Category
page 1Mayan languages
Mayan
language family spoken in Mesoamerica
Yucatec Maya
Mayan language spoken in the Yucatán Peninsula
Mayan hieroglyphs
writing system of the Maya civilization
K’iche’
Mayan language spoken by the K'iche' people
Kaqchikel
Mesoamerican language
Achi
language
Q’eqchi’
language
Tzeltal
language
Tzotzil
language
Ch’ol
Mayan language of Chiapas, Mexico
Q’anjob’al
language
Chuj
Mayan language
Classic Maya
oldest attested Mayan language family member
Mam
Mayan language
Ch’orti’
Mayan language
Ixil
language
Lacandon
language
Tz’utujil
language
Teenek
language
Itza’
language
Mopan Maya
language
Sakapultek
language
Awakatek
language
Sipakapa
language
Akateko
language
Jakaltek
Mayan language of Mexico and Guatemala spoken by the Jakaltek people
Chontal Maya
Maya language of Tabasco, Mexico
Uspantek
Mayan language
Poqomam
language
Tektitek
language
Poqomchi'
Mayan language
Tojolab'al
language
Mocho’
Mayan language
Proto-Mayan
Common ancestor of the 30 living Mayan languages
Chicomuceltec
Extinct Mayan language of southeastern Mexico
Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala
Ch’olti’
extinct language
Ꜭ
Cuatrillo (capital: Ꜭ, small: ꜭ) (Spanish for "little four") is a letter of several colonial Mayan alphabets in the Latin script that is based on the digit 4. It was invented by a Franciscan friar, Alonso de la Parra, in the 16th century to represent the velar ejective consonant found in Mayan languages, and is known as one of the Parra letters.
Classical K'iche'
language
Ꜫ
letter of several colonial Mayan alphabets in the Latin script, based on the digit 3
Yucatecan
subgroup of Mayan languages
Quichean
subgroup of Maya languages
list of Mayan languages
Wikimedia list article
Q'anjobalan
Western Mayan language
Mamean
branch of Mayan languages
Toquegua
Toquegua may be the name of a group of people, and a language, spoken along the Atlantic coast of Guatemala and Honduras from the area around the mouth of the Golfo Dulce to the Ulúa River in Honduras. It is also an elite Indigenous family surname in colonial Honduras, and a place name in the Motagua river valley in 1536. Feldman (1975), largely based on unpublished notes of Nicholas Helmuth conserved in the American Philosophical Society, concludes that Toquegua is a Chʼol Mayan-related language. Sheptak (2007) contests that identification and concludes the people referred to as the Toquegua