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I did that, sorry if it broke norms. I thought that since there was no particular discussion, the relevant norm was
WP:BOLD. I still think the move is the right idea, but I am definitely sorry, Infrogmation, if I rained on your yuletide.
So: let's discuss this. First: Infrogmation, do you have a specific opinion about this move, or were you reacting to the improper way it was carried out? If you do think it's a bad idea, please explain why?
Yes, my chief objection and the reason for the revert was due to the fact that there was no discussion here first, and that the previous dicussion above favored the "Yukatek" title. If there is consensus to move it back, I do not object. I request we give it a week to see if anyone else cares to comment; I believe CJLLW who was an important contributor is on an internet break for the hollidays. No need for major apologies, but in the future, explaining the reason for a proposed page move on the talk page and giving time for replies is a good policy (except in the case of an obvious typo). Cheers, --
Infrogmation04:46, 27 December 2006 (UTC)reply
OK. Just in case my new years resolution is "no more wikipedia" I should explain that you didn't totally fix my move, the usage and text over at
Mayan languages still favors Yucatec, so whatever is resolved a week from now should be applied there too. --
Homunq15:58, 27 December 2006 (UTC)reply
I needed to comment on the switch from "Yucatec" to "Yukatek". I studied and speak Yucatec Maya (as a scholar, but not a native speaker). However, I have lived and worked with the Maya people for nearly two decades. And I must say that this Wiki-Meso decision to switch to the modern revisionist Guatemalan spelling is surprising. I fully understand if a linguist would like to "purify" the spellings in their own articles. But for an encyclopedia, isn't the goal not to "break new ground" but to "inform the public"? All modern Yucatec speakers who know how to read or write use the "C" for non-glottalized consonant and the "k" for the glottalized consonant. Yucatec has two non-glottalized consonants, and therefore should be spelled with the letter "C". But, honestly, let's forget the details (which I would gladly provide more of). The hundreds of thousands of Maya who are now going online and getting higher educations... They did not go to the conference in Guatemala where someone decided to re-define how they should write their language. Please remember - their health education pamphlets, their government documents, the signs that tell them about their own past at all archaeological sites, and heck, EVEN THEIR OWN NAMES are written with the standard orthography (C not K in "Yucatan"). To allow such a revision in an encyclopedic resource would be to say that Wikipedia supports the complete revision of their current and living orthography. This is not just an academic issue. It is a cultural issue. Allow Wikipedia to be accessible to all. It is not the proper place for radical revisions of entire languages.
Chunchucmil04:26, 24 December 2006 (UTC)reply
I did not know that the practice was different for Yucatec and that both c and k was used. Now that you say that for Yucatec the k represents the ejective you convince me that although it will be somewhat of a mess to change back all the links we should do it. Do you know anything a bout the orthography used for wastek? I know that it is also not governed by ALMG but that both spellings exist - is there any considerations towards the speakers them selves that would suggest using one over the other?
Maunus04:46, 24 December 2006 (UTC)reply
I can say that the switch was made without the kind of input you're giving here. Based on what you say - and given that I'd bet Yucatec is the language with the highest literacy rate (percentage or absolute) of any of them - I have no reservations in switching it back, and even adding some of this info to the article. --
Homunq05:25, 24 December 2006 (UTC) ps. If you have any other Yucatec perspective to add to the article - particularly the Literature section - that would be great.reply
OK, this change is done. This needs to go into the map and tree, but Madman, I suggest you wait a week to see if anyone squeals. --
Homunq06:08, 24 December 2006 (UTC)reply
You were a little quick to do that Homunq. There are a whole bunch of redirects to the
Yukatek Maya language page I hope you have time to start fixing those as well (I don't at the moment and will not have much time for editing untill after new year). Chunchumil: I hope you will read the article through and add anything you find missing and suggest changes and additions where they may be necessary -TRhe past weeks we have worked towards bettering the page a great deal but the more with a knowledge of Mayan working on the page the better
Maunus06:44, 24 December 2006 (UTC)reply
I hadn't been here for a week - didn't notice until after that the discussion was only hours old. But I fixed the double-redirects, and the article itself (which actually had one "Yukatec" as it was). There are 22 pages that go directly to Yukatek Maya Language and 19 that go directly to Yucatec Maya Language; most of the redirects are Yucatec something not Yukatek something; and Google gives exactly 10 times the hits for Yucatec as for Yukatek (225000 vs 22400); so I feel that this change is not as hasty or as messy as it may have seemed.--
Homunq13:29, 24 December 2006 (UTC)reply
This morning (yes, this is what I'm doing on X-mas eve - my family is rolling their eyes at my stack of books while they watch x-mas movies) I just pulled down all of my books to re-check common usage on Maya spellings, and found a good summary of how I think this project should best proceed. Bear with me... Maya signage and common literature (such as health brochures, religious pamphlets and bibles) do still use the "c" vs "k" convention, as does one of my phrase books, and two colonial dictionaries. However, most of my modern scholarly dictionaries have generally agreed to use the K vs K’ spellings agreed upon in the "Cordemex" (edited by Alfredo Barrera Vasquez), including the latest dictionary published by the University of Yucatan. Now, the question is… which to use in Wikipedia? I personally think the best rationale was put forth in the introduction to John Montgomery’s Maya phrasebook. He uses the new standardized spellings (K and K’) for vocabulary entries, except for all place names and proper nouns. For these, he conforms to the spellings that have dominated the literature for over a century. This same rationale is also expressed in the U. of Yucatan publication (notice they didn’t change the name of their state or their university, just because they revised the spelling of “dog”). Otherwise, we would need to change the names of villages, towns and cities, archaeological sites, and even peoples’ names (which obviously would be extreme).
Thus, I suggest Wikipedia use spellings such as Yucatan and Yucatec Maya and Dzibilchaltun as opposed to the revised Ts’ibilchaltun. Since most of the time Wikipedia authors be using proper nouns as headings (not writing the articles themselves in Maya), revised spellings will not be necessary for most entries. Remember, users will be looking up words in Wiki that they see in other sources like archaeological textbooks and Lonely Planet guide books. These sources have all kept the original orthographic conventions, because they are place names and other proper nouns.
Chunchucmil13:33, 24 December 2006 (UTC)reply
My excuse is that my family is still asleep :) (except my 2-year-old daughter, who is feeding me play-doh tortillas with avocado and salt). I added a note summarizing your analysis above to the writing systems section - if you could add the reference of the U of Yucatan dictionary there, that would be great. --
Homunq14:47, 24 December 2006 (UTC)reply
Yucatec Maya
Regarding the Yukatek, Yucatec or Yucateco definition for this branch of maya language, i propose this line of investigation, in order to *obtain the correct sources of information* related on how to define this sort of maya in a geographically oriented way (mayan itself) and English:
Question: How many language academies exists in the maya world as a whole and how they define Yucatec Maya?
Sorry to butt in, but this is not a good question. The problem is that the word "academy" in English means some kind of generally respected, government supported scholarly organization, while in Spanish "academia" is usually used for a very small private operation, one room that opens to the street, where they hold language classes sometimes, in the evening. And there is no one standard Yucatec maya, from what I understand there are three major dialects that have to use Spanish heavily to understand each other. There is also no consensus about which consonants are glottalized and which are not, much less how to write them. The people I know in Playa del Carmen use apostrophe signs to indicate "glottalization", making no difference between K an C. Also, it seems to me that the word "glottalized" is being used exclusively by people who are unable to pronounce it, because in fact we are talking about three totally different things.
1. Making a little pause after a consonant before starting to pronounce the following vowel. A similar thing exists in English when a word starts with p, t, or k, however, those are aspirated, they come with a puff of air. This is not the case in Maya.
2. Reformulated. This is a little pause between two vowels, then you restart the same vowel again.
3. An upward movement of the stomach at the end of the word.
All these are called "glottalized", but IMHO are totally different things.
142.243.254.224 (
talk)
14:54, 4 November 2010 (UTC)Gilbertreply
Reason: maya is spoken by a lot of people in several geographic locations, each one of them must have their own way to define Yucatecan Maya, Using just the definition of the guatemalan academy isn't accurate and non neutral.
Action: google for mayan academies, email / call them, asking for references and publications about how they define Yucatecan Mayan.
Question: how does English spoken Scholars define this branch of the Mayan Language?
Reason: obvious
Action: Google/email/reading
Sergio Quezada, Papeles y Documentos del Linaje Xiu, 1580-1780, 1996, 175 Págs.
[...]La versión paleográfica de los textos mayas se realizó respetando su ortografía original, las puntuaciones y la división de los párrafos originales. No obstante, modificamos las siguientes grafías que fueron adaptados por los frailes españoles a la fonología maya: ch herida (ch), p herida (p) y c invertida ( ), que representan las fonemas /ch'/, /p'/ y /tz'/ respectivamente, son escritas como: cb', p' y dz. [...]la conjunción maya:
yetel que casi siempre aparece como y herida.
I don't know what herida means in this context. It would be good to mention these forms and show some samples of old Maya text.
The 'reversed c' has been used by just about all authorities and dictionaries for transcription of [ʦ’] in (Yucatec) Maya, from the earliest (Coronel 1620, San Buenaventura 1684, Beltran 1746, the Motul and San Francisco dictionaries, Perez 1866-77) up to and including
Tozzer 1921 (who uses it with a ’ for [ʦ’], and on its own for [ʦ]). Later 20thC and modern works have generally used dz or tz'.
In the context of the above quote, I think "letras heridas" is used in spanish to indicate what might otherwise be termed
fortis or
ejective consonants.
According to Tozzer, Beltran's original 1746 Arte uses z for [s]. In the reproduction of Beltran's Arte on FAMSI linked to above, when Beltran talks about ç (section 10) I think he is explaining why he's chosen z for [s] over the ç which was used by his predecessors San Buenaventura and Coronel( "...pongamos en su lugar la .z. desterrando de nuestro arte dicha .ç."). Modern orthography uses s (and neither z nor ç).
Beltran uses ħ only as part of a digraph, writing tħ for [t’] (modern orthog. t' ) and cħ for [ʧ’] (modern orthog. ch' ). I think the main difference in David Bolles' webpage transcription of Beltran's Arte on FAMSI is the use of dz for the 'reversed c' in the original.
Agree it would be good to have a facsimile img of some Colonial Yucatec text using reversed c, there should be some PD reproductions about someplace. Also agree that it would be great to expand upon the orthographical history in the article, when I or someone else has the chance. For now I'll add in a couple of refs which could be used for the (future) expansion.--
cjllw | TALK05:11, 1 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Hey, nice find, Ptcamn- I should have looked in the obvious place! I see they also have a scan of the 1859 second edition, which Tozzer says mistakenly omitted e and ch from the abcedario- but looking at the 1759 scan, these appear to be missing here as well(?)
We probably could use the IPA symbol for ɔ, although we'd need to enclose it in a {{IPA}} template call so it displays on most folks' systems (without it it doesn't come up on mine). --
cjllw | TALK23:14, 1 February 2007 (UTC)reply
I work for FAMSI, if you need me to ask for image persmissions. However, I suggest separating "orthography" as a new heading, as this is not appropriate for an intro paragraph on Wikipedia
Chunchucmil16:01, 5 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Thanks Chun. I was thinking that maybe we could reproduce an img of a page from Beltran or some other work which illustrates colonial Yucatec orthography. In my non-professional understanding of copyrights I would say that scans of these original works would be in the
Public Domain, and could be used here (with an acknowledgement of the source); however if you're in a position at some point to check with the FAMSI folks to see if there'd be any objections then that would be great.
On your second point, I've begun to rearrange the existing text into appropriate subsections- there is of course plenty more to be added and expanded (whole topic areas are missing), but it's a start which can be further worked on.--
cjllw | TALK00:51, 6 February 2007 (UTC)reply
Hi, I have a copy of Alfred Tozzer's "A Maya Grammar" and I am in the process of placing the verb tables from that book here. It's a work in progress. Let me know if you would like it formatted some other way or if it should be its own page etc. — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Atlatlqueh (
talk •
contribs)
01:31, 19 November 2015 (UTC)reply
This is not a good source for this information, as Tozzers work has been superceded by almost a century of subsequent work. Please use a contemporary source if you want to give a more detailed description of Yucatecan grammar. Examples should also use a contemporary orthography.
·maunus ·
snunɐɯ·02:49, 19 November 2015 (UTC)reply
Glottal stop and typography
Which would be the most appropriate character to use for the glottal stop when using a Maya name in a document?
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The Yucatec Maya language is normally transcribed with 25 phonemes: 20 consonants and 5 vowels. Our section on consonants gives 22. In particular, our article lists ⟨r⟩ and both ⟨j⟩ and ⟨h⟩. I have never seen a source that lists ⟨r⟩ as a letter in Yucatec Maya, and all the sources I have seen use either ⟨j⟩ or ⟨h⟩, but never both. For example, Dictionary Of The Maya Language: As Spoken in Hocabá Yucatan uses ⟨h⟩, but not ⟨j⟩. The
University of Quintana Roo's Diccionario Introductorio uses ⟨j⟩, but not ⟨h⟩. I have not, however, seen the official INALI orthography for Yucatec Maya, which is probably more recent than either of those sources, but frustratingly impossible to locate. The
Spanish version of this article also includes ⟨r⟩, but not ⟨h⟩.
Nosferattus (
talk)
04:19, 22 October 2023 (UTC)reply
According to Ethnologue, The Endangered Languages Project, and the ALMG, Yucatec Maya is spoken in Mexico and Belize. However, the map we are using in the article, which is based on
a map by linguist Danny Law, shows Yucatec Maya in Guatemala, albeit in a remote jungle corner of Guatemala where I'm not even sure anyone lives. Which one is correct?
Nosferattus (
talk)
18:16, 23 October 2023 (UTC)reply