Saltillo
From Fresh Dictionary
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English
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Etymology
From Spanish.
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Noun
saltillo
- In Mexican languages, especially Nahuatl, a glottal stop or fricative sound.
- An apostrophe used to represent this sound.
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Quotations
- 1915: Nahuatl â (saltillo) can be clearly shown to be developed in certain cases from syllabically final -t or -k, ... âSouthern Paiute and Nahuatl - A Study in Utoaztekan, Part II, Edward Sapir, American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 17, No. 2 (Apr.-Jun., 1915)
- 1937: In Aztec the second ultra-short vowel is syncopated, leaving however the glottal consonant or âsaltillo,â ... âThe Origin of Aztec Tl, B.L. Whorf, American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 39, No. 2 (Apr.-Jun., 1937)
- 1960: ... the grave accent for the saltillo, as in tà tli /taËλi/ father; and the circumflex for the âsaltillo finalâ, as in tÄtlî /ta·λiË/ we drink. ... The saltillo of Rincón corresponds to that of Carochi, with the additional information from Rincón that the saltillo âsolamente se halla en la sÃlaba breveâ. â'Accent' in Classical Aztec, William Bright, International Journal of American Linguistics, Vol. 26, No. 1. (Jan. 1960)
- 1993: Third, Whorfâs hypotheses concerning the origin of âsaltilloâ (basically glottal stop) are an important stage in the development of Uto-Aztecan linguistics, and in the study of Nahuatl in particular. âPitch Tone and the "Saltillo" in Modern and Ancient Nahuatl, Lyle Campbell and Frances Karttunen, International Journal of American Linguistics, Vol. 59, No. 2 (Apr., 1993)
- 2005?: The famous "saltillo" is a glottal stop [Ê] in some variants, or a fricative [h] in others, but there are not two separate glottal phonemes. âNahuatl Consonants, David Tuggy [1]
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Spanish
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Etymology
"Little jump", diminutive of salto "a jump", from Latin saltus, from salire "to jump", from Proto-Indo-European *sal-yo-. Related to English sally.
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Noun
- Saltillo.