Category
page 2Mesoamerican languages
Cuitlatec
language
Chichimeca Jonaz
language
Oluta Popoluca
language
Mesoamerican language area
sprachbund containing many of the languages natively spoken in the cultural area of Mesoamerica
Mixe
language family belonging to the Mixe–Zoque indigenous language family from southern Mexico
Matlatzinca
group of languages spoken in central Mexico
Tepecano
language
Tepehuán
language
Tlahuica
indigenous language of Mexico
Chiapanec
language
Sierra Popoluca
language
Alagüilac
language
Mexicanero
language
Zapotecan
language family
Corachol
group of Mesoamerican languages within the Uto-Aztecan language family
Texistepec Popoluca
language
Chiapas Zoque
language
Huehuetla Tepehua
language
Subtiaba
extinct Oto-Manguean language
Misantla Totonac
language
Chimalapa Zoque
language
Macro-Mayan
proposal linking the clearly established Mayan family with neighboring families that show similarities to Mayan
Tapachultec
language
Guerrero Amuzgo
language
Totozoquean
proposed language family of eastern Mexico
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 Feldman (1975), largely based on unpublished notes of Nicholas Helmuth conserved in the American Philosophical Society, concludes that Toquegua is a Chʼol Mayan-related language.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