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Showing below up to 50 results in range #51 to #100.

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  1. Dakin, Karen. 2004. Nahuatl -ka words: evidence for a proto-Uto- Aztecan derivational pattern. STUF - Language Typology and Universals, 57(1) :6-22.
  2. Dakin, Karen. 2007. Final features and proto-Uto-Aztecan: A contribution using morphological reconstruction. in Joseph C. Salmons and Shannon Dubenion-Smith (eds.)Historical Linguistics 2005, John Benjamins, 295-310.
  3. Dakin, Karen and Wichmann, Søren, 2000. Cacao and chocolate: A Uto-Aztecan perspective. Ancient Mesoamerica, 11(1):55-75.
  4. Davletshin, Albert. 2012. "Proto-Uto-Aztecans on their way to the Proto-Aztecan homeland: linguistic evidence" (PDF). Journal of Language Relationship. 8 (8): 75–92.
  5. Dog
  6. Estrada Fernández, Zarina, Crescencio Buitimea Valenzuela, et al. 2004. Diccionario yaqui-español y textos. Obra de preservación lingüística. México D.F.: Plaza y Valdés.
  7. Eudeve lexicon
  8. Fire
  9. Foot
  10. Fowler, Catherine S. 1983. Some lexical clues to Uto-Aztecan prehistory. IJAL 49:224–57.
  11. Félix Armendáriz, Rolando Gpe. 2005. A Grammar of River Warihío. PhD Dissertation. Rice University .
  12. Garcia Salido, Gabriela and Verónica Reyes Taboada. 2023. Tepehuano del sureste de Santa María de Ocotán, Mezquital, Durango, México. Archivo de Lenguas Indígenas de México. Ciudad de México: Colegio de México.
  13. Greenhill, Simon J., Hannah J. Haynie, Robert M. Ross, Angela M. Chira, Johann-Mattis List, Lyle Campbell, Carlos A. Botero, and Russell D. Gray. 2023. A recent northern origin for the Uto-Aztecan family. Language 99(1): 81-107.
  14. Grimes, Joseph E., Pedro de la Cruz Ávila, José Carrillo Vicente, Filiberto Díaz, Roman Díaz, Antonio Rosa, and Toribio Rentería. 1981. El huichol: apuntes sobre el lexico. Ithaca: Cornell University Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics.
  15. Haugen, Jason D. 2009. Borrowed borrowings: Nahuatl loan words in English. Lexis: Journal in English Lexicology, (3).
  16. Heart
  17. Heath, Jeffrey. 1977. Uto-Aztecan morphophonemics. International journal of American linguistics 43:27–36.
  18. Hikwɨsɨ
  19. Hill, Jane H., 2011. Subgrouping in Uto-Aztecan. Language dynamics and change, 1(2):241-278.
  20. Hill, Jane H., and William L. Merrill. 2017. Uto-Aztecan Maize Agriculture: A Linguistic Puzzle from Southern California. Anthropological Linguistics 59(1): 1–23.
  21. Hill, Kenneth C. 2020. "Wick Miller's Uto-Aztecan Cognate Sets." Report 18, Volume I Survey of California and Other Indian Languages University of California, Berkeley
  22. Hiyaori
  23. Hopi lexicon
  24. Introduction: SUALEX
  25. Iturrioz Leza, J. L. & P. Gomez López. 2006. Gramática Wixárika. Lincom Europa, München
  26. Jicama
  27. Johnson, Jean B. and Irmgard W. de Johnson. 1947. Un vocabulario Varohio. Revista Mexicána de Estudios Antropológicos 9. 27-46.
  28. Karttunen, Frances E. 1992. An analytical dictionary of Nahuatl. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
  29. Katɨ
  30. Kaufman, Terrence. 1981. Uto-Aztecan Comparative Phonology. ms.
  31. Kaufman, Terrence. 2001. The history of the Nawa language group from the earliest times to the 16th century: Some preliminary results. PDLMA online.
  32. Kaufman, Terrence & John Justeson. 2009. Historical linguistics and Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica. Ancient Mesoamerica, 20:221–231
  33. Kiss
  34. Launey, Michel. 1978. Deux sources du passif d'aprés la morphologie nahuatl. Actes du XLIIe Congrès International des Américanistes: Congrès du Centenaire, Paris, 1976. IV: 471-484. Société des Américanistes, Paris.
  35. Launey, Michel. 1979. Introduction à la Langue et à la Litterature Aztèques. Paris: L'Harmattan
  36. León-Portilla, Miguel. 1956. La Filosofia Náhuatl: Estudiada en sus Fuentes. México, D.F.: Instituto Indigenista Interamericano.
  37. Lionnet, André. 1985. Relaciones internas de la rama sonorense. Amerindia. 27-57.
  38. Lionnet, Andrés. 1978. El idioma tubar y los tubares. Según documentos inéditos de C. S. Lumholtz y C. V. Hartman. Mexico: Universidad Iberoamericana
  39. Lionnet 1978
  40. List of reconstructed levels
  41. Louse
  42. Madajczak, Julia, & Pharao Hansen, M. (2016). Teotamachilizti: an analysis of the language in a Nahua sermon from colonial Guatemala. Colonial Latin American Review, 25(2), 220-244.
  43. Manaster-Ramer, Alexis. 1986. Genesis of Hopi Tones. International Journal of American Linguistics 52(2):154–160.
  44. Manaster-Ramer, Alexis. 1993. Blood, tears, and murder: the evidence for Proto-Uto-Aztecan syllable-final consonants. In Jaap van Marle (ed.) Historical Linguistics 1991, John Benjamins, 199-210
  45. Manaster-Ramer, Alexis. 1993. On Lenition in some Northern Uto-Aztecan Languages. International Journal of American Linguistics 59:334–341.
  46. Manaster-Ramer, Alexis. 1995. The Search for the Sources of the Nahuatl Saltillo. Anthropological Linguistics, 37(1): 1–15.
  47. Manaster-Ramer, Alexis. 1996. Eudeve and Huichol Evidence for Proto-Uto-Aztecan Phonology. Journal de La Société Des Américanistes, 82, 117–127.
  48. Manaster-Ramer, Alexis and Ralph C. Blight. 1993. Uto-Aztecan* ps (and* sp, too?). International Journal of American Linguistics, 59(1): 38-43.
  49. Manaster Ramer, Alexis. 1996. On Whorf's law and related questions of Aztecan phonology and etymology. International journal of American linguistics, 62(2):176-187.
  50. Mason, J. Alden. 1916. Tepecano, a Piman Language of western Mexico. Annals of the New York Academic Society. XXV: 309-416

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