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  2. Nahuatl language in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahuatl_language_in_the...

    The Nahuatl language in the United States is spoken primarily by Mexican immigrants from indigenous communities and Chicanos who study and speak Nahuatl as L2. Despite the fact that there is no official census of the language in the North American country, it is estimated that there are around 140,800 Nahuatl speakers.

  3. Nahuas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahuas

    64.3% of Nahuatl speakers are literate in Spanish compared with the national average of 97.5% for Spanish literacy. Male Nahuatl speakers have 9.8 years of education on average and women 10.1, compared with the 13.6 and 14.1 years that are the national averages for men and women, respectively. [25]

  4. Aztecs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aztecs

    The Nahuatl language is today spoken by 1.5 million people, mostly in mountainous areas in the states of central Mexico. Mexican Spanish today incorporates hundreds of loans from Nahuatl, and many of these words have passed into general Spanish use, and further into other world languages. [177] [178] [179]

  5. Nahuan languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahuan_languages

    Until the middle of the 20th century, scholarship on Nahuan languages was limited almost entirely to the literary language that existed approximately 1540–1770 (which is now known as Classical Nahuatl, although the descriptor "classical" was never used until the 20th century [7]). Since the 1930s, there have appeared several grammars of ...

  6. Nahuatl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nahuatl

    The language is now called mexicano by many of its native speakers, a term dating to the early colonial period and usually pronounced the Spanish way, with or rather than . [33] [36] Many Nahuatl speakers refer to their language with a cognate derived from mācēhualli, the Nahuatl word for 'commoner'. [33]

  7. Nawat language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nawat_language

    Nawat (academically Pipil, also known as Nahuat) is a Nahuan language native to Central America.It is the southernmost extant member of the Uto-Aztecan family. [9] Before Spanish colonization it was spoken in several parts of present-day Central America, most notably El Salvador and Nicaragua, but now is mostly confined to western El Salvador. [3]

  8. Indigenous languages of the Americas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indigenous_languages_of...

    In the United States, 372,000 people reported speaking an Indigenous language at home in the 2010 census. [5] In Canada, 133,000 people reported speaking an Indigenous language at home in the 2011 census. [6] In Greenland, about 90% of the population speaks Greenlandic, the most widely spoken Eskaleut language.

  9. Mexico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexico

    It is estimated that around 8.3 million citizens speak these languages, [275] with Nahuatl being the most widely spoken by more than 1.7 million, followed by Yucatec Maya used daily by nearly 850,000 people. Tzeltal and Tzotzil, two other Mayan languages, are spoken by around half a million people each, primarily in the southern state of ...