Grammars are published for Sochiapam Chinantec, and a grammar and a dictionary of Palantla (Tlatepuzco) Chinantec.
Syntax Chinantecan languages have
VSO as their unmarked word order, with focused constituents typically being able to be fronted before the verb, and are strongly head-initial, as is the case for most Otomanguean languages. The following examples from San Juan Quiotepec Chinantec demonstrate basic word order facts: }} In Lealao Chinantec, however, default word order in transitive sentences with non-pronominal subjects is
VOS: }} Example phrase: :
ca¹-dsén¹=jni chi³ chieh³ :‘I pulled out the hen (from the box). The parts of this sentence are:
ca¹ a
prefix which marks the
past tense,
dsén¹ which is the
verb stem meaning "to pull out an animate object", the
suffix -
jni referring to the
first person, the
noun classifier chi³ and the
noun chieh³ meaning chicken.
Animacy Chinantecan languages group nouns into one of two genders based on
animacy. Animals, humans, and some natural phenomena such as thunder or stars which are considered spirits in Chinantec mythology are animate, while plants and body parts are inanimate. Animacy is not overtly marked on the noun itself, but adjectives, demonstratives, quantifiers, numerals, and in some languages relativizers agree with the noun they modify in animacy. In most languages, the reflex of the marker of animate gender involves a nasal element, either nasalization of the stem, or a postvocalic nasal, for which reason Rensch (1989) reconstructs *-ŋ as the proto-Chinantecan marker of animacy. In some languages, however, "the marker is primarily a high front vowel or palatal semivowel," thought to be either cognate with or synchronically identical to a 3rd person marker descended from *-i, "but in every case there is some involvement of nasalization," and in other languages, both occur, either together or in complementary distribution. Furthermore, in some languages, animacy agreement with nouns may be marked by changes in tone and stress, stem
apophony, and even
suppletion. }} Verbs agree with one of their core arguments in animacy as well, following an ergative pattern where intransitive verbs agree with the subject, and transitive verbs agree with the patient. Verbs thus fall into one of at least 4 transitivity-animacy classes, conventionally labelled (Inanimate Intransitive), (Animate Intransitive), (Transitive Inanimate), and (Transitive Animate), in a scheme like the one used for the
Algonquian languages. The following examples from Tepetotula Chinantec demonstrate the 4 agreement patterns with the verbs
stand (),
stand (),
leave (),
leave (). Note the presence of nasalization and differing vowel quality in the animate verb stems.
Verbs Verbs in Chinantecan languages have the following structure: • a number of prefixes which typically co-occur in a fixed order; express categories such as
tense,
aspect,
mood,
evidentiality,
movement, and posture; and select for only certain tense-aspect forms of the stem; • an obligatory stem, which inflects for 4 core
persons (, , , ) and a number of tense, aspect, and motion categories through a combination of tone, vowel length, ballisticity, glottal coda, and ablaut, the last of which is thought to reflect the alternation between the proto-Chinantecan palatal and non-palatal vowel series; • suffixes or
enclitics which mark certain grammatical persons not distinguished by tone and other internal changes in the verb stem, typically , , and
clusivity distinctions in the first-person plural. In some languages, postposed free-standing pronouns are instead used. In summary, the full range of
tense-aspect-mood distinctions in a language is expressed by the tense-aspect series of the stem in combination with its prefixes, and
person by the person series of the stem in combination with its suffixes or free-standing pronouns. {{interlinear While the shape of the stem used for a given combination of person and
tense-aspect-mood may appear unpredictable, "starting from Merrifield (1968), the existing descriptive tradition of Chinantecan languages from the SIL suggests that the entire paradigm of a verb is retrievable from the inflectional information provided by only 12 cells," which represent the product of the 4 core persons, and 3 core tense-aspect categories, termed Progressive, Intentive, and Completive (alternatively Present, Future, and Past, respectively). The form of the stem used for categories beyond the 3 core tense-aspects is thus predictable from one of the 12 forms. ==Whistled speech==