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Nahuatl Translation Services
Verbatim Solutions provides professional, high quality Nahuatl to English translations and English to Nahuatl translations. Our Nahuatl translation services will help you maximize your global strategy.
Native Speaking Nahuatl Translators
Verbatim Solutions Nahuatl translation teams are professional linguists performing translation from English to Nahuatl and Nahuatl to English for a variety of documents in various industries including:
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Nahuatl is a
language spoken by many of the native people, including the Aztecs,
in what is now Mexico. It is still the most important Indian language
in the country. Its 1.5 million speakers live mainly in the states of
Puebla, Veracruz, Hidalgo, and Guerrero. Almost all but the most
elderly speakers of Nahuatl are professional, having a working
knowledge of the Spanish language. In general, modern Nahuatl shows
strong influences from Spanish.
Nahuatl belongs to the
Uto-Aztecan language family, which also includes the languages spoken
by the Comanche, Pima, Shoshone, Toltecs and other tribes of western
North America. It is an agglutinative, flexive language. In Nahuatl
there is no fixed difference between phrases or words, there are no
infinitives, and no proper pronouns. There is no word for "I",
instead one refers to oneself as "my skin".
Nahuatl
has been described as a language that is pure etymology. A Nahuatl
word always consists of a prefix, then several root concepts, and a
suffix. One can put as many root concepts, each one a syllable, as
necessary, so some Nahuatl words are very long. It means also, that
words can be created on the fly.
Nahuatl words adopted into
English include "avocado", "axolotl",
"chocolate", "coyote", "ocelot",
"peyote", and "tomato".
At the time of
the Spanish conquest, Aztec writing used mostly pictographs
supplemented with a few ideograms. This was adequate for keeping such
records as genealogies, astronomical information, and tribute lists,
but could not represent a full vocabulary of spoken language in the
way that the writing systems of the old world or of the Maya
civilization do. The Spanish introduced the Roman script and recorded
a large body of Aztec prose and poetry. Thus, Nahuatl written in
Roman script is pronounced as if it were Spanish with a few
exceptions.
Words are stressed on the second-to-the-last vowel
(excluding U)
U does not occur as an independent vowel.
X is
pronounced like English SH.
LL is pronounced like a long L.
TL
counts as a single consonant, never as a full syllable.
TL is, in
linguistic terms, a lateral affricate. This is a type of sound found
in very few European languages (Welsh being the exception) but
commonly found in North and Central American indigenous languages.
CU and UC are both pronounced KW.
HU and UH are both
pronounced W.
H without an adjacent U represents a glottal stop
(as in "kitten" in some dialects or "go over")
Z
is pronounced like English S (as in Mexican, but not European,
Spanish).
Before the conquest, there existed differences
between the Nahuatl of the people, and the Nahuatl of the upper
classes. The upper classes had created an esoteric language; for
example, the word Aztlan means "the place of the storks".
But Stork means "white", and white means "the origin",
so in the language of the upper classes, Aztlan means "the place
of origin". This has complicated the translation of the
surviving Aztec writings.
Since the time of the Spanish
conquest the spelling of Nahuatl has varied considerably.
U and O
both represent the sound of O.
U alone may replace UH or HU to
represent the sound of W.
H representing the glottal stop may or
may not be written.
Vowel length may or may not be marked.
Y
and I may both represent the vowel I.
I may replace the consonant
Y.
The letter Ç may replace Z to represent the sound of S.
Recently, US linguists working with modern Nahuatl have
sometimes preferred spellings that look more like English. Thus:
W
may replace HU or UH for the sound of W.
K may replace QU/C for
the sound of K.
S may replace Z/Ç for the sound of S.
In
some unusual cases, non-ASCII symbols are used for TL, CH, CU/UC, and
TZ to stress that these are single consonants, not compounds.
