otm ISO 639

Nyuhu Autonyms

Otomi, Eastern Highland

  • Geography

    MX Hidalgo state: Huehuetla, Otomi de la Sierra Baja, Otomi-Tepehua, and San Bartolo Tutotepec municipalities; Puebla state: Pahuatlan, Pantepec, Tlacuilotepec, Tlaxco municipalities; Veracruz state: Ixhuatlan de Madero and Tlachichilco municipalities.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Mexico

otm
Eastern Otomi, Otomí de Huehuetla, Otomí de la Sierra, Otomí de la Sierra Madre Oriental, Otomí de la Sierra Oriental, Otomí del Oriente, Sierra Oriental Otomi, Sierra Otomi, Yųhų, Yuhu
Nyuhu
49,300 (2007). Total Otomí speakers: 299,000 (2020 INEGI). 4,700 monolinguals.
Hidalgo state: Huehuetla, Otomi de la Sierra Baja, Otomi-Tepehua, and San Bartolo Tutotepec municipalities; Puebla state: Pahuatlan, Pantepec, Tlacuilotepec, Tlaxco municipalities; Veracruz state: Ixhuatlan de Madero and Tlachichilco municipalities.
Western Central Mexico
5* (Developing).
Otomanguean, Western Otomanguean, Oto-Pame-Chinantecan, Oto-Pamean, Otomi
None known. 81% intelligibility of Tenango [otn] (most similar), 51% of Mezquital [ote], 70%–79% of Texcatepec [otx].
VOS; short words, affixes, clitics; tonal.
Indigenous teachers teach L1 literacy. Positive attitudes. Also use Spanish [spa].
Literacy rate in L1: 1%. Literacy rate in L2: 40%. Literature. Dictionary. Grammar. NT: 1974–2009.
Latin script [Latn].
Traditional religion, Christian.
OLAC resources in and about Otomi, Eastern Highland