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Hyacinthe de CharenceyFrench linguist

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Hyacinthe de Charencey. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved August 21, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/106374/Hyacinthe-de-Charencey

Hyacinthe de Charencey

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Hyacinthe de Charencey (French linguist)
  • investigation of Mesoamerican languages ( in Mesoamerican Indian languages: Uto-Aztecan (1) )

    In 1859, Johann Karl Buschmann, a German philologist, correctly identified all the then-known Uto-Aztecan languages as forming a family. In 1883 a French philologist, Hyacinthe de Charencey, divided Uto-Aztecan into Oregonian (=Shoshonean) and Mexican (=Sonoran), and, in 1891, in the United States, anthropologist Daniel Brinton recognized Shoshonean and divided the Sonoran division (of this...

    in Mesoamerican Indian languages: Mixe-Zoque (14) )

    ...Zoquean group, and a Mixean group including Tapachultec. Glottochronological figures, however, suggest a three-way division, as shown in the table. The Mixe-Zoque family was correctly identified by Hyacinthe de Charencey in 1883. The Texistepec, Sayula, and Oluta languages of this family are all locally called Populuca.

Mixe-Zoque languages
Johann Karl Buschmann (German linguist)
  • study of Uto-Aztecan languages Mesoamerican Indian languages

    In 1859, Johann Karl Buschmann, a German philologist, correctly identified all the then-known Uto-Aztecan languages as forming a family. In 1883 a French philologist, Hyacinthe de Charencey, divided Uto-Aztecan into Oregonian (=Shoshonean) and Mexican (=Sonoran), and, in 1891, in the United States, anthropologist Daniel Brinton recognized Shoshonean and...

Daniel Brinton (American anthropologist)
  • study of South American Indian languages ( in Mesoamerican Indian languages: Uto-Aztecan (1) )

    ...as forming a family. In 1883 a French philologist, Hyacinthe de Charencey, divided Uto-Aztecan into Oregonian (=Shoshonean) and Mexican (=Sonoran), and, in 1891, in the United States, anthropologist Daniel Brinton recognized Shoshonean and divided the Sonoran division (of this article) into Nahuatlan (=Nahuan) and Sonoran (=the Sonoran of this article minus Nahuan). Brinton’s division was...

    in South American Indian languages: Classification of the South American Indian languages )

    There have been many linguistic classifications for this area. The first general and well-grounded one was that by U.S. anthropologist Daniel Brinton (1891), based on grammatical criteria and a restricted word list, in which about 73 families are recognized. In 1913 Alexander Chamberlain, an anthropologist, published a new classification in the United States, which remained standard for several...

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