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Maya or Mayans? Comment on Correct Terminology and Spellings On the Misuse of the word "Mayan" as an Advjective: Civilization, Maya Calendars, Maya Hieroglyphs ...

The word "Mayan" is often misused in English, especially in popular media but even by anthropologists on occasion. The fact Is OSEA right for me? of the matter is that there are few complications to the correct usage that even well informed scholars can trip up on. For What is Ethnography? example, here is one semi-scholarly website that sort of uses the words Maya and Mayan correctly but mostly uses Mayan What is Field Study? incorrectly as an for things that are not . What is Heritage? OSEA FAQs It is not correctly used as an adjective to name the cultural objects such as calendar, hieroglyphs, civilization, society, peoples, etc. that are associated with Maya people, culture or civilization. The word Maya is a but also an adjective, Student Experience that is, a qualifier, that is used to name things that belong to the Maya culture. Student Success Student Projects Maya is the correct word to use as the adjective in noun phrases such as: Maya culture, , (s), Student Conference Maya hieroglyphs, Maya , , Maya pyramids, , Maya ritual, , Maya food, Student Testimonies Maya hairstyle, Maya clothing, Maya folklore, Maya heritage, and so on.

Immersion Learning Maya There is only one exception to this rule, which in turn has one exception. This is the first complication: Mayan is (mostly) Maya Coursework and Credits always used (instead of Maya) to refer to the that Maya and Mayans speak or spoke. Mayan language is the most Maya Language Resources generally correct form but Maya language has a very specific meaning as the proper name of one Mayan language. FLAS Grants to Study Maya ______

Maya or Mayan Language? "Mayan" has four primary, correct uses. First, it is the proper name of a -- the Mayan language family. The Mayan language family is completely separate linguistic family from other languages in hemisphere. Second, it is the technical name given by linguists to identity the 29-32 or languages that comprise this grouping of sociohistorically and genetically related languages. The exact number of languages is a question due to linguistic debates and the politics of how minority languages are defined by nation states and by their speakers. The third correct use of Mayan is to reference the proper name of the ur-language or origin/source language -- i.e., Proto-Mayan -- from which all those other languages are historically derived. This is a "reconstructed" language that linguists seek to establish based phonological, lexical, and other criteria. Fourth, Mayan is used as an ascribed term of identitification by which outsiders reference speakers of a Mayan language. Similarly, English speakers can be identified as Germanic speakers and as Indo-Europeans because the language they speak, English, is part of the Germanic branch of the Indo-European language family; as well, English speakers do not OSEA on Facebook itentify as Indo-European because this is not a sociocultural, ethnic, racial, or national identity. Escuela Abierta de Etno. y Antro. OSEA Photos on Facebook In these four instances, the word Mayan is an ascribed label, that is, it is a name given by linguists. These uses of Mayan are OSEA Image Galleries not terms of self-identity for the most part of the 19th and 20th centuries. There is a major sociohistorical exception to this OSEA YouTube Videos point that began to emerge in the aftermath of the (1960 to 1996) that is discussed below.

OSEA Publications The use of these words suddenly gets complicated, however. There is one Mayan language whose proper name is "Maya"! OSEA Online Library The native speakers of Yucatec Maya call their language Maya. Maya is the correct proper name of the language that they OSEA News & Updates speak. Ethics and Human Subjects Maya however is commonly called "Yucatec Maya" by linguists (especially North Americans but not by Mexicans) to distinguish it from the other 29-32 or so spoken in , , , and . These other Mayan languages each have their own distinct proper name. Just as languages that comprise the European language family are known by their proper names; for example, German, English, Dutch. Similarly, Tzotzil and Tzeltal are two Mayan languages spoken in highland . In Guatemala, Mayan languages include Kekchi, Kiche, Kaqchiquel, , and Jakaltec. The language called Maya is spoken primarily in Mexico, in the states of , Yucatán, and ; these three states comprise the geographic region known as the Yucatan Peninsula.

These MAYAN languages have their own individual name. For example, Q'ekchi, Pokom, Jakaltec, Tzotzil, Tzeltal, Mam, Huastec are all Mayan languages. Thus to refer to these languages as Mayan is like calling the French language, "European" or "Romance". Similarly to call Maya "Mayan" is not incorrect or technically wrong. but it is rather an inappropriate way to speak unless one is in fact referring to the facts about this language belonging to the Mayan language family. Here is one scholarly website where the word Mayan is incorrectly used to refer to the one Mayan language that is correctly identified by its proper name as Maya.

______Maya or Yucatec Maya? The Maya are called Maya. The speakers of the language called Maya are Maya. This is their proper name. To call them the "Yucatec Maya" is not appropriate despite more than a century of anthropological conventions of calling them by this name. To use "Yucatec Maya" to refer to the Maya is to use the scientific-technical name of the language spoken by that people as the name of the itself. It is not a little denigrative to use this term as it effectively puts a people in a museum display case as a lab microscope.

"Yucatec Maya" is not equivalent to labels such as, Italian American, Texan American, or African American, which are terms of identity, even self-identity. To use Yucatec Maya in this way would be to ascribe this identity to the those people who call themselves simply Maya. Thus it actually would be equivalent to calling African Americans "Ebonic Americans" because such people speak a linguistic of English ("Black English"). In both cases, this would be inappropriate.

Further, "Yucatec Maya" is therefore not equivalent to phrases such as "Texan American" if it is used identify a group of people by their shared geographic location in a place, in this case a place called Texas. It seems like it is the same kind of label if Texan American is used as a racial-ethnic label to refer to the ethnic group derived from the white-German descended immigrants that came from the Mid-East states like Ohio to colonize Texas in the mid-19th century; and therefore to use this label as a means to distinguish from the African Americans, Mexicans and Mexican Americans who are ALSO Texan Americans in the geographic, as well as social, political, and historical senses. But, actually neither Texan American nor Yucatec Maya are very appropriate terms to use in this sense.

What is the Plural of Maya? Maya! Maya is singular and plural when refering to people or persons who are Maya speakers. In other words, do not add an "s" to make the plural: *"Mayas" is incorrect.

Thus: "Juan is Maya." And: "Those Maya over there are waiting in line to see ."

Note, however, that "Mayan" which is an English word must have an "s" added to make the plural. Thus, Mayan speakers of languages such as K'iche, Mam, Tzotzil, etc. are Mayans. More on this below, however.

The use of Maya in singular and plural had been the established tradition in the US for most of the 20th century. However, some time in the 1980s or 90s, a new generation of US authors and editors at university presses began to use *"Mayas" to form the plural in written academic publications. This most likely resulted from proofreaders who adhered to English rules without having any knowledge of the history of words and accepted usage. This may also be a borrowing of conventions that are found in Spanish and in Maya. In both of these languages, Maya can take the plural marker as a way to emphasize the plurality of the peoples who are identified as Maya: "los mayas" "le maya'o'obo".

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Doña Pil is Maya vs Don Eraclio is a Maya Both of these sentences are correct usage but they mean different things. Whats the difference? The first sentence references Doña Pil by a proper name of identity, "Maya." This sentence presupposes an unquestioned shared assumption of who and what are Maya; thereby implies that the identity is a (cultural or social) identification. To say, "Juan is Maya" is therefore to highlight that "Maya" is his identity (self-recognized or ascribed by outsiders).

The second case is a bit more complicated. Here, "Maya" is a qualifier that identifies a specific class or type of a broader category that remains unstated and implicit. This is most likely "Indian" (a racial-ethnic category) and less often "speaker" (a linguistic category). In other words, to say "Juan is a Maya" means either: "Juan is a Maya (Indian)" or "Juan is a Maya (speaker)."

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What is the proper spelling, Yukatan or Yucatán? Yucatec or Yukatek? In Mexico Yucatan is spelled Yucatan, Yucatec is spelled Yucatec. The "c" in these words is sometimes changed to "k" according to the orthography established by the ALMG, Academia de Lenguas Mayas de Guatemala.

In Guatemala the Mayan linguists of the ALMG created a standardized orthography by which to write the Mayan . The Maya did not participate in this process of creating a standard set of rules for writing Mayan languages and do not subscribe to its norms. Remember, the Maya afterall are not nor do they live in Guatemala! The Mayans who are from Chiapas and Belize also did not participate in establishing this convention. As one might imagine, the non- Guatemalan Mayans have not subscribed to this convention except as an individual choice. Nonetheless, there are US academics, especially among archaeologists, who have adopted the ALMG to write any and all words in any Mayan language, including Proto-Mayan and Maya (i.e., Yucatec Maya).

Although this seems like a politically correct and respectful adoption of a norm that was defined by an Indigenous group, others might view this as a continuation of neocolonial imposition. While it is respectful of the Guatemalan Mayans, it is overtly disrespectful of the Mayans in other nations who use their own orthographies. For example, to spell Yucatán "Yukatan" and Yucatec "Yukatek" is blatantly respectful of the established and accepted Mexican conventions of spelling the proper names of places and languages in Mexico.

Further, the Maya -- that is, to be redundant, Maya from Yucatán -- have not agreed upon a single standard orthography for writing Maya, including the orthography established by Mayans of Guatemala. There are instead about 2 or 3 different orthographies currently in use and another 4 or 5 that have been used within the last 20 years. While there is no single standard there are many agreed upon conventions. Not only are there differences in the orthographies used by Maya linguists today, but one is likely to find variation in the way a Maya linguist currently writes Maya today and how she or he wrote Maya 3 years ago.

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