| Maratino | |
|---|---|
| Tamaulipeco | |
| Region | near Martín, Tamaulipas, NE Mexico | 
| Extinct | (date missing) | 
| unclassified | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | None ( mis) | 
| Glottolog | mara1266 | 
|  The location of Maratino in Tamaulipas state | |
Maratino is a poorly attested extinct language that was spoken in north-east Mexico, near Martín, Tamaulipas. Swanton, who called it 'Tamaulipeco', classified it as Uto-Aztecan based on a few obvious cognates, such as Maratino chiguat 'woman' ~ Nahuatl cihuātl 'woman' and peyot 'peyote' ~ Nahuatl peyotl, but other scholars have not considered this to be enough to classify the language.
Vocabulary
The following vocabulary list of Maratino is from John Swanton (1940: 122–124).[1]
- gloss - Maratino - able - kugtima - after the manner of - niwa - although - kuaahne - and - he - arrow - ciri - bird - magtc - bow - mahkā - but yet - kuaahne - children - tzikuini - come home, to - utepa - cord - pong - cry, to - mimigihi - deer - kons(gio) - (diminutive suffix) - -i - drink, to - baah(ka) - eat, to - migtikui - enemy - koapagtzi - escape, to - kugtima - far - kuiüsikuima - flee, to - pamini - forces - koh - forest (?) - tamu - go, to - nohgima - joy - maamehe - kill, to - paahtcu - leap, to - maatzimetzu - like - niwa - lion - xuri - little - -i - many - a-a - meat - migtikui - mountain - tamu - not - -he - now - mohka - our - ming - peyote - peyot - (plural suffix) - -a - run, to - kuino, kugtima - see, to - tepeh - shots - katama - shout, to - nohgima - shout for joy, to - maamehe - sleep, to - tutcē - strength - koh - the - tze - them - me - these - tze - to - tamu - unable - kugtimā - us - ko, ming - very - kuiüsikuima - war, to - tamu - we - ming - weep, to - mimigihi - without - -he - wolf - bum - woman - tciwat - woods - tamu - yet - kuaahne 
References
- ↑ Swanton, John. 1940. Linguistic material from the tribes of southern Texas and northern Mexico. (122–124)
Further reading
- Swanton, John. 1940. Linguistic material from the tribes of southern Texas and northern Mexico. (122–124)

Wiktionary has a word list at Appendix:Maratino word list
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