mexico’s other minority languages. Thanks for the show! Adelante 🌶

    • @clippertonislander1478
      @clippertonislander1478 Před 2 lety +3

      hi Professor Bitto. Nice to see you on Paul's channel.

    • @CarlosPacheco-np1km
      @CarlosPacheco-np1km Před 2 lety +2

      Ne in tlajtoa nahutl ni mo toca Carlos pacheco

    • @metzli_moon
      @metzli_moon Před 2 lety +1

      I'm super stoked to see you here! I have watched likely every episode on your channel since finding it about 9 months ago.

    • @mexicounexplained
      @mexicounexplained Před 2 lety +4

      @@metzli_moon thanks for your support!

    • @KingMacuilmiquiztli
      @KingMacuilmiquiztli Před 2 měsíci

      The most powerful ruler in Nicaragua was Nahua, King Macuilmiquiztli. Proud of my Nahua heritage 💪🇳🇮

  • @Mozkonauta
    @Mozkonauta Před 2 lety +37

    I am Mexican, I live in Mexico City and speak Spanish as most of the people in my country. It is not common to listen to people speaking indigenous languages in the big cities, and these languages are not taught at schools. I learned by myself one of the many variants of Nahuatl and most people asked me: “What for? You will never speak Nahuatl.”

    • @quetzalcoatl3242
      @quetzalcoatl3242 Před 2 lety +5

      Cualtitoc. Nican tlahtolli nelli tlahtolli iMexico. Ocachi Mexicameh como tehua.

    • @Mel_Golta
      @Mel_Golta Před 11 měsíci +3

      Pues es verdad, los idiomas mexicanos cada vez se pierden más, ya sea por el español, la hueva de la gente o por el nulo peso geopolítico que tienen.

    • @JuanCastillo-nx3oi
      @JuanCastillo-nx3oi Před měsícem

      That’s terrible. I get told I’m not “ Mexican” because I’m from the U.S. even though my parents are from Mexico. However I know who I am and am comfortable in my skin. One thing I asked is. If im not Mexican. Your not Mexican. We speak Spanish. Which was the language of the “ white” man. Who can and conquered and raped Mexico. For years. OUR language is this. So why doesn’t Mexico teach THEIR language? Its weird and ass backwards.

  • @diegorodriguez5790
    @diegorodriguez5790 Před 2 lety +97

    You know it’s interesting because this reminds me that my Linguistic professor told me that Mexicans, even if they don’t speak Nahuatl, use the [tl] sound in words such as “Atlas” and the phoneme is unique at least among the Spanish speaking countries.

    • @Alex53Ace
      @Alex53Ace Před 2 lety +3

      Except that Atlas is the name of the one who held the heavens up in greek mythology, so it's a word that used in a huge part of the world. But yes, it's a phoneme used by mexicans when naming some animals, plants and places

    • @tacoguy764
      @tacoguy764 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Alex53Ace Asides from that a lot of names and words in Mexican Spanish comes from Náhuatl

    • @GuillermoSilvaSilva
      @GuillermoSilvaSilva Před 2 lety +3

      *Yes. Spaniards pronounce Adlas, Adlántico, etc., insted of Atlas, Atlántico, like we do in Mexico.*

  • @AngelRamirez-ew9et
    @AngelRamirez-ew9et Před 2 lety +115

    So interesting your video. Thanks a lot for it. You really researched the language well.
    As a native náhuatl de la Huasteca speaker I struggle with others variants of náhuatl. I try to find some cognates so the context let me to understand what are they speaking. Some times it's not so hard and other times really makes you to think 'what did it just said?'
    Well, always's a pleasure to learn others languages, it's another way to see the life.

    • @gustavovillegas5909
      @gustavovillegas5909 Před 2 lety +6

      Titlahtoa nawatlahtolli? Niyolpaki! Nimomachtia inin tlahtolli :) piyali

    • @hsjoihs_linguistic
      @hsjoihs_linguistic Před 2 lety +5

      Piyali. Na niJaponés wan nimomachtia nawatlahtolli tleh Huasteca pan ome xiwitl ika Stanford. Ika totlamachtiliz tiktekiwiah ortografía de IDIEZ, sanpampa nikakki miak masewalmeh axkitekiwiah...

    • @valkeakirahvi
      @valkeakirahvi Před 2 lety +2

      Pialli! Na niewa Finlandia pero iwan na nimomachtia nahuatlahtolli!

    • @zaulp_e364
      @zaulp_e364 Před 2 lety +1

      @@hsjoihs_linguistic kuali nimitz paleuis timo'machtis okachi in tlatoli

    • @shravani7360
      @shravani7360 Před rokem

      Can someone help me with translation of one English text into nahuatl

  • @jaycorwin1625
    @jaycorwin1625 Před 2 lety +280

    Hi Paul. Thank you for posting this. TL in Nahuatl is
    a sound that exists in other native North American languages, such as the one my grandparents spoke, Tlingit, which only has that phoneme (and not the voiced L). I have often suspected that there is some distant genetic relationship between those languages because of some familiar feel to Nahuatl. Now I see what looks like a cognate: siwatl in Nahuatl (woman) is shaawat in Tlingit. Fascinating.

    • @andyjay729
      @andyjay729 Před 2 lety +17

      A problem with that theory is that the "tl" in Tlingit is pronounced closer to "cl" or "kl", so "Tlingit" sounds more like "Klinkit". Also, as Paul mentioned, Nahuatl is part of the Uto-Aztecan family, and Tlingit part of the Na-Dene family, whose speakers actually migrated to the Americas separately sometime after most other natives.

    • @angelpalacios5074
      @angelpalacios5074 Před 2 lety +15

      Náhuatl comes from a language named "Uto-nahua". These languages were born in a radial area in Utah, so I am sure Tlingit is part (or at last has a relationship) of this family. And the people who spoke this languages even have similarities about mythology and religion :) do you speak Spanish? there is a good documentary about it but it's in Spanish.
      I am a náhuatl speaker (not native) so I am shoked about that siwatl word :O. Do you speak Tlingit?

    • @jwbeaton
      @jwbeaton Před 2 lety +20

      To add to this - the salish languages - which is a huge language group covering a large geographic area also has the TL sound, pronounced exactly as Paul says. The St’at’imc have it twice - the T’ = TL in Nahuatl

    • @Doorisessa
      @Doorisessa Před 2 lety +31

      Nahuatl and Tlingit are not believed to be related. Nahuatl is an Uto-Aztecan language, and Tlingit is part of the Na-Dené branch of the proposed Dené-Yeniseian languages.
      Now this is not to say that it's _impossible_ that they are related--the problem with reconstructing large language families that aren't things like Indo-European or Afro-Asiatic or Sinitic is that there aren't many written records that go very far back, which means that many proposed relations between languages in places such as the Americas are very hard to prove. But even so, the largest proposed language family for the Americas is Amerind, which specifically excludes the Na-Dené languages, and the most radical proposals for superfamilies that include the Na-Dené languages stretch more in the direction of Central Asia, rather than toward the rest of the Americas. In so far as much as there are similarities between Tlingit and Nahuatl, there's a good chance this is due to features and words gradually being exchanged between neighbouring languages rather than due to genetic relation between the languages.

    • @MrRabiddogg
      @MrRabiddogg Před 2 lety +2

      @@Doorisessa if all of the Native Americans came from across the land bridge between Alaska and Russia, then it would stand to reason they all shared a language far enough back.

  • @kimpettersson6605
    @kimpettersson6605 Před 2 lety +104

    Icelandic also has a TL sound, written as LL, so Eyjafjallajökull is pronounced Eyafyatlayökutl 😁🇮🇸🇲🇽

    • @MysticHeather
      @MysticHeather Před rokem +8

      Cool!

    • @eswarjuri
      @eswarjuri Před 7 měsíci +6

      Some German dialects have that too - for example you can say “Kastl” instead of “Kasten”, which means “small cupboard” instead of “cupboard”.

  • @siyabongamviko8872
    @siyabongamviko8872 Před 2 lety +49

    In South Africa there are two closely related language sub-groups with the TL sound as pronounced here, but in the Nguni languages it is usually preceded by an N, which makes it a nasalised sound (I am not a proper linguist but I think this is nasalisation).
    For instance; intloko (head), intloni (shame) [this is Nguni]
    e tla (do come); ho tlutla (to venerate), tlatsa (fill) [this is in Sotho-Tswana)

  • @bvillafuerte765
    @bvillafuerte765 Před 2 lety +83

    All the official languages (Spanish, Náhuatl, Mayan, Mixtec, etc) must be taught, analyzed and practised at national level of written, visual and oral form from Initial even Secondary.

    • @amjan
      @amjan Před 2 lety +8

      I'm happe to hear that you're maintaining your true ethnic culture!

    • @darklord7069
      @darklord7069 Před 2 lety +25

      I’m not against learning native languages, but there are far too many for it to be possible. It’s why these languages should be taught at the regional level and I doubt that someone from Tamaulipas would care to learn huichol or someone from the Yucatán learning Nahuatl

    • @MrShadowThief
      @MrShadowThief Před 2 lety

      Is this what actually happens or are you suggesting it?

    • @darklord7069
      @darklord7069 Před 2 lety

      @Weasel i already said that. I would like to speak teenek since it was the language of the huastecos. Mayans and Aztecs weren’t the only people. There were toltecs, people of Teotihuacán, olmecs, and Tarascans who contributed largely to mesoamerica. I’d only make Nahuatl the National language since it was more close to the lingua Franca at the time

    • @Zrck33
      @Zrck33 Před 2 lety

      @Weasel Should Nahuatl be teached in Baja California? I mean like...

  • @ad-fz9kx
    @ad-fz9kx Před 2 lety +37

    yay! tlaxtlaui ikniutli. thank you friend! i requested this on the mexican spanish video. as a trilingual…
    learn coatepec nahuatl with some guerrero nahuatl as well due to living between the two regions, mexican spanish and then english it makes me happy that younger people are learning more about nahuatl.
    my nahuatl is not as strong as i like it. my mother and aunt refuse to speak it outside the home unless they are super mad and it comes out lol. bro and cousins did not care to learn it. i’m in my 40s now and it’s very hard to find people that speak my specific dialect. not all nahuatl variations are intelligible. thank you for making this video happen.
    i still laugh when people give us a weird look when my mom will scold me in public in nahuatl lmao. peace to all my nahuatl brothers from Guerrero, Puebla, Morelos
    my elders would be proud to know that Nahuatl has some interest outside it’s respective regions. it was seen as a poor or inferior language and status. crazy how times have changed.

    • @arthurmoran4951
      @arthurmoran4951 Před rokem

      how how many nahuatl languages did you know that are intellegible with your variarety

    • @MysticHeather
      @MysticHeather Před rokem

      My husband is from Guerrero!! We would love to learn his local dialect of Nahuatl.. it’s hard to find resources or that specific dialect of speaker here in the states. He’s been stateside since he was a toddler

  • @Jly531
    @Jly531 Před 2 lety +137

    this is a beautiful language that should be taught more in schools❤

    • @Iambunny-ry2os
      @Iambunny-ry2os Před 2 lety +2

      I’m from El Salvador and most people can’t even get proper education and if they do it’s very far especially if you are native, a lot of us still stuffer generational poverty and w no education and therefore no opportunity we have no way to progress. We also still have some of these phrases in our language like aguacate and cipote.

  • @benitocamelo1488
    @benitocamelo1488 Před 2 lety +31

    As someone from Mexico, I gotta admit that I've always felt drawn to the Nahuatl, Zapotec and Mayan languages, but a couple of the reasons I haven't learned any of them are because of the lack of learning resources and not knowing which variety to learn.
    I love this video because it's the closest I've ever been to any of the indigenous languages of my country and I got to thank you for that, Paul! Keep up the good work! 🤩🙌✨

  • @fbkintanar
    @fbkintanar Před 2 lety +28

    A fascinating language. I have been interested in this language from seeing videos from David Tuggy and his daughter.

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 2 lety +15

      I had actually never seen any videos of them, but used David Tuggy’s materials as a source for this video.

    • @JosePineda-cy6om
      @JosePineda-cy6om Před 2 lety +1

      Hey Paul, check "Super Holly" channel here in CZcams - it's the vblog of Tuggy's youngest daughter. Her Spanish is so damned good, in fluency, pronunciation, rythm, entonation, etc she could pass as a native speaker any day of the weak. On a few of her videos she's interviewed her dad about Nahuatl and its characteristics, pretty interesting conversations! Most of these interviews were done twice, in English and Spanish, but one or two were done only in English. You might be interested also in her videos in which she tells the story of how she learnt Spanish by brute force, being enrolled in a Mexican kindergarten without knowing a single word of Spanish, plus her experiences with (sadly) xenophobia and children's occassional cruelty towards people who are very different physically from themselves.

  • @iusedtobegods
    @iusedtobegods Před 2 lety +153

    There are many household items still referred to by their Nahuatl names in Mexico, and consequently in the United States. Even in Northern Mexico which doesn’t seem to have as many current speakers of Nahuatl. Comal, molcajete, popote, etc. are all common use loan words used by otherwise native speakers of English in the southern United States or by native speakers of Spanish in Northern Mexico.

    • @adrin181
      @adrin181 Před 2 lety +4

      popote is a funny one for me. my spanish teacher in high school would organize yearly trips to europe with some students during each year's spring break period. once, one of the students asked a waiter in spain for a "popote" and the waiter had no idea what she meant. my teacher often mentioned how the spaniards would refer to the class as "americans" and how they spoke weird. we at least dont use weird words like vosotros!

    • @danymann95
      @danymann95 Před 2 lety +10

      And many words penetrated in many languages like Xix-Tomatl (“water fat bellybutton fruit”), Xocoatl > Chocolate (bitter-flavoured water)

    • @slagthompson
      @slagthompson Před 2 lety +18

      I remember being around Guadalajara and hearing the word "tianguis" for a market, which I later heard was from Nahuatl. Is that right?

    • @danymann95
      @danymann95 Před 2 lety +14

      @@slagthompson yes, it means open market without roof (street market)

    • @11mazatl
      @11mazatl Před 2 lety +14

      or "guajolote" for turkey instead of "pavo" haha

  • @novelero03
    @novelero03 Před 2 lety +48

    Thank you for this video! Super fascinating video. One thing is certain, Nahuatl has also influenced Mexican Spanish a lot 😊

  • @BiomechaWolf
    @BiomechaWolf Před 2 lety +28

    Nice video Paul thank you for taking the time to analyze such a beautiful language as Nahuatl, I'm from Mexico and I always find cool when I hear people speaking it

  • @holyrosecross
    @holyrosecross Před 2 lety +24

    メキシコがスペイン語が公用語なのは知っていましたが、スペイン人が入植するより以前の現地の言葉が生き残っていたのを初めて知りました。
    興味深く楽しませてもらいました。

  • @pez4
    @pez4 Před 2 lety +72

    About "bestia" being used for horse, my dad (he's from Xalapa, just a few hours away from Orizaba) who only speaks spanish and english, told me most people referred to horses as "bestias" when he was young, but gradually the word "caballo" came to be the mos common word.
    People knew about the other meaning of the word "bestia" but it was rarely used, unless some more context was added, for example saying "bestias de la selva" meaning "beasts of the jungle" wouldn't be interpreted as "horses of the jungle" it would be interpreted as "wild beasts from the jungle".

    • @abrarey
      @abrarey Před 2 lety +6

      Interesting, I remember back in Dominican Republic in the country side they used to call "bestia" to the female horse, the Spanish word normally used is "yegua". I have no idea why only the female was call that way.

    • @davidtuggyt
      @davidtuggyt Před rokem +2

      In a number of places in México the prototypical “bestia“ is not a horse but rather a mule; a “beast of burden”, as the English phrase has it.

  • @ClaudiniGod
    @ClaudiniGod Před 2 lety +18

    I was mindblown by your explanation. As a southern Mexican, I have always been surrounded by mayan speakers but I've never met a Nahautl speaker. I never thought I could be fascinated by a language spoken in my own country!

  • @gustavohernandez4068
    @gustavohernandez4068 Před 2 lety +18

    Great video! For me, nahuatl it's a very complex and interesting language. Recently I rediscovered that my grand grandparents spoke Popoluca. The great majority of Mexicans doesn't spoke native languages but this languages are very close to us in our everyday routines, in the names of food, things and places.

  • @TeLeoyDibujo
    @TeLeoyDibujo Před 2 lety +47

    Paul, you're great!
    Paul, sos fantástico, gracias por darle visualización a este idioma tan genial.

  • @fabianaguilar6288
    @fabianaguilar6288 Před 2 lety +26

    Love this video, Paul. Also, the TL phoneme sounds similar to the 'LL' sound found in Icelandic.

  • @djsc2012
    @djsc2012 Před 2 lety +80

    Something interesting about the TL combination is that we pronounce them in one syllable in Latin-America (I guess because of the influence of these native languages). So when you see "Atlántico" (Atlantic) and "Atlas", we pronounce them as a-tlan-ti-co and a-tlas in LA but you will hear At-lan-ti-co and At-las in Spain.

    • @adrin181
      @adrin181 Před 2 lety

      thats something i never even was consciously aware of. pretty cool!

    • @lets_lvl_up
      @lets_lvl_up Před 2 lety +5

      Esto despertó mi curiosidad! voy directo a Forvo a comparar!!!

    • @mttrnx
      @mttrnx Před 2 lety +4

      No tenía idea. ¿Podría compartir algún video con la pronunicación europea?

    • @citrusblast4372
      @citrusblast4372 Před 2 lety +5

      Thats funny because whenever i see hispanics say nahuatl i always hear them say nahuatel or NAHUATTLE, like the tle in english "rattle" lol, they somehow get an english accent when pronouncing nahuatl

    • @caimaccoinnich9594
      @caimaccoinnich9594 Před 2 lety +9

      @@citrusblast4372 They don't pronounce tl correctly at the end of words, sadly. Only within words and at the beginning of words.

  • @regulocastrohernandez2644

    Such a great video of my language! Thank you for giving the importance it deserve!

  • @BobTheHatKing
    @BobTheHatKing Před 2 lety +7

    What perfect timing! I was just watching your Mexican vs European Spanish video last night and became interested in learning more about the Nahuatl language, and here you are!

  • @ktdoty9921
    @ktdoty9921 Před 2 lety +3

    I don't think I have ever seen such a clear breakdown of a polysynthetic grammar system

  • @mapazhie
    @mapazhie Před 2 lety +5

    2 weeks ago I learned about the existence of Nahuatl by my aunts after asking about the other language that my moms side of the family sometimes speak. This video definitely helped with some more explaining on the language. I really hope I can try to learn it so I can at least relate to my family more ❤️

  • @jaxshort9025
    @jaxshort9025 Před 2 lety +2

    I'm really enjoying your content on indigenous languages. I'm hoping I will see more in the future. Thank you for all of your hard work!

  • @basedbartholomew3968
    @basedbartholomew3968 Před 2 lety +2

    I was literally thinking about your next upload when you uploaded this! Nice!

  • @RobCamp-rmc_0
    @RobCamp-rmc_0 Před 2 lety +3

    I was just looking at your channel earlier this morning wondering when a new video would be posted. And what a cool one, at that

  • @Milosevic7
    @Milosevic7 Před 2 lety +9

    Haven't watched it yet but already love it! As a huge fan of Mexico I'd love to learn nahuatl one day (gonna do it as soon as I have learned all the languages I'm learning now 😆). Great to see this beautiful language here on your channel, Paul.

  • @zeroeyedpete
    @zeroeyedpete Před 2 lety +27

    I'm glad that Langfocus is doing videos about indegonous languages like Nahuatl. it's so imported for people to learn about idegrnous cultures and appreciate them.

    • @scootabean
      @scootabean Před 2 lety

      Especially since so many are endangered.

  • @GamerHeavenandHell
    @GamerHeavenandHell Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for all your effort to make these videos possible.

  • @randomuser4370
    @randomuser4370 Před 2 lety +6

    "Chicolatl" / chocolate, my favorite one because it was a gift from the gods indeed :p
    Thanks for the video, I'm always fascinated about Nahuatl phonetic. The grammar part was very clear and interesting as well.

  • @AvrahamYairStern
    @AvrahamYairStern Před 2 lety +8

    I've been asking for this video for so long! תודה רבה

  • @FirstLast-wg1gs
    @FirstLast-wg1gs Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so much for this and your many other entertaining and informative videos! I love watching them and sharing your channel!
    I do hope to see a video on Maya (Yucatec Mayan) somewhat soon. It is on my heart that I learn this language to be able to use it with Maya-speaking friends in Mexico! Plus it is so widely spoken! Mexico, Guatemala, Belize... and it is one of the most researched of the indigenous American languages. Plus, practically everyone has heard of the Mayans but many people don't know that these people are still around. :)
    I'm currently sharpening my Spanish so I can read and watch videos on Maya with ease (plus most people speak more Spanish than Mayan anyway in the communities I've been interacting with) but I know that if we got a video from you I would be able to breeze through it! Thanks again for all of the high-quality content you provide the world with! 🙏

  • @Via-Media2024
    @Via-Media2024 Před 2 lety +2

    Love your videos Paul. Thanks for featuring languages that I know little (or nothing) about.

  • @BrooklyKnight
    @BrooklyKnight Před 2 lety +3

    I've been waiting for you to do this one for a while lol - never suggested it but in my heart I knew you'd eventually do it. I'm actually trying to make a conlang with some features pulled from Nahuatl, so it's nice to have yet another source. :)

  • @connormurphy683
    @connormurphy683 Před rokem +3

    Please do an episode on either Yucatec Maya or K'iche'! Purepecha and Mixtec would also be welcome.

  • @sohopedeco
    @sohopedeco Před 2 lety +42

    The Brazilian Portuguese word for _cup_ ("xícara") comes from Nahuatl!🇧🇷🇲🇽

  • @naamashang5107
    @naamashang5107 Před 2 lety +22

    I find it very interesting that many of the consonants in this language were used in constructing the Klingon language.

    • @DanSolo871
      @DanSolo871 Před 2 lety +7

      It would be awesome if Paul does a video on Klingon since it was made into an actual language 😁

  • @neuralwarp
    @neuralwarp Před rokem +7

    I hope they develop courses for Nahuatl and Quechua on DuoLingo.

    • @MysticHeather
      @MysticHeather Před rokem

      I believe Pimsleur had Nahuatl… or maybe Clozemaster.. which honestly both taught me more in a few months than duolingo did in years

  • @pads6367
    @pads6367 Před 2 lety +7

    Nahuatl has also influenced Mexican Spanish resulting in unique ways to express certain things. For example, instead of saying "I'm late" (voy tarde), we say "it's gotten late for me" (se me hizo tarde), or "it's gotten dark for me" (se me hizo de noche) treating time as if it was some kind of entity that gets ahead of you. There's other examples like using redundant possessive, so instead of saying "Juan's house" (la casa de Juan), some people tend to say "his house of Juan's" (su casa de Juan), "the toy of my brother's" (su juguete de mi hermano), and so on

    • @ignaciocampos8435
      @ignaciocampos8435 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Very interesting, a cognitive influence beyond grammar

  • @--Paws--
    @--Paws-- Před 2 lety +1

    I was waiting for you to cover this, thank you!

  • @aldoperera6688
    @aldoperera6688 Před 2 lety +1

    Had been waiting for this! Thanks 👍👍

  • @ashtonshelton8584
    @ashtonshelton8584 Před rokem +3

    You have the coolest channel! You bring so much love and attention to the lesser known languages and it’s super cool. I have one gripe, as a Texan, with this video. Y’all is in standard English… at least OUR standard English😂🤠

  • @Daigotsumax
    @Daigotsumax Před 2 lety +6

    Fascinating topic! I've always been interested in Aztec culture so I was curious about the language. And I love the construction of the words with prefixes and suffixes, it seems very logical.

  • @sid300e
    @sid300e Před 2 lety +1

    I’ve recently gotten interested in Nahuatl and you end up making this vid. Perfect timing!

  • @annakoek1930
    @annakoek1930 Před 2 lety +1

    yay you're back! and with a video on my favorite language no less

  • @mmorales4395
    @mmorales4395 Před 2 lety +4

    Thanks Paul for such interesting and informative video about a language spoken on my Country México wich I didn't know much about it.

  • @Swooper86
    @Swooper86 Před 2 lety +21

    Did you know that the "tl" sound also exists in Icelandic? It occurs in some consonant clusters like ll, tl and rl.

    • @jirunjak
      @jirunjak Před 2 lety +4

      And also in our language, the Rungus language, from Sabah, Malaysian Borneo.

    • @chibiromano5631
      @chibiromano5631 Před 2 lety

      it's also in Tlingit of Alaska, icelandic is actually related to the Algonquin/ Iriquosi languges tho just like Finnish-Sami is.

    • @Swooper86
      @Swooper86 Před 2 lety +4

      @@chibiromano5631 Uhm. No, Icelandic is a northern germanic language. Absolutely no relation to any native North American languages.

    • @chibiromano5631
      @chibiromano5631 Před 2 lety

      @@Swooper86 no relation to Sami or the Finic? not even genetically? Why does Bjork look Sami if she is pure Icelandic? Like obviously, I know lots of 'germano' vikings went over there to iceland at one time, but wasn't there a group already there? I know for sure that Finnish is related to Iriqouis, there is 1st person accounts detailing this.
      But I heard that Sami made it to Iceland, and if they made it to iceland they made it to NE US and that would explain the commonality Finnish-Sami has to Iriqouis.

    • @Swooper86
      @Swooper86 Před 2 lety +3

      @@chibiromano5631 Absolutely zero, different language family (Icelandic is Indo-European, Finnish and Sami are Finno-Ugric). No genetic connection either. Epicanthic folds are a rare but known mutation that sometimes occurs among Northern Europeans, Björk happens to have them.

  • @Matthews2004
    @Matthews2004 Před 2 lety +2

    I've been waiting for this video for a long time, since I watched the guarani video there started the hope of nahuatl language

  • @KenSoutherland
    @KenSoutherland Před 2 lety

    What a fascinating language! Thank you for this incredibly concise, sharp intro. Loved it!

  • @finthechat9264
    @finthechat9264 Před 2 lety +69

    Amazing how such old languages are still preserved with so few speakers

    • @mexicounexplained
      @mexicounexplained Před 2 lety +40

      Nahuatl has over 1.5 million speakers. There's no danger that it will vanish anytime soon.

    • @falnica
      @falnica Před 2 lety +23

      I has two million speakers. I’d say that’s a decent amount

    • @user-vz2fj4wq7d
      @user-vz2fj4wq7d Před 2 lety +8

      Neither it is so old, there's a bunch of european languages that are much older, not to mention languages like Chinese, Persian, Aramaic and so on

    • @roykk2
      @roykk2 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mexicounexplainedOh really, I was born in the central area (Morelos) of Mexico. And let’s just say I moved around quite bit. i've never heard someone speak Nahuatl or any other dialects in life. So, I would say the odds of reviving the language are miniscule.

    • @mexicounexplained
      @mexicounexplained Před 2 lety +26

      @@roykk2 There's nothing to "revive." There are more people speaking Nahuatl now than at the time of the Conquest. It's not going to die anytime soon. I've heard it spoken in Tijuana by some suppliers of mine (I live in San Diego and do business in TJ quite frequently).

  • @hsjoihs_linguistic
    @hsjoihs_linguistic Před 2 lety +13

    It's my second year taking Huasteca Nahuatl under IDIEZ, and I was amazed that I could understand so much of the varieties presented in this video. To note some differences, Huasteca Nahuatl lacks the o- prefix that Classical Nahuatl also has, and I'm also completely unfamiliar with the "amo" vs. "mach" distinction in Orizaba. That said, I'm pretty accustomed to most of the aspects mentioned, and it was nice to understand what the sentences mean before the translation comes up. Such is the joy of language learning!

    • @miarangel2978
      @miarangel2978 Před 2 lety

      i took a semester of nahuatl my professor was from IDIEZ too!

    • @chibiromano5631
      @chibiromano5631 Před 2 lety

      Classical nahuatl is the incorrect nahuatl or less pure version it has lots of indo european influence. Most of the stems and suffixes have latin o-a and they use their grammar. Huastec is a more accurate version.

    • @arthurmoran4951
      @arthurmoran4951 Před rokem +1

      can you show us more diferences examples between huastecan nahuatl and the variarity showed here?

  • @owenwebb5095
    @owenwebb5095 Před 2 lety

    Thanks Paul, I was waiting for this one!

  • @--julian_
    @--julian_ Před 2 lety +4

    Loved the video! also loved that you used David Tuggy as a source, he's very smart and kind

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 2 lety

      It seems a lot of people know him from his videos with his daughter, but I had never seen them (or heard of her channel) until people started commenting about it. I just found his materials while digging for sources on Orizaba Nahuatl (to match the variety spoken by the guy who did the audio samples). But it's cool that so many people know who he is!

  • @diegomarin9525
    @diegomarin9525 Před 2 lety +8

    Absolutely loved this video. As a Mexican, now I am more interested in learning this beautiful language. 🤓

  • @eomguel9017
    @eomguel9017 Před 2 lety +40

    I took some nahuatl courses in college and it is very difficult. Partly because its words differ so much from the European languages we're more used to and also because some varieties retain some degree of agglutinaton that was even greater in classical nahuatl.

    • @kenrose2523
      @kenrose2523 Před 2 lety +2

      Which college is that? I don't know if any colleges in my area that even offers such courses. What's even more difficult I can imagine is finding a native speaker that you can continuously communicate with (really that's the fastest way to get used to any language).

    • @eomguel9017
      @eomguel9017 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kenrose2523 It was in UNAM (Mexicós National University). I visited some Nahuatl-speaking communities and manages to hold some basic-level conversations, but without spending longer time immersed in the language and culture, it is very difficult to make significant progress, as you said.

    • @kenrose2523
      @kenrose2523 Před 2 lety

      @@eomguel9017 Excellent to hear, furthermore I assume there's not much of an economy in villages/communities so support yourself while being immersed is also challenging. Nonetheless, if it is one of your passions go for it.
      I myself want to learn Roman Latin for a fanfiction that I'm writing; at least Nahuatl is still somewhat spoken. Where do you find a native speaker for a language as virtually dead? Lol.

  • @scootabean
    @scootabean Před 2 lety

    It really warms my heart that there's been interest in discovering, studying, learning, etc indigenous languages. I have a friend who is learning Cherokee.

  • @mnic86
    @mnic86 Před 2 lety +1

    A fascinating language from a fascinating culture! Well researched!! 👍👍 Great work Paul.

  • @PewPewPlasmagun
    @PewPewPlasmagun Před 2 lety +16

    This tl sound exists as a fricative in Cymru, i.e. Welsh. But it is heavier there. Especially in the north.

    • @Ravenesque
      @Ravenesque Před 2 lety

      I agree! Although the ll is more often heard at the beginning of a word then at the end, maybe?

    • @PewPewPlasmagun
      @PewPewPlasmagun Před 2 lety

      @@Ravenesque I Think so. I did try to learn Welsh for a month. I think Llewellyn is the only word - a name actually - that I know which has ll in the middle. On the other hand Llyn is also a word so that is probably 2 words put togrther.

    • @Ravenesque
      @Ravenesque Před 2 lety

      @@PewPewPlasmagun I need to tell you about a place called Llangollen :)

    • @Ravenesque
      @Ravenesque Před 2 lety +2

      @katerpudy what u are thinking of is just called Llanfairfechan by the locals lol

    • @PewPewPlasmagun
      @PewPewPlasmagun Před 2 lety

      @@Ravenesque Ah! Well be that as it may.

  • @ScoutsManyMarshes
    @ScoutsManyMarshes Před 2 lety +3

    Awesome video! I absolutely agree, Nahuatl is fascinating and surpisingly simple at the same time. I took four semesters of it in Uni. I believe it was a central variety spoken in a couple of villages in the Alto Balsas valley in Guerrero, it did have that glottal stop at the end! My teacher was a Linguist and Anthrolopogist who did several years of field research there (still does I believe). Sadly I'm really rusty since there isn't much use for it here in Germany, but I should definitely try to get back into it!

  • @urielrodriguezavila2084

    He estado esperando este video por años.

  • @camiloestrada2450
    @camiloestrada2450 Před 2 lety +2

    I am from Mexico City. I am learning Nahuatl now. I love it. I love your videos too.

  • @aaronmarks9366
    @aaronmarks9366 Před 2 lety +5

    Thank you for doing a major Indigenous American language, Paul! Hope to see more in the future :)

  • @adrin181
    @adrin181 Před 2 lety +10

    wow, avocado and guacamole come from the same classical nahuatl root? amazing!

  • @jlvargas24
    @jlvargas24 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for the dedicated work that you and your channel do.

    • @Langfocus
      @Langfocus  Před 2 lety +1

      It’s my pleasure. 👍🏻

  • @janhavlis
    @janhavlis Před 2 lety +1

    thnx, very good as usually :-) unknowingly, i used quite some nahuatl grammar features in one of my conlangs. later on, i've met and for 3 yrs worked with a mexican colleague here in czechia (i am chemist) , who was proud of being of indigenous origin, she gave me some source books on nahuatl and let me listen to it. marvelous experience for a language lover 🥰

  • @amjan
    @amjan Před 2 lety +43

    The weirdest thing about the "tl" sound is that it's super easy and intuitive to make. It's the sound that Duffy Duck and Donald Duck characters abused, isn't it? ;)

    • @talideon
      @talideon Před 2 lety +4

      Joking aside, it's even easier than that: it's almost the same sound at you find at the start of "clean", but you substitute a /t/ for the /k/ sound.

    • @amjan
      @amjan Před 2 lety

      @@talideon Now that you say it I realize that the "tl" is actually no unique sound, it's literally just t+l, but slightly less "disciplined" and so slightly different, but not different enough to be considered a different phoneme.
      How swishy it becomes depends largely also on the vowel following it. And if there's none, it kinda falls apart as way. /tlee/ is easy to make sound clead, whereas /tly/ swishes up.

    • @gunjfur8633
      @gunjfur8633 Před 2 lety +4

      @@amjan
      How familiar are you with the IPA?

    • @talideon
      @talideon Před 2 lety

      @@amjan It's more that the unvoiced stop devoices the /l/, which leaves you with a lateral fricative, /ɬ/.

  • @jaymearnao6760
    @jaymearnao6760 Před 2 lety +19

    Negative markers in Nahuatl, "amo" and "mach", are similar to those in Quechua, "ama" and "manan". Words formation are similar in these two languages too, since both are agglutinative and use many independent suffixes.

    • @manuelrazo876
      @manuelrazo876 Před 2 lety +3

      As far as I read almost every indigenous american language is agglutinative.

    • @noncat3218
      @noncat3218 Před 2 lety +1

      Peruvian here.
      In quechua, "ama" is for prohibitions, like:
      *Ama ripunalla haqayta. (Please don't go there. )
      *Ama q'illa. (Don''t lie. )
      *Amataq waqyariwayá. (Don't dare to call me.)
      Meanwhile "mana" basically means no
      *Manapuni / Manapunitaq (Never)
      *Nawa simita rimayta mana atinichu. (I can't speak nawatl language.)
      *Mana, manapunitaq haqayta risaqmi. (No, I won't go there never ever).
      *Mana kawallunchu ushanmi chayqa (That's not a horse, it's a sheep)
      5:06 It's interesting posessives go before the base word. your-WORD [moWORD]
      but in Quechua is WORD-your [WORD(ni)yki]
      mamataytayki (your parents), wasiyki (your house)
      3:32 TL sound sounds tricky to pronounce,,,,,
      13:00 It's interesting to see how loan words changes into different languages. LL is lost?!

    • @jaymearnao6760
      @jaymearnao6760 Před 2 lety +1

      @@noncat3218 , qué variante del Quechua hablas ?

    • @noncat3218
      @noncat3218 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jaymearnao6760 Qullaw (Collao)

  • @danieltetetla1219
    @danieltetetla1219 Před 2 lety +2

    Excelente la atención que le das a los idiomas indígenas. Saludos desde México!

  • @riquemariotto
    @riquemariotto Před 2 lety

    Thank you for all the work you do for me to have this video to watch. Thank you.

  • @shaptile5096
    @shaptile5096 Před 2 lety +31

    I‘d love to see more videos on Native American languages

  • @AnariEvans
    @AnariEvans Před 2 lety +42

    As a Mexican from the central part of Mexico, I've been wanting to learn (central) Náhuatl for a while
    I've met indigenous people who speak it, it is actually very common to find them, selling artesanías, a lot of them even speak English (I live in Morelos, Cuernavaca is somehow touristic)
    I love how it sounds but I also know it is very difficult to learn, now I see why
    I thinks maybe my knowledge of Japanese, Russian and German might help with the weird structure, the way they mix everything and make just "one word"... I can only wonder
    Fortunately they teach Náhuatl at the school where I studied the languages i speak
    I haven't started because I don't feel ready yet 😅

    • @tessacyclone6329
      @tessacyclone6329 Před 2 lety +4

      Do it !

    • @feuersturmfeuersturm2481
      @feuersturmfeuersturm2481 Před 2 lety

      Sería en el CELE? Es bueno?

    • @AnariEvans
      @AnariEvans Před 2 lety +3

      @@feuersturmfeuersturm2481 justo estudié en el CELE, mi experiencia fue con japonés, portugués, italiano y alemán
      Mi profa de japo era mexicana pero fue de la primera generación que aprendió de un profe japonés, los demás eran de sus respectivos países, y los 4 fueron de los mejores profesores que pude tener (lamentablemente el de alemán falleció, las de japo e italiano se jubilaron, la brasileña sigue ahí, creo)
      Sé que enseña ahí un profe de Náhuatl que sabe bastante y que enseña bien, una amiga mía estuvo en clases pero fueron en línea (pinshi pandemia) y dijo que no las disfrutó tanto

    • @chibiromano5631
      @chibiromano5631 Před 2 lety +1

      I'm Otomi from Edo Mex, same langauge background as you. I used Cyrillic to leaern Nahutl and it rapidly improved my ability to leaern so much of it fast. My dad spoke Otomi so I think it helped me learn Russian faster. For some reason Russian was super easy for me, i learned it in like 4 months and I think its because there might be some connection .. Central Russian have haplogroup Q which is the Native American gene, so that could explain, and also the NA DENE langauge family. But Japanese is also included too.
      I'm busy working on Masters program, but after i'm done I will learn Japanese and Tlingit and the Dene langauges.
      Also, Classical Nahuatl is not the pure Nahuatl , its Latanized. The real Nahautl must have sounded like Tlingit.
      Proof is MICHOCAN and MICHIGAN, they both mean the same thing, another weird thing is that Japanese has a word for this same meaning in MIZUMIKAN (lake settleemtn).
      I also know that Turkish has CHAPULTEPEC too , CHAPUL- Grasshopper/Raider TEPEK- Hill.
      Also, in Russia there is a TULA , the russians don't know what it means but it predates Mongol invasion and the Russ. Russia also has SOCHI , Russia which means fields . ..nahuatl has XOCHTLI(sochi) which means flower.
      I think at one time Central Asia was linked to Alaska and British Colombia and Nahuatl were originally from Washington like the Ojibwe and the Hopi.
      Somebody at unam told me that SEATTLE means CE-ATL (ONE RIVER), a reference to the Mizoula flood.
      Se que esto suena muy raro , pero no manches, si empiezas a estudiar Genetico, Lingustica y la historia de la regiones .. hay un historia mas grande de los nos contaron.
      Aedemas de eso Mexico no se convierto en pais Hispanohablante hast la llegada de Lazaro Cardenas.
      En un CENSUS formado por Gustavo Madero en el 1908 , encontraron que 82% de los Mexicanos hablan idiomas indigenas como Nahuatl, Otomi, Zapotec. etc.
      No fue hasta que Lazaro Cardenas hiso escula compulsatoria para los Mexicanos que espanol llego a dominar influenciar nuestras tieras.

    • @feuersturmfeuersturm2481
      @feuersturmfeuersturm2481 Před 2 lety +1

      @@AnariEvans Schön zu wissen, dass mein Vater so nette und interessante Schüler hatte!
      Si tienes tiempo, recomendaría mucho el Náhuatl, se nota que te gustan los idiomas y aprender un idioma lejano al español (como el japonés) siempre es muy interesante, cambia tu forma de expresarte y hasta de pensar. Mucha suerte!

  • @carmennunez2400
    @carmennunez2400 Před 2 lety

    Another fabulous language video!! Thank you!! Keep up the great work👏👏👏👏🧡❤💚

  • @JAFerr-ug9jb
    @JAFerr-ug9jb Před 2 lety +1

    Hi Paul, I just wanted to thank you for making this video! I'm really interested in learning this language, specially because it's native to my country and it's also endangered. So anyway, I really appreciate this video ❤ thank you

  • @kQcsdN8JBUw
    @kQcsdN8JBUw Před 2 lety +12

    I'm really glad you added the "an indigenous language of Mexico", I think many people are nahuacentrist when it comes to indigenous languages from Mexico and let's give credit to all the +60 indigenous languages that are alive in the country

    • @baneofbanes
      @baneofbanes Před 2 lety

      True but isn’t Nahuatl the most populous of the indigenous languages? I’m American so I wouldn’t know for sure but I can’t temper any other one having a few million like Nahuatl.

    • @kQcsdN8JBUw
      @kQcsdN8JBUw Před 2 lety +4

      @@baneofbanes Yes, but is mainly concentrated in specific areas, especially rural towns.
      Let's say that you're an indigenous person from Yucatán, then you probably don't speak nahuatl and you can't even understand it, then someone says that nahuatl is THE indigenous language from Mexico, then you'd probably feel attacked.

    • @baneofbanes
      @baneofbanes Před 2 lety

      @@kQcsdN8JBUw True enough.

  • @CitizenAyellowblue
    @CitizenAyellowblue Před 2 lety +3

    This was really interesting. A language that's really nice to listen to!

  • @memo6783
    @memo6783 Před 2 lety

    Very excited for this video as long time watcher of your channel! A lot of my family are Nahua from northern Morelos and speak a a dialect of Nahuatl spoken in Hueyapan, Morelos. I hope to learn it someday but wow is it difficult to self teach far from home in the US!

  • @tucutaca2010
    @tucutaca2010 Před 2 lety

    Love your videos. I know it'd take a lot of effort but I'd love a more long form type of video where you go into more detail about the language you're speaking about. Keep it up, your videos are amazing

  • @Hellinophilos
    @Hellinophilos Před 2 lety +4

    Thank you for this short introduction to Nahuatl. Much more material is available on classical Nahuatl; it might therefore be a good idea to start by learning the classical variety, with lots of historical texts to read, and then adapt this classical language to the spoken variety of one's choice. Besides, the classical orthography helps to understand historical concepts: Xochitl, cihuatl, teotl....

  • @Vinniflame
    @Vinniflame Před 2 lety +4

    Yay! Another video on my country 🇲🇽! I would love to learn this language but I'd prefer to speak Yucatec. Thanks for this awesome video langfocus!

  • @matthewlee9641
    @matthewlee9641 Před 2 lety +1

    I’ve been waiting for this one!!

  • @Xiuhcoatl_0
    @Xiuhcoatl_0 Před 2 lety +2

    I started Learning this language because I wanted to connect more with my roots and be able to speak a dialect because it's interesting and fun. I hace some far family members that speak mixteco and it sounds really nice.