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Mesoamerican languages
Spanish Diminutive Markers -Ito/-Ita in Mesoamerican Languages a Challenge for Acceptance of Gender Distinction Claudine Chamoreau
Santa Barbara Papers in Linguistics Volume 21 Proceedings from the 13Th Annual Workshop on American Indigenous Languages
Otomanguean Historical Linguistics: Past, Present and Prospects for the Future
The Numeral System of Purepecha: Historical and Typological Perspectives Kate Bellamy
The Data from Huave Borrowings
Introduction to the Languages and Their Speakers
JOURNAL of LANGUAGE and LINGUISTIC STUDIES Privative
On the External Relations of Purepecha
Nahuatl: the Influence of Spanish on the Language of the Aztecs
The Proto-Uto-Aztecan Cultivation Hypothesis: New Linguistic Evidence
Language Contact and Change in Mesoamerica and Beyond. Ed. by Karen Dakin, Claudia Parodi, and Natalie Operstein
Contact-Induced Change As an Innovation Claudine Chamoreau
Prosody in Mesoamerican Languages
Spatial Frames of Reference in Mesoamerican Languages
The Mesoamerican Indian Languages Cambridge Language Surveys
The Pueblo Region As a Linguistic Area: Diffusion Among the Indigenous Languages of the Southwest United States
Reconsidering the Puebloan Languages in a Southwestern Areal Context
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Linguistic Areas
The Contact Diffusion of Linguistic Practices Reference Frames in Mesoamerica
Assimilatory Processes in Chuxnabán Mixe
Headless Relative Clauses in Mesoamerican Languages, Pp
Uto-Aztecan Jason D
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Otomanguean Historical Linguistics: Exploring the Subgroups
Papers in Linguistics
Introduction: on Typological Change in Mesoamerica 1 Background
6. the Languages of Middle America Harry Van Der Hulst, Keren Rice
Ssila Bulletin
Mesoamerican Pilot Project Guide
Proto-Uto-Aztecans on Their Way to the Proto-Aztecan Homeland: Linguistic Evidence*