K'iche' language

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For other uses, see Quiché (disambiguation).
Quiché
K'iche' 
Pronunciation: /kʼiʧeʔ/
Spoken in: Guatemala 
Region: Central highlands
Total speakers: approx. 1,000,000
Language family: Mayan
 Quichean-Mamean
  Greater Quichean
   Quichean
    Quiché-Achi
     Quiché
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: myn
ISO 639-3: variously:
quc — Central Quiché
cun — Cunén Quiché
quu — Eastern Quiché
quj — Joyabaj Quiché
qxi — San Andrés Quiché
qut — West Central Quiché

The K'iche' language (Quiché in Spanish) is a part of the Mayan language family. It is spoken by many K'iche' people in the central highlands of Guatemala. With close to a million speakers (some 7% of Guatemala's population), it is the second most widely spoken language in the country after Spanish. Most speakers of K'iche' also have at least a working knowledge of Spanish except in some isolated rural villages. One of the notable speakers of the Quiché language is Rigoberta Menchu.

There is substantial dialectal variation, and the main dialects are sometimes considered to be separate languages. Most speakers use Central K'iche', which is the most commonly used in the media and education. Other dialects include West Central K'iche', San Andrés Quiché, Joyabaj K'iche', Eastern K'iche', Nahualá K'iche' and Cunén K'iche'. Although it has no official status in Guatemala and the first-language literacy rate is low, K'iche' is increasingly taught in schools and used on radio.

The most famous work in the Classical Quiché language is the Popol Vuh (Pop Wuj in modern spelling).

Contents

[a] open front unrounded vowel a
[ə] mid centre unrounded vowel ä
[ɛ] close-mid front unrounded vowel e
[i] close front unrounded vowel i
[o] close-mid back rounded vowel o
[u] close back rounded vowel u

  Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
  plain implosive plain ejective plain ejective plain ejective plain ejective plain
Nasals   m  [m]   n  [n]     nh  [ŋ]    
Plosive p  [p] b'  [ɓ] t   [t] t'  [t']   k  [k] k'  [k'] q  [q] q'  [q']  '   [ʔ]
Affricate   tz  [ʦ] tz'  [ʦ’] ch  [ʧ] ch'  [ʧ’]          
Fricative   s  [s] x  [ʃ]   j  [χ] h  [h]
Rhotic   r  [r]        
Approximant   l  [l]    y  [j]   w  [w]    

Historically different orthographies have been used to transliterate the K'iche' language. The classic orthography of Father Ximénez who wrote down the Popol Wuj is based on the Spanish orthography and has been replaced by a new standardized orthography defined by the ALMG (Academia de las Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala). Ethnohistorian and Mayanist Dennis Tedlock uses his own transliteration system completely different from any of the established orthographies, but this system will not be given here.

The first line of Popol Wuj in different orthographies:
Ximénez's classical orthography Are v xe tzíh varal Quíche ubí.
ALMG orthography Are’ uxe’ ojer tzij waral K’iche’ ub’i’.
(Ximénez's Spanish translation) Este es el principio de las antiguas historias aquí en el Quiché.
(Tedlock's English translation) "This is the beginning of the ancient word, here in the place called Quiché."

Quiché uses subject-verb-object (SVO) order, unlike most Mayan languages, which are verb-initial. Variation in word order is not uncommon, and some modern speakers do also use VSO order.

The Nahualá dialect of K'iche' shows some differences from other K'iche' dialects: Nahualá’s local dialect preserves an ancient Proto-Mayan distinction between five long vowels (aa, ee, ii, oo, uu) and five short vowels (a, e, i, o , u). It is for this conservative linguistic feature that Guatemalan and foreign linguists have actively sought to have the language called "K'ichee'," rather than K'iche' or Quiché.

Unlike the most prominent K'ichee' dialects, the Nahualá dialect of K'ichee' also has a phoneme /h/ and a phoneme /N/, both of which occur only at the ends of words, almost exclusively after short vowels. Linguists have established firmly that the /h/ is a reflex of a proto-Mayan */h/. Linguists have not thoroughly investigated the origin of the /N/ phoneme, which occurs only in a few words.

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