mxb ISO 639

To̱ꞌon nda’í Autonyms

Mixtec, Tezoatlán

  • Geography

    MX Oaxaca state: Tezoatlán area, San Andrés Yutatío, San Isidro de Zaragoza, San Juan Diquiyú, San Marcos de Garzón, San Martín del Río, San Valentín de Gomez, Santa Catarina Yotandú, Yucuñuti de Benito Juárez, and Yucuquimi de Ocampo.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Mexico

mxb
Mixteco de Tezoatlán de Segura y Luna, Mixteco del Municipio de Tezoatlán, Mixteco del Noroeste Central Alto, Mixteco del Noroeste Central Bajo, Mixteco del Noroeste Medio, Mixteco del Oeste Alto, Tu’un davi, Tu’un djavi, Tu’un javi, Tu’un nda’i
To̱ꞌon nda’í
5,080 (2005 census). Total Mixtec speakers: 527,000 (2020 INEGI). 670 monolinguals.
Oaxaca state: Tezoatlán area, San Andrés Yutatío, San Isidro de Zaragoza, San Juan Diquiyú, San Marcos de Garzón, San Martín del Río, San Valentín de Gomez, Santa Catarina Yotandú, Yucuñuti de Benito Juárez, and Yucuquimi de Ocampo.
Southern Central Mexico
5 (Developing).
Otomanguean, Eastern Otomanguean, Amuzgo-Mixtecan, Mixtecan, Mixtec
None known. Those in each town speak a bit differently. 70%–80% intelligibility of Silacayoapan [mks].
Almost all speak Mixtec to their children, except in 2 towns where Spanish [spa] is mostly used. All domains, mostly oral; written use in church. Used by all. Neutral attitudes. A few also use English [eng]. Also use Spanish [spa], especially youth.
Because of different efforts by SIL, government officials and Mixtec organizations, more people are learning to read and write Mixtec. Literature. Dictionary. Grammar. NT: 2006.
Latin script [Latn].
Christian, traditional religion.
OLAC resources in and about Mixtec, Tezoatlán