Tzeltal language
Tzeltal or Tseltal is a Mayan language spoken in the Mexican state of Chiapas, mostly in the municipalities of Ocosingo, Altamirano, Huixtán, Tenejapa, Yajalón, Chanal, Sitalá, Amatenango del Valle, Socoltenango, Las Rosas, Chilón, San Juan Cancuc, San Cristóbal de las Casas and Oxchuc. Tzeltal is one of many Mayan languages spoken near this eastern region of Chiapas, including Tzotzil, Chʼol, and Tojolabʼal, among others. There is also a small Tzeltal diaspora in other parts of Mexico and the United States, primarily as a result of unfavorable economic conditions in Chiapas.
The area in which Tzeltal is spoken can be divided in half by an imaginary north-south line; to the west, near Oxchuc, is the ancestral home of the Tzeltal people, predating Spanish colonials, while the eastern portion was settled primarily in the second half of the twentieth century. Partially as a result of these migrations, during which the Tzeltal people and other cultural groups found each other in close proximity, four different dialects of Tzeltal have been described: north, central, south, and southeast, though the southeastern dialect is today spoken only by a few elderly and geographically dispersed speakers. It is a living language with some 371,730 speakers as of 2005, including approximately 50,000 monolinguals.
Overview and current status
Tzeltal forms, together with the Tzotzil language, a branch of the Mayan languages, called Tzeltalan, which in turn forms a branch with the Chʼolan languages called Cholan–Tzeltalan. All these languages are the most spoken Mayan languages in Chiapas today. Historically, the branches are believed to have split about 1,400 years ago. Also, some researchers believe that the Tzeltal language has been spoken as far away as in Guatemala. While Greenberg groups Tzeltal with the proposed Penutian superfamily, this hypothesis is not well attested.The Ethnologue classifies Tzeltal as a 5 out of 10 on its scale of endangerment status, and additionally describes its use as "vigorous." Nevertheless, its usage is almost exclusively oral; schools rarely incorporate Tzeltal materials, and as a result almost everyone under the age of 30 is bilingual in Spanish.
One of the primary differences between the Tzeltalan and the Chʼol languages today is that while the Chʼol languages feature split ergativity, the Tzeltalan languages are fully morphologically ergative.
Tzeltal language programming is carried out by the CDI's radio station XEVFS, broadcasting from Las Margaritas, Chiapas.
In 2013, Pope Francis approved translations of the prayers for Mass and the celebration of sacraments into Tzotzil and Tzeltal. The translations include "the prayers used for Mass, marriage, baptisms, confirmations, confessions, ordinations and the anointing of the sick... Bishop Arizmendi said Oct. 6 that the texts, which took approximately eight years to translate, would be used in his diocese and the neighboring Archdiocese of Tuxtla Gutierrez. Mass has been celebrated in the diocese in recent years with the assistance of translators -- except during homilies -- Bishop Arizmendi said in an article in the newspaper La Jornada.
Phonology
The phonology of Tzeltal is quite straightforward with a common vowel inventory and a typical consonant inventory for Mayan languages. Some phonological processes do occur, however, including assimilation, epenthesis, lenition and reduplication.Vowels
Tzeltal has 5 vowels:Front | Back | |
Unrounded | Rounded | |
Close | ||
Close-mid | ||
Open |
Whether vowel length is phonemic distinctive in Tzeltal is debatable.
Consonants
Tzeltal has 21 consonants, including the glottal stop. Though Tzeltal does not have a standardized orthography, the bolded letters in the chart below represent one orthography heavily derivative of Spanish:has three allophones:
- at the end of a word: early, sapʼ
- between vowels: many, tzopʼol
- everywhere else: road, pʼe
has two allophones:
- when it is the first member of a CC-consonant cluster,
- everywhere else: I feared, ziwon
Phonological processes
When a vowel is found in the context , the vowel is pronounced with creaky voice.Contraction may occur with consecutive identical phonemes, either at a word- or morpheme-boundary. For example, the word /ta aʼtel/ may be pronounced , the two phonemes having been pronounced as one.
The phoneme may undergo a number of processes depending on context and dialect. In most dialects, most notably that of Bachajón, word-final is very light and in rapid speech often disappears entirely if not protected by some other element. For example, in the Bachajón dialect, the nominal root bah in isolation would lose the final and sound like ba, but if the root takes the particle -e, the word will be pronounced . This process does not hold true for word-final . All dialects retain before voiceless consonants. Similarly, medial has disappeared from the Oxchuc dialect but not from the Bachajón dialect, such that yahl and chʼahil in Bachajón would be said yal and chʼail in Oxchuc. Further, in the Oxchuc dialect, an preceding a plain consonant will change the consonant into an ejective stop; thus baht' in Oxchuc corresponds to baht in other dialects.
In the majority of cases, root-initial glottal stop is pronounced, though it is often omitted in orthography. is only lost when the root is closely related to the preceding word. For example, the glottal stop in the particle -ʼix will never be pronounced, because the particle always attaches to the preceding word. The prefix ʼa- sometimes retains the glottal stop, but not when it occurs in a verb form. Similarly, the glottal stop in the particle maʼ has been lost in verbal forms. Thus, words beginning or ending with a vowel and not a glottal stop should be pronounced together with the word preceding or following it. For example, tal ix would sound like .
Root syllable structure and stress
The following is a general list of common root shapes in Tzeltal. For further examples and detail, see section 3.3 below.- VC
- CV
- CVC
- CVhC
- CVʼC
- CCVC.
- CVCV
- CVCVC
- CVhCVC
- CVʼCVC
Stress always falls on the last syllable of a word. If a root takes a suffix or if it follows a particle, the accent falls on the latter. Many Spanish loanwords retain penultimate stress in the Spanish style.
Minimal pairs
Kaufman provides the following list of minimal pairs from "dialects other than that of Aguacatenango," though recall that, for example, is a phoneme in some dialects and does not exist in others.- /p/≠/pʼ/
- */hpís/ and /hpʼís/
- /p/≠/b/
- */spók/ and /sbók/
- /pʼ/≠/b/
- */hpʼál/ and /hbál/
- /b/≠/w/
- */bá/ and /wá/
- /t/≠/tʼ/
- */htúl/ and /htʼúl/
- /ts/≠/tsʼ/
- */stsák/ and /stsʼák/
- /tʃ/≠/tʃʼ/
- */tʃín/ and /tʃʼín/
- /k/≠/kʼ/
- */kúʃ/ and /kʼùʃ/
- /ts/≠/tʃ/
- */tsám/ and /tʃám/
- /s/≠/ʃ/
- */súl/ and /ʃul/
- /t/≠/ts/
- */tám/ /tsám/
- /t/≠/tʃ/
- */tám/ and /tʃám/
- /k/≠/tʃ/
- */kól/ and /tʃól/
- /k/≠/ʔ/
- */sík/ and /síʔ/
- /kʼ/≠/ʔ/
- */hákʼ/ and /háʔ/
- /h/≠/ʔ/
- */hám/ and /ʔám/
- /m/≠/n/
- */stám/ and /stán/
- /l/≠/r/
- */ʃpululét/ and /ʃpururét/
- /i/≠/e/
- */wilél/ and /welél/
- /e/≠/a/
- */htén/ and /htán/
- /a/≠/o/
- */tán/ and /tón/
- /o/≠/u/
- */kót/ and /kút/
- /u/≠/i/
- */yútʃʼ/ and /yítʃʼ/
- /w/≠/u/
- */haláw/ and /snàu/
- /y/≠/i/
- */ʔáy/ and /ʔai/
Morphology
Typology
Tzeltal is an ergative–absolutive language, meaning that the single argument of an intransitive verb takes the same form as the object of a transitive verb, and differently from the subject of a transitive verb. It is also an agglutinative language, which means that words are typically formed by placing affixes on a root, with each affix representing one morpheme. Tzeltal is further classified as a head-marking language, meaning that grammatical marking typically occurs on the heads of phrases, rather than on its modifiers or dependents.Types of morphemes and derivational processes
There are three types of morphemes in Tzeltal: roots, affixes, and clitics. Kaufman distinguishes between roots, from which stems are derived, and stems, which are inflected to form full morphological words. Each root and stem belongs to a class, which determines the ways in which it may be affixed; see the section below for details. Affixes cannot appear alone; they are bound morphemes found only attached to roots and stems, and in Tzeltal are usually suffixes. Derivational affixes turn roots into stems and can change the grammatical category of the root, thought not all roots need to be affixed to become a stem. Inflectional affixes denote syntactic relations, such as agreement, tense, and aspect. Clitics are syntactically and prosodically conditioned morphemes and only occur as satellites to words.In addition to denoting grammatical possession, the suffix -Vl in Tzeltal is highly productive as a means of noun-to-noun, noun-to-adjective, and adjective-to-noun derivation, each exemplified below:
jaʼ →jaʼ-al
lum →lum-il chʼo ; this is a case of noun-to-adjective derivation, as chʼo is modified by the derived adjective lum-il.
lek →lek-il-al
In the case of noun-to-noun derivation, the suffix -il is particularly prominent, often used to produce a noun marked for non-referentiality in cases of interrogation. It is followed by the additional suffix -uk. In the sentence Banti wits-il-uk ay te ja-na e, the word Banti receives these suffixes as it is the thing in question.
In addition to suffixation and prefixation, Tzeltal uses the morphological processes of infixation, reduplication, and compounding to derive words. The only infix is -j-, and only appears in CVC roots, yielding a CVjC root. With a transitive verb, -j derives a passive; compare mak and majk.
Reduplication can only occur with monosyllablic roots, and is typically used with numbers and numeral classifiers. With classifiers, reduplication also entails the insertion of a Vl syllable between the repeated roots. For example, wojkʼ can become wojkʼ-ol-wojkʼ. When a redoubled root takes the suffix -tik, it creates the effect of a distributive plural; thus be becomes be-be-tik. With redoubled adjective roots, -tik attenuates the quality of the verb, such that tsaj becomes tsaj-tsaj-tik.
Compounding is most commonly used to compound a transitive verb with its object, in so doing creating a noun describing the action in question.
pas + na →pasna
pakʼ + waj →pakʼwaj
Stem and root classes
There are six stem classes defined by unique sets of inflectional affixes with which they may occur. The unique set for each stem class may be increased by up to four affixes. Although the total set representing each stem class is unique, certain subsets of affixes are shared by multiple stem classes. Kaufman describes six stem classes, followed by his abbreviations: nouns, adjectives, transitive verbs, intransitive verbs, affect verbs, and inflectible particles. A seventh class, particles, exists but is never inflected; they are radical or derived stems that function as words in syntactic constructions.There are seven classes of roots: noun root, adjective root, transitive verb root, positional verb root, intransitive verb root, inflectible particle root and particle root. When roots function as stems, they belong to the following stem classes : N roots become n stems, A roots become aj stems, T roots become tv stems, P roots become tv stems, I roots become iv stems, Pi roots become ip stems, and Pn roots become p stems.
There is a small set of multivalent stems that may occur with the inflectional affixes of more than one stem class with no change in the morpheme. Kaufman supplies this list, but does not say whether or not it is complete.
- /tʃʼày/ "to lose" or "to be lost"
- /kʼàhkʼ/ "fire" or "hot"
- /kʼòk/ "to cut" or "to be cut"
- /mès/ "broom" or "to sweep"
- /pùl/ "to pour out" or "to gush forth"
- /tùpʼ/ "to put out/extinguish" or "to go out/be extinguished"
- /tʼìm/ "bow" or "to stretch a string"
- /yàk/ "snare" or "to snare"
- /ʔùtʃʼ/ "to drink", "to drink", or "louse"
Typical phonetic shapes of morphemes
The following forms are the most common, in which C represents any consonant, and in which V represents any vowel:
Root class | Phonetic shapes | Example | Translation | Exceptions |
T roots | CV, CVC | /lè, lòʔ/ | "seek," "eat fruit" | /ʔaʔi/ "to hear" |
I roots | CV, CVC, CVhC | /t͡ʃʼì, ʔòt͡ʃ, ʔòht͡s/ | "to grow," "enter," "contract" | |
P roots | CV, CVC | /t͡sʼè, mèl/ | "leaning," "fixed" | |
N roots | Cv, CVC, CVhC, CVCV, CVCVC, CVhCVC, CVʔCVC | /nà, lùm, kʼàhkʼ, páta, wìnik, màhtan, ʔòʔtan/ | "house," "earth," "fire," "guava," "man," "gift," "heart" | /ʔànt͡s/ "woman" |
A roots | CV, CVC, CVCV, CVCVC | /t͡sʼà, bòl, poko, tàkin/ | "bitter," "stupid," "used up," "dry" | |
P roots | CV, CVC, CVCV, CVCVC, CVʔCVC | /to, naʃ, màt͡ʃʼa, kʼàlal, yaʔtik/ | "yet/still," "only," "who," "until," "now" | |
Prefixes | C, VC, CVC | /s, ah, lah/ | "third person," "agent," "plural" | |
Suffixes | C, VC, CVC | /t, et, tik/ | "theme formative," "intransitive," "plural" |
Verbs
verbs include at least a transitive or intransitive theme, one person marker or two, and an aspectual mark. Verbs are also the only part of speech to take aspectual markers. In almost every case, these markers differ between transitive and intransitive verbs, a difference further systematized by the ergative-absolutive case system. Among the affixes shared by both transitive and intransitive verbs are -el, and the lexical aspect suffixes -lay, and -tilay. For example, the verb tam may be affixed to tam-tilay-el, and the verb way can be affixed to way-ulay-el. Transitive verbs marked with -el are interpreted as having passive voice. To create a transitive, active infinitive, the -el suffix is used along with a third-person ergative prefix which must agree with the subject of the verb. Thus, the transitive verb le could be affixed as le-el and as s-le-el. Alternatively, a transitive infinitive can be expressed with the suffix -bel to the verbal theme; notably, these forms are fully inflected for ergative and absolutive cases. Thus the morphemes in j-le-bel-at correspond to -"look for"--.Like many Mayan languages, Tzeltal has affect verbs, which can be thought of as a subcategory of intransitive verbs. They generally function as secondary predicates, with adverbial function in the phrase. In Tzeltal they are often onomatopoeic. Affect verbs have the following characteristics:
1) they have their own derivational morphology ;
2) they take the imperfective prefix x- but never its auxiliary imperfective marker ya, which is usually present with x- for intransitive verbs;
3) they take the same person markers as intransitive verbs, but aspect–tense markers appear only in the imperfective; and
4) they may function as primary or secondary predicates.
For example, the onomatopoeic affect verb tum can function as a primary predicate in describing the beating of one's heart: X-tum-ton nax te jk-otʼan e. As a secondary predicate, an effect verb is typically exhortative, or indicative/descriptive as in the sentence X-kox-lajan y-akan ya x-been.
Tzeltal uses receive, the verb of reception in a kind of periphrastic passive.
Clitics
s appear in one of three places in a clause: in the second position, in the final position, or immediately following the lexical predicate. There are eight second-position clitics, and several can appear on the same word. When multiple second-position clitics appear, they follow the following order:1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
=to | =nax | =nix | =la, =wan, =kati | =ba =me |
For example, the sentences Kichʼoj to and Ma to kichʼoj both use the second-position clitic to.
Certain pairs of second-position clitics may be phonologically altered when appearing consecutively.
First clitic | Second clitic | Compound | Translation |
=nax | =nix | =nanix | "still", emphasizes continuity |
=nix | =wan | =niwan | "might" |
=nix | =bal | =nibal | "same" + interrogative |
=nix | =me | =nime | emphasizes continuity |
The most common final-position clitic is =e. It is typically used in conjunction with the determiner te, though the possible semantic outcomes are numerous and governed by complex rules. The remaining four final-position clitics are all deictic: =a or =aː, =to, =uːk, and =ki.
Finally, the clitic =ix always follows the lexical predicate of a phrase, regardless of the phrase's other constituents. Its signification is similar to those of the Spanish word ya; it is semantically opposed to the clitic =to
Inflection
, typically classified as a subcategory of morphology, describes the ways in which words are modified to express grammatical categories. With regards to verbs it may be called conjugation, and in the case of nouns, pronouns, adjectives and particles it is called declension. In Tzeltal, inflection is most commonly achieved through affixation, though other inflectional processes exist as well.Person marking
The affixes of person marking depend on the case of the verb. In the absolutive case, all person-marking affixes are suffixes:Person | Singular | Plural |
1 | -on | -otik |
2 | -at | -ex |
3 | -Ø | -Ø |
Use of the -ik in the third person plural is optional.
Ergative case is marked with prefixes, each of which has two allomorphs depending on whether the word begins with a vowel or a consonant. Rather than having different prefixes for singular and plural person, the plural is expressed with the addition of a suffix as well as the prefix:
Person | /_C | /_V | Plural |
1 | h- | k- | -tik |
2 | a- | aw- | -ik |
3 | s- | y- | -ik |
Variation between k~hk is characteristic of central Tzeltal. Thought often pre-aspirated, the prevocalic second person ergative form is the sole case of a Tzeltal initial vowel not preceded by a glottal stop. The sets of phrases below demonstrate various combinations of person marking, one with the consonant-initial verb tʼun and the vowel-initial verb il .
i. ya h-tʼun-at I am following you
ii. ya a-tʼun-on You are following me
iii. ya s-tʼun-otik He is following us
iv. ya h-tʼun-tik-0 We are following him
v. ya h-tʼun-tik-at We are following you
vi. ya a-tʼun-otik You are following us or you are following us
vii. ya h-tʼun-tik-ex We are following you
viii. ya a-tʼun-on-ik You are following me
ix. ya s-tʼun-at-ik They are following you
i. ya hk-il-at I see you
ii. ya aw-il-on You see me
iii. ya y-il-otik He sees us
iv. ya hk-il-tik-0 We see him
v. ya hk-il-tik-at We see you
vi. ya aw-il-otik You see us or You see us
vii. ya hk-il-tik-ex We see you
viii. ya aw-il-on-ik You see me
ix. ya y-il-at-ik They see you
Aspect marking
Lacking grammatical tense, Tzeltal makes grammatical aspectual distinctions, using "preverbal auxiliaries" and/or verbal affixes, whereas temporal relations are pragmatically inferred. There are four aspects in Tzeltal: imperfective, perfective, progressive, and perfect. Each aspect is marked differently for transitive and intransitive verbs. Verbs are the only grammatical component able to receive aspect marks in Tzeltal.Imperfective: The imperfective aspect corresponds to an event or action considered as ongoing or unbound. If the action marked as imperfective is understood to be in the present tense, it is generally interpreted as an expression of habit. All verbs can, but do not have to, be marked as imperfective with the auxiliary ya, intransitives further requiring the prefix -x. In the sentence Ya x-weʼ-on " or "I'm going to eat, Ya x- marks the verb weʼ as both imperfective and intransitive, while -on marks both case and person/number. Compare this to the sentence Ya j-naʼ in which the transitive verb -naʼ does not receive -x but instead receives, like all transitive verbs, two person/number markers.
In reality the auxiliary ya is a reduced form of the imperfective marker yak, though variation and conditioning vary greatly across dialects. In the Bachajón dialect it has been morphologically reanalyzed as a prefix, but only when the verb is marked for the second-person ergative. Thus, to say "You know that," speakers from Bachajón may say Ya k-a-naʼ, the -k occurring as a verbal prefix before person/case marker a-, whereas other speakers would prefer Yak a-naʼ. The independence of ya and k in this dialect is shown by the fact that they may be separated by clitics, as in Yato k-a-naʼ. Further, in other dialects ya is commonly reduced to , though not systematically. It is, however, systematically absent after the negation ma.
Perfective: The perfective aspect is used to present an event as bound or completed. Intransitive verbs do not take any markers in the perfective aspect, and an intransitive verb without aspectual markers is unambiguously understood as perfective. Compare the following two sentences, each with the intransitive verb bajtʼ, the first perfective and the second imperfective:
Bajtʼ ta Kʼankujkʼ
Ya x-bajtʼ ta Kʼanjujkʼ
Transitive verbs in the perfective aspect are marked with the auxiliary preverb la ~ laj, the full form laj used in the Oxchuc dialect only when the auxiliary appears alone, as an affirmation. This auxiliary historically comes from the intransitive verb laj. Certain other "aspectual" or movement-oriented verbs, such as tal have similarly become usable as auxiliaries, and when used as such appear without person markers, which appear on the following verb.
Though tense is not morphologically indicated in Tzeltal, the perfective aspect can be used in certain constructions to indicate or suggest location in time. In an independent clause, the perfective verb is almost always understood as having occurred in the past, but can signal either a recent or a distant past. It may correspond to the present tense if the terminating point of the event is understood as the present moment. For example, to announce one's immediate departure, the verb meaning "go" would be marked for the perfective aspect, even though the social circumstances of such a locution would necessitate that the action not yet be complete. Further, the perfective aspect can indicate a past, habitual action, similar to the English "used to" or "would". In this construction, adverbs such as neel may additionally be used for clarity. Lastly, when a perfective clause is topicalized, it may be interpreted as a future factual; in the same context an imperfective clause would be interpreted as a conditional statement, with a lesser degree of factuality and punctuality.
Ya sujtʼ-on tel
, ya x-lokʼ ora te atʼele
In the above two examples, the first perfective and the second imperfective, the bolded portions correspond to respective aspect markers. The following chart briefly summarizes the above. Note that, in cases in which the auxiliary ya disappears, imperfective transitive verbs and perfective intransitive verbs would be marked for aspect in the same way, but recall that the presence of ergative person markers is required for transitive verbs and impossible in the case of intransitive verbs.
Transitive verbs | Intransitive verbs | |
Imperfective | TV | x-IV |
Perfective | la TV | Ø-IV |
Perfect: Not to be confused with the perfective aspect, the perfect aspect generally signals the resultant state of an action or event, similar to participles in English. The perfect aspect is always marked with a suffix, which changes between transitive, intransitive, and passive constructions.
For transitive verbs, the allomorph -oj follows monosyllabic verb stems, while -ej follows polysyllabic verb stems, though the generalization of -oj and subsequent disappearance of -ej seem to be changes in progress. Observe the following two sentences and their translations, the first with the verb ichʼ and the second with the verb tsʼibuy :
K-ichʼ-oj
J-tsʼibuy-ej
Perfect intransitive verbs take the suffix -em, which has an allomorph -en following a labial consonant
Atin-em
Lub-en
While verbs in the passive voice are typically conjugated as intransitive, passives in the perfect aspect do not take the intransitive suffix -em but instead receive a unique suffix, -bil. Thus to translate "He is seen" one would say Il-bil and not Il-ot-em.
Perfect constructions in Tzeltal can also signal a "persistent state," similar to the function described above but without the necessity that the characterization be the result of an action or event. Further, when following the clause-initial predicate ay, it is interpreted experientially. If the transitive verb tiʼ were marked for the perfect aspect in such a construction, it would translate as "Have you ever eaten monkey ?"
Progressive: The progressive aspect typically signals an event or action still occurring when another, more temporally located event took/takes/will take place. It is expressed with the auxiliary yakal or its reduced form yak together with an infinitive verb construction. There are two ways to combine yak with an infinitive. In the first, the subject is marked by an absolutive suffix on the auxiliary, while infinitive is marked by the preposition ta. In the second, which only occurs with inflected transitive infinitives, the auxiliary yak is unmarked while the second verb, still in the infinitive, takes person markers:
1) Yak--ta
- Tulan yak ta okʼ-el te alale
- Yakal j-koltay-bel-at
Syntax
Noun phrases
The following schematic represents the full range of possible elements that may exist in a noun phrase:Determiners and demonstratives: The initial position of the noun phrase may be occupied by either the determiner te, or a demonstrative. They behave like proclitics, phonologically joining the following independent word. Te serves two functions in the noun phrase, as a marker of both definiteness and grammatical topic. In this sense it is similar to the definite articles in French or Spanish. Te is usually used with definite nouns, that is, to reference a contextually identifiable entity or to reference a unique entity. In casual speech, Tzeltal speakers often replace te with i.
There are two demonstratives, the proximal ini ~ in ~ i and the distal me, and both are accompanied by the final-position clitic =to, which serves a deictic function in reinforcing the act of signaling. They are analogous to the demonstratives "this" and "that" in English; for example, Ya j-mulan ini jun =to and Ya j-mulan me jun =to .
Numerals: This position may be occupied by a numeral and classifier, or by a quantifier. Various classifiers exist, each associated with a specific semantic domain. In the absence of a semantically associated classifier, numerals take the general classifier -eb, with the exception of the numeral jun, "one". Quantifiers such as teb or bayal also appear in this position.
Adjectives: One or more adjectives may appear in the position labeled . When the adjective serves an epithetical function, it takes the suffix -Vl, or -Vm with adjectives of color applied to animals, as in the sentence Le way-al aa te j-kojtʼ mukʼ-ul tiʼwal sak-im tsʼiʼ. Nouns can appear in this position when used as a modifier, as in Tunim chij.
Possession: If the noun at the head of the noun phrase is possessed by another noun, the possessor noun immediately follows the possessed noun. Possession takes many complex forms in Tzeltal. Most commonly and simply, it is marked with the prefixes corresponding to transitive verbs marked for ergativity, such that the phrase "John's house" would be expressed as s-na John, or "his-house John".
Order of arguments in a phrase
s occur phrase-initially; non-final position for predicates is an areal feature. The order of arguments in the phrase is variable, but the most frequent order for transitive phrases is VOS. The relationship between arguments and predicates is mediated by the personal ergative and absolutive affixes, one affix occurring for each argument. The systematic appearance of one personal marker per argument means that corresponding arguments need not be realized as noun phrases, but can be implied when corresponding to an unmarked topic. The two following examples illustrate both scenarios:1) La s-tsʼun ixim te h-bankile.
2) La s-tsʼun.
The la marks the verb in the perfective aspect. In both examples, the transitive verb tsʼun takes two personal affixes, the third-person ergative prefix s- and the third-person absolutive, -Ø. In sentence 1, both because of the semantic nature of the verb meaning "sow" and because VOS is the "unmarked" constituent order, we assume that ixim is the object of the verb, and h-bankile the subject. In sentence 2, neither the object nor the subject argument appears as a noun phrase; Tzeltal almost never uses pronouns as unmarked topics. The presence of two affixes completes the meaning of the transitive predicate, without the need, as in English, for separate deictic arguments. Because of this paradigm, a transitive verb with both third-person affixes appearing only with one argument can be ambiguous: La y-il te achʼixe could mean either "The girl saw it/him/her," or "He/she saw the girl," because the noun phrase te achʼixe could be either the subject or object.
However, in the case of passive phrases, the semantic agent may appear unmarked, while the absolutive suffix is preceded by the passive suffix, -ot:
Tiʼ-ot tsʼiʼ te Mikel
With ditransitive verbs, marked with the applicative suffix -b, the indirect object corresponds to an absolutive marker, while the direct object goes unmarked:
La h-man-b-at tumut is marked with the first-person ergative prefix corresponding to "I," and with the second-person ergative suffix corresponding to "you," while tumut
Polian provides the following table showing the relative frequencies of various constituent orders occurring with transitive, active verbs :
Order | Percentage |
VP | 41.6% |
V | 23.5% |
VA | 14.5% |
VPA | 7.7% |
AVP | 4.5% |
PV | 3.6% |
AV | 3.2% |
VAP | 0.9% |
PVA | 0.4% |
total | 100% |
As the three most frequent constructions omit at least one verbal argument, it can be said that Tzeltal speakers prefer to omit arguments if they are evident from context.
Information structure, topicalization, and focalization
Though there is minor disagreement among linguists as to the placement of post-verbal noun phrases, the most recent studies suggest that information structure is the principal factor in determining their order; with few exceptions, noun phrases are arranged in order from the most focalized to the most topicalized. In short, if the semantic agent is the more topicalized element, active voice constructions will take the order VPA, while passive voice constructions take the order Vpas.AP. If the subject is not the more topicalized element, then the active voice will take the form VAP and the passive voice will take the form Vpas.PA.Both the focus and topic of a phrase can be syntactically expressed with non-verb-initial constructions, though these occur usually as a means to emphasize information rather than as a preferred construction. To topicalize the semantic active/subject, an AVP order is used, with the determinant-clitic circumfix te...=e around both the A and P elements. To focalize the subject, the same AVP order is used, except that the determinant circumfix is absent on the A element. To focalize the object, PVA order is used, with the A element circumfixed with te...=e and with P unaffixed. If the subject is topicalized and the object is focalized, an APV order is used, with A circumfixed and P unaffixed. Though these are not the only possible orders, it is clear that a focalized element occurring before a verb does not take the determinant te....
Topic: As was stated above, the more topicalized an element is, the more likely it is to be distanced from the predicate. Topic can be morphologically marked in a number of ways. Topicalized elements in the initial position can optionally be preceded by the particle in, followed by the determinant te or by a demonstrative:
te k-ijtsʼine tal my little brother came.
Further, the particle jaʼ may also be used to mark topicalization, also phrase-initially: te k-ijtsʼine tal my little brother came. If jaʼ is marking a change in topic within a discourse, it is immediately followed by the adverb xan, often reduced in casual speech to jaʼan, jan or even an.
To mark a contrastive topic, as in the English sentence "Michael I saw, but John I did not," yan appears before the contrastive topic, along with the pronoun -tukel: Te Petule, la jk-il; yan te Mikele, ma chiknaj s-tukel.
Focus': Focus in Tzeltal behaves such that noun phrases are more or less focalized depending on their degree of predictability in a given context; noun phrases that are more surprising or unexpected in a given context will be said to be more marked for focus that those which are expected.