Anthropologists are racing to compile a dictionary of the centuries-old Ayapaneco tongue, spoken in Mexico. There are just two people left who can speak it fluently – but they refuse to talk to each other. Manuel Segovia, 75, and Isidro Velazquez, 69, live 500 metres apart in the village of Ayapa in the tropical lowlands of the southern state of Tabasco. It is not clear whether there is a long-buried argument behind their mutual avoidance, but people who know them say they have never really enjoyed each other's company.
The dictionary is part of a race against time to revitalise the language before it is definitively too late. "When I was a boy everybody spoke it," Segovia told the Guardian by phone. "It's disappeared little by little, and now I suppose it might die with me." This compiled dictionary is due out later this year.
The rest of the report can be read here, and a full list of the endangered languages of the world can be viewed here; this long list includes languages that are vulnerable, those that are definitely endangered, those critically endangered, & those which are extinct.
No comments:
Post a Comment