Atatláhuca–San Miguel Mixtec | |
---|---|
Native to | Mexico |
Region | Oaxaca, Guerrero |
Native speakers | (28,000 cited 1995–2010) [1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Variously:
mib – Atatláhuca
mdv – Santa Lucía Monteverde
mce – Itundujía
mpm – Yosondúa
mig – San Miguel el Grande
xtj – San Juan Teita
xtl – Tijaltepec
xti – Sinicahua
xtt – Tacahua (Yolotepec) |
Glottolog |
west2824 partial match |
ELP | Western Alta Mixtec (partial match) |
Atatláhuca–San Miguel Mixtec is a diverse Mixtec language of Oaxaca.
Egland & Bartholomew [2] found six dialects (with > ≈80% internal intelligibility) which had about 70% mutual intelligibility with each other:
Ethnologue notes that two additional varieties Egland & Bartholomew had not looked at, Sinicahua [xti] and Tijaltepec [xtl], are about as similar.
Atatláhuca–San Miguel Mixtec | |
---|---|
Native to | Mexico |
Region | Oaxaca, Guerrero |
Native speakers | (28,000 cited 1995–2010) [1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Variously:
mib – Atatláhuca
mdv – Santa Lucía Monteverde
mce – Itundujía
mpm – Yosondúa
mig – San Miguel el Grande
xtj – San Juan Teita
xtl – Tijaltepec
xti – Sinicahua
xtt – Tacahua (Yolotepec) |
Glottolog |
west2824 partial match |
ELP | Western Alta Mixtec (partial match) |
Atatláhuca–San Miguel Mixtec is a diverse Mixtec language of Oaxaca.
Egland & Bartholomew [2] found six dialects (with > ≈80% internal intelligibility) which had about 70% mutual intelligibility with each other:
Ethnologue notes that two additional varieties Egland & Bartholomew had not looked at, Sinicahua [xti] and Tijaltepec [xtl], are about as similar.