saltillo
See also: Saltillo
English
Etymology
Noun
saltillo (plural saltillos)
- In Mexican languages, especially Nahuatl, a glottal stop or fricative sound.
- In mostly Hispanophone countries, especially Mexico, an apostrophe-like letter (lowercase ꞌ and in some orthographies capital Ꞌ) used to represent a glottal stop.
Quotations
- 1915: Nahuatl ’ (saltillo) can be clearly shown to be developed in certain cases from syllabically final -t or -k, ... —Southern Paiute and Nahuatl - A Study in Utoaztekan, Part II, Edward Sapir, American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 17, No. 2 (Apr.-Jun., 1915)
- 1937: In Aztec the second ultra-short vowel is syncopated, leaving however the glottal consonant or “saltillo,” ... —The Origin of Aztec Tl, B.L. Whorf, American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 39, No. 2 (Apr.-Jun., 1937)
- 1960: ... the grave accent for the saltillo, as in tàtli /taˀλi/ father; and the circumflex for the ‘saltillo final’, as in tātlî /ta·λiˀ/ we drink. ... The saltillo of Rincón corresponds to that of Carochi, with the additional information from Rincón that the saltillo ‘solamente se halla en la sílaba breve’. —'Accent' in Classical Aztec, William Bright, International Journal of American Linguistics, Vol. 26, No. 1. (Jan. 1960)
- 1993: Third, Whorf’s hypotheses concerning the origin of “saltillo” (basically glottal stop) are an important stage in the development of Uto-Aztecan linguistics, and in the study of Nahuatl in particular. —Pitch Tone and the "Saltillo" in Modern and Ancient Nahuatl, Lyle Campbell and Frances Karttunen, International Journal of American Linguistics, Vol. 59, No. 2 (Apr., 1993)
- 2005?: The famous "saltillo" is a glottal stop [ʔ] in some variants, or a fricative [h] in others, but there are not two separate glottal phonemes. —Nahuatl Consonants, David Tuggy [1]
Anagrams
Spanish
Etymology
From salto (“jump”) + -illo (diminutive), from Latin saltus, from saliō (“to jump”), from Proto-Indo-European *sal-yo-.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /salˈtiʝo/ [sal̪ˈt̪i.ʝo] (most of Spain and Latin America)
- IPA(key): /salˈtiʎo/ [sal̪ˈt̪i.ʎo] (rural northern Spain, Andes Mountains, Paraguay, Philippines)
- IPA(key): /salˈtiʃo/ [sal̪ˈt̪i.ʃo] (Buenos Aires and environs)
- IPA(key): /salˈtiʒo/ [sal̪ˈt̪i.ʒo] (elsewhere in Argentina and Uruguay)
- Rhymes: -iʝo (most of Spain and Latin America)
- Rhymes: -iʎo (rural northern Spain, Andes Mountains, Paraguay, Philippines)
- Rhymes: -iʃo (Buenos Aires and environs)
- Rhymes: -iʒo (elsewhere in Argentina and Uruguay)
- Syllabification: sal‧ti‧llo
Noun
saltillo m (plural saltillos)
- saltillo
- (uncommon) a (relatively small) waterfall
- Coordinate term: salto
- 1987, Humberto Buentello Chapa, Toponimias de Nuevo León, page 31:
- […] cascada, que no era con mucho lo que se pensaba, modificó su opinión con estos términos: “se nos ha vuelto el ... un saltillo”.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 2006, Contenido, issues 513-518, page 99:
- […] cascada (un "saltillo" de agua) que había en el sitio original del asentamiento.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
Descendants
- → English: saltillo