Akateko stems from the Q'anjob'alan branch, making it closely related to Q’anjob’al and Chuj.[5]
History
Akateko was regarded as a dialect of the Qʼanjobʼal language until the 1970s, when linguists realized that it has a distinct grammar from that of Qʼanjobʼal.[6] That it has been thought a dialect of Qʼanjobʼal is reflected in the many names Akateko has had through time. One of its primary names before it was named Akateko was TiWestern Qʼanjobʼal, but it has also been called Conob and various names including Qʼanjobʼal and the municipality where it is spoken.
Akateko is closely related to the two Mayan languages, Qʼanjobʼal and Jakaltek. The three languages together form the Qʼanjobʼal-Jakaltek sub-branch, which together with the Mochoʼ language form the Qʼanjobʼalan sub-branch, which again, together with the Chujean languages, Chuj and Tojolabʼal, form the branch Qʼanjobalan–Chujean. It is believed that Qʼanjobʼal–Jakaltek split into Akateko, Qʼanjobʼal and Jakaltek some 500 to 1,500 years ago.[citation needed]
Classifiers in Akatek
Akateko, Q’anjob’al and Chuj all utilize similar classifiers to organize nouns. Nouns are divided into three categories: humans, animals and inanimate objects and there is no generic classifier. [5][7]
An interesting aspect of Akateko grammar, which is also present in most other Qʼanjobalan languages, is the use of directional morphemes, which appear as enclitics. These morphemes make it possible for the speaker to talk about movement and direction in space without pointing or using other gestures. Consider the stative verb[ʔej]to be, which can appear as [ʔejʔok]existing inwards, [ʔejtok]existing towards there, away from the speaker and listener and [ʔeːltox]existing from the inside out, using different enclitics.
Standard verb roots are classified in multiple categories at once.[8]
Vowel length is distinctive, so one can say that the total number of vowels is 10. These long vowels are a unique and recent sound change from Q'anjob'al.[9]
^ abZavala, Roberto (2000). Systems of Nominal Classifiers: Multiple classifier systems in Akatek (Mayan) (Gunter Seft ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 118.
^Henderson, Robert (2016). "Mayan Semantics". Language and Linguistics Compass. 10 (10): 551–588. doi:10.1111/lnc3.12187.
^Bennett, Ryan (2016). "Mayan phonology". Language and Linguistics Compass. 10 (10): 469–514. doi:10.1111/lnc3.12148.