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Nawat language

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

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Nawat language

Nawat, also known as Náhuat and called Pipil by scholars, is a Nahuan language from Central America. It is the southernmost living language in the big Uto-Aztecan family.

Before the Spanish colonization, many people in parts of today’s El Salvador and Nicaragua spoke Nawat. It was even spoken in some parts of Pacific Guatemala.

Now, Nawat is mostly spoken in western El Salvador. For a long time, it was almost lost. But since 2012, more people have started learning and using it again, helping the language come back. In El Salvador, Nawat was the language of groups such as the Nonualcos, Cuscatlecos, and Izalcos. In Nicaragua, it was the language of the Nicarao people and used for trading in the 1500s. The language has a rich history and is very important to the culture of Central America.

Classification

Nawat, also called Nahuat, Pipil, or Nicarao, is a language spoken in parts of Central America. It belongs to the Uto-Aztecan language family, which includes languages like Nahuatl spoken in Mexico.

Some experts consider Nawat a separate language, while others see it as part of the Nahuatl language group.

Nawat is the southernmost living language in the Uto-Aztecan family. It used to be spoken in places such as El Salvador and Nicaragua, but today it is mostly found in western El Salvador. The language has some special features, like changes in certain sounds compared to other Nahuatl varieties.

Geographic distribution

Nawat, also called Pipil, was once spoken in many parts of Central America. This includes El Salvador, Nicaragua, Guatemala, Honduras, and Costa Rica. Today, it is mostly spoken in western El Salvador. In the past, Nawat was spoken in places like Dolores, Escuintla, and Comapa.

In Nicaragua, about 20,000 people identified as Nahuas in 2022, but the Nawat language there disappeared in the late 1800s. Small groups of Nahuas also live in Costa Rica, especially in Bagaces and other parts of Guanacaste province.

Status and usage

Nawat, also called Náhuat or Pipil, is a language from Central America. It is related to languages spoken in Mexico. In 2012, many online tools helped people learn Nawat. These included video lessons and a Facebook group. Projects worked to save Pipil culture, like traditions and games, to help learners.

Today, Nawat is mostly spoken in western El Salvador. Towns like Cuisnahuat and Santo Domingo de Guzmán are where you can hear it. The number of speakers has gone down, but people are working to keep the language alive. Since the 1990s, small projects have tried to teach Nawat. By 2009, thousands of young people were learning it, giving hope that Nawat will not disappear.

Phonology

Nawat has some unique sounds that make it different from other similar languages. For example, certain sounds change in Nawat compared to Mexican dialects, like turning one sound into another or using a different vowel sound more often.

One special feature is how Nawat uses the sound represented by /t/. This sound can also act like two other sounds in Classical Nahuatl and even a glottal stop at the end of words. This helps experts understand where Nawat fits among related languages. Nawat also combines some repeated consonant sounds into single ones.

Grammar

Main article: Nawat grammar

Nawat has some grammar rules that are different from Classical Nahuatl. For example, it doesn’t use the past prefix “o-” that Classical Nahuatl uses in verbs. Instead, Nawat often adds “-k” or “-ki” to the end of verbs to show past actions. This changes “he wants it” to “he wanted it.”

Nawat also uses special words called articles, such as “ne” for “the” and “se” for “a.” It marks plural nouns by repeating parts of words, a process called reduplication. This happens more often in Nawat than in Classical Nahuatl. Unlike Classical Nahuatl, Nawat uses prepositions instead of postpositions to show relationships between words.

Comparison: Verb
NahuatlNawatNawat example
inflectionmore complexless complex; analytic substituteskuchi nemi katka 'used to stay and sleep'
past prefix o-found in Classical + some dialectsnoki-neki-k 'he wanted it'
ni-kuch-ki 'I slept'
subtractive past formationcommon in Classical + some dialectslimited
past in -kinoyes
perfect in -tuknoyesni-kuch-tuk 'I have slept'
imperfect-ya-tuya (stative)ni-weli-tuya 'I could'
-skia, -tuskia conditionalsnoyesni-takwika-(tu)-skia 'I would sing/I would have sung'
initial prefixes /_Vlose imostly retain iniajsi 'I arrive',
kielkawa 'he forgets it'

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Nawat language, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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