Classical Nahuatl

Classical Nahuatl
Nāhuatlāhtōlli
Pronunciation[naːwat͡ɬaʔˈtoːlːi]
Native toMexico
RegionAztec Empire. Postclassic Mesoamerica
Era14th to 16th century, during the Late Postclassic and after Conquest of Mexico in the Early Colonial Period
Standard forms
  • Tecpillāhtōlli

Colonial Nahuatl

Mixteca-Puebla Hieroglyphs (Aztec Script)/ Latin Alphabet (Nahuatl Alphabet)
Language codes
ISO 639-3nci
Glottologclas1250
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Classical Nahuatl, also known simply as Aztec or Codical Nahuatl (if it refers to the variants employed in the Mesoamerican Codices through the medium of Aztec Hieroglyphs) and Colonial Nahuatl (if written in Post-conquest documents in the Latin Alphabet), is a set of variants of Nahuatl spoken in the Valley of Mexico and central Mexico as a lingua franca at the time of the 16th-century Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire. During the subsequent centuries, it was largely displaced by Spanish and evolved into some of the modern Nahuan languages in use today (other modern dialects descend more directly from other 16th-century variants). Although classified as an extinct language,[1] Classical Nahuatl has survived through a multitude of written sources transcribed by Nahua peoples and Spaniards in the Latin script.

  1. ^ "Ethnologue summary for Classical Nahuatl". Archived from the original on 2013-02-18. Retrieved 2006-06-09.

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