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Comecrudo |
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Comecrudo is an extinct Comecrudan language of Mexico. The name Comecrudo is Spanish for eat-raw; Carrizo is Spanish for reed.
It was best recorded in a list of 148 words in 1829 by French botanist Jean Louis Berlandier (Berlandier called it Mulato)
(Berlandier et al. 1828–1829). It was spoken on the lower Rio Grande near Reynosa, Tamaulipas, in Mexico. Comecrudo has often
been considered a Coahuiltecan language although most linguists now consider the relationship between them unprovable due
to the lack of information. Comecrudo tribal names were recorded in 1748 (Saldivar 1943): Sepinpacam Perpepug Atanaguaypacam
/ Atanaouajapaca (also known as Atanaguipacane) In 1861, German Adolph published a travelogue with some vocabulary (Adolph
called the language Carrizo) . In 1886, Albert Gatschet recorded vocabulary, sentences, and a text from the descendants (who
were not fluent) of the last Comecrudo speakers near Camargo, Tamaulipas, at Las Prietas . The best of these consultants were
Emiterio, Joaquin, and Andrade. |
Names (more)[en] Comecrudo language[fr] Comecrudo |
Language type : Extinct
Technical notes
This page is providing structured data for the language Comecrudo. |
ISO 639 CodesISO 639-3 : xcmLinked Data URIshttp://lexvo.org/id/iso639-3/xcmhttp://dbpedia.org/resource/ISO_639:xcm More URIs at sameas.org SourcesAuthority documentation for ISO 639 identifier: xcmFreebase ISO 639-3 : xcm GeoNames.org Country Information Publications Office of the European Union Metadata Registry : Countries and Languages |