Arte de la lengua mexicana con la declaración de los adverbios della
The Arte de la lengua mexicana con la declaración de los adverbios della is a grammar of the Nahuatl language in Spanish by Jesuit grammarian Horacio Carochi. This classic work on the Classical Nahuatl language is now considered by linguists to be the finest and most useful of the many extant early grammars of Nahuatl.
Author | Horacio Carochi |
---|---|
Language | Spanish |
Subject | Nahuatl language |
Publisher | Juan Ruyz |
Publication date | 1645 |
Publication place | Mexico |
Carochi had an acute understanding of the Nahuatl language and was the first grammarian to understand and propose a consistent transcription of several phenomena in Nahuatl phonology, especially vowel length and the saltillo (glottal stop). His art was seen as important soon after its elaboration and already in 1759 a version called "compendio del arte ..." re-edited by Fray Ignacio Paredes was prepared and reprinted. This version which has been reprinted many times since, however, lacks most of the virtues of the original work.[citation needed]
The 1754 Nahuatl grammar Arte de la lengua mexicana is considered particularly derivative of Carochi's work.[1][2]
In 2001 it was published as "Grammar of the Mexican language: with an explanation of its adverbs" in an edition where the Spanish paleographic version appears side-by-side with an English translation by James Lockhart.[citation needed]
Notes
edit- ^ Schwaller, John Frederick (1973). "A Catalogue of Pre-1840 Nahuatl Works Held by The Lilly Library". The Indiana University Bookman. 11: 69–88.
- ^ Launey, Michel (1986). "Catégories et opérations dans la grammaire Nahuatl". Archived from the original on 2015-08-04. Retrieved 2017-04-06.
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References
edit- 1759. "Compendio del arte de la lengua mexicana, dispuesto . . ." por el P. Ignacio de Paredes. (Edicion facsimilar de la de 1759, Mexico, Editorial Innovacion, S.A., 1979, 206 p.). Mexico: .
- 2001 "Grammar of the Mexican Language: With an Explanation of Its Adverbs" (1645) Horacio Carochi, James Lockhart (Translator), Stanford University Press.