Quinigua language

Quinigua is an extinct language that was spoken in northeastern Mexico. Quinigua was spoken between the Sierra Madre Oriental and the Sierra Tamaulipa la Nueva, and between the Rio Grande and the Rio del Pilón Grande.[1] It has no apparent relatives and remains unclassified.

Quinigua
RegionNE Mexico
Extinct(date missing)
unclassified
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
Glottologquin1252
The location of Quinigua relative to Tamaulipas state

Classification

Gursky (1964) notes that Quinigua is highly different from its neighbors such as Coahuilteco, but observes some limited similarities with "Hokan-Coahuiltecan languages" such as Comecrudan and Yuman languages.[1]

Vocabulary

A vocabulary list of Quinigua is documented in del Hoyo (1960).[2] Gursky (1964) has selected and retranscribed some of del Hoyo's (1960) vocabulary, reproduced below.[1]

glossQuinigua
beanmina
broadpatama
deepsarak
deermau
dogkarama
duckamakia
earthama
eatama, anama; ka(ene)
fishama, ami; ka
foot (of deer)boi
foreheadniapin
gowame, wan (?)
greatya; ki
headkai
hillagu, ayu; imi
javali, hogamoka
manykai, ki
rabbitkun
rainpaak
red (or black)pan, pa
reedaki, xi
rockpixa
tail (of deer)apino
thickta
tobaccoaxo
treeana
waterka, kwa, wa

References

  1. Gursky, Karl-Heinz (October 1964). "The Linguistic Position of the Quinigua Indians". International Journal of American Linguistics. The University of Chicago Press. 30 (4): 325–327. doi:10.1086/464792. JSTOR 1263527. S2CID 143736051.
  2. del Hoyo, Eugenio. 1960. Vocablos de la Lengua Quinigua de los Indios Borrados del Noreste de México. Anuario del Centro de Estudios Humanisticos, Universidad de Nuevo León 1. 489-515.
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