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  1. Adelaar, Willem F. H. & Pieter C. Muysken. 2004. Genetic relations of South American Indian languages. in The Languages of the Andes. Cambridge University Press.
  2. Bascom, Burt. 1965. Proto-Tepiman (Tepehuán-Piman). Doctoral dissertation: University of Washington.
  3. Bascom, Burt and Gregorio Molina. 1998. Diccionario Tepehuán de Baborigame, Chihuahua. Catalina, Arizona: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano.
  4. Big cat
  5. Boas, Franz. 1917. El dialecto mexicano de Pochutla, Oaxaca. International Journal of American Linguistics 1:9–44.
  6. Brambila, David. 1976. Diccionario raramuri-castellano (tarahumar). México, DF: Obra Nacional de la Buena Prensa
  7. Brown, Cecil. H. 2011. The Role of Nahuatl in the Formation of Mesoamerica as a Linguistic Area. Language Dynamics and Change, 1(2), 171-204.
  8. Buelna, Eustaquio (ed). 1989 (1890). Arte de la Lengua Cahita: por un padre de la Compañia de Jesús. Edición facsimilar. México: Siglo Veintinuo Editores
  9. Buitimea Valenzuela, Crescencio; Zarina Estrada Fernández; Aarón Grageda Bustamante; Manuel Carlos Silva Encinas. 2016. Diccionario Yaqui de Bolsillo. Hermosillo, Sonora: Universidad de Sonora.
  10. Caballero, Gabriela, 2011. Behind the Mexican mountains: Recent developments and new directions in research on Uto‐Aztecan languages. Language and Linguistics Compass, 5(7):485-504.
  11. Campbell, Lyle. 1985. The Pipil Language of El Salvador. Mouton.
  12. Campbell, Lyle & Ronald W. Langacker. 1978. ”Proto-Aztecan vowels: part I, II, III”. International Journal of American Linguistics, 44(2, 3, 4): 85-102, 197-210, 262-79.
  13. Canger, Una. 1980. Five Studies Inspired by Nahuatl Verbs in -oa, Travaux du cercle linguistique de Copenhague, no. 19. Copenhagen
  14. Canger, Una. 1988. Nahuatl Dialectology: A Survey and Some Suggestions. International Journal of American Linguistics, 54(1):28-72
  15. Canger, Una. 2011. "El nauatl urbano de Tlatelolco/Tenochtitlan, resultado de convergencia entre dialectos, con un esbozo brevisimo de la historia de los dialectos". Estudios de Cultura Náhuatl (Mexico: UNAM), 243–258.
  16. Canger, Una. 2017."A Nawatl Dialect with a Shallow History." Ms.
  17. Canger, Una. 2022. Nawatl of North Guerrero, Not a Descendant of Reconstructed Common Nawatl. Estudios de Cultura Náhuatl, 63, 135-156.
  18. Canger, Una and Karen Dakin. 1985. An inconspicuous basic split in Nahuatl. International Journal of American Linguistics 51: 358–361.
  19. Carochi, Horacio. 1983 (1645). Arte de la lengua Mexicana con la Declaración de los Adverbios Della. ed. facisimilar. México: UNAM.
  20. Carochi, Horacio. 2001. Grammar of the Mexican language: with an explanation of its adverbs (1645). James Lockhart (translator, ed.). Stanford University Press.
  21. Carochi, Horacio. 2002. Grammar of the Mexican language: with an explanation of its adverbs (1645). James Lockhart (translator). Stanford University Press.
  22. Casad, Eugene. 2019. Diccionario Cora de Jesús María, Borrador. (ms). Catalina, Arizona: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano.
  23. Casad, Eugene 1984. Cora. In Langacker, Ronald W. (ed.) Studies in Uto-Aztecan Grammar vol 4: Uto-Aztecan Grammatical Sketches. Pp. 151-456. Dallas, TX: Summer Institute of Linguistics.
  24. Coyote
  25. Dakin, Karen. 1982. La evolución fonológica del protonáhuatl. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Instituto de Investigaciones Filológicas.
  26. Dakin, Karen. 1983. Proto-Aztecan vowels and Pochutec: An alternative analysis. International Journal of American Linguistics, 49(2): 196-203.
  27. Dakin, Karen. 1989. Sugerencias Acerca Del Origen Yutoazteca De *il- En náhuatl. Estudios De Cultura Náhuatl 19:347-59.
  28. Dakin, Karen. 1990. Raíces en IH- y AH-en el náhuatl y la **p Protoyutoazteca. Estudios De Cultura Náhuatl 20:261-80.
  29. Dakin, Karen. 1993. Composición Yutoazteca En El náhuatl: Algunas etimologías. Estudios De Cultura Náhuatl 23:47-51.
  30. Dakin, Karen. 1994. El náhuatl en el yutoazteca sureño: algunas isoglosas gramaticales y fonológicas. Investigaciones lingüísticas en Mesoamérica, México: UNAM, 53-86.
  31. Dakin, Karen. 1996. "Huesos" en el náhuatl: etimologías yutoaztecas. Estudios de Cultura Náhuatl, 26:309-325.
  32. Dakin, Karen. 2000. Proto-Uto-Aztecan *p and the e/ye isogloss in Nahuatl Dialectology. In Eugene Casad & Thomas Willett (eds.) Uto- Aztecan: Structural, Temporal, and Geographic Perspectives. Hermosillo, Mexico: University of Sonora, 213-19
  33. Dakin, Karen. 2001. Animals and vegetables, Uto-Aztecan noun derivation, semantic classification, and cultural history. in Laurel J. Brinton (ed.), Historical Linguistics 1999. John Benjamins, 105-117.
  34. Dakin, Karen. 2003. Uto-Aztecan in the linguistic stratigraphy of Mesoamerican prehistory. in Henning Andersen (ed.) Language Contacts in Prehistory: Studies in Stratigraphy. John Benjamins, 259-288.
  35. Dakin, Karen. 2004. Nahuatl -ka words: evidence for a proto-Uto- Aztecan derivational pattern. STUF - Language Typology and Universals, 57(1) :6-22.
  36. 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.
  37. Dakin, Karen and Wichmann, Søren, 2000. Cacao and chocolate: A Uto-Aztecan perspective. Ancient Mesoamerica, 11(1):55-75.
  38. 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.
  39. Estrada Fernández, Zarina, Crescencio Buitimea Valenzuela, et al. 2004. Diccionario yaqui-español y textos. Obra de preservación lingüística. México D.F.: Plaza y Valdés.
  40. Fowler, Catherine S. 1983. Some lexical clues to Uto-Aztecan prehistory. IJAL 49:224–57.
  41. Félix Armendáriz, Rolando Gpe. 2005. A Grammar of River Warihío. PhD Dissertation. Rice University .
  42. 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.
  43. 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.
  44. 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.
  45. Haugen, Jason D. 2009. Borrowed borrowings: Nahuatl loan words in English. Lexis: Journal in English Lexicology, (3).
  46. Heath, Jeffrey. 1977. Uto-Aztecan morphophonemics. International journal of American linguistics 43:27–36.
  47. Hill, Jane H., 2011. Subgrouping in Uto-Aztecan. Language dynamics and change, 1(2):241-278.
  48. Hill, Jane H., and William L. Merrill. 2017. Uto-Aztecan Maize Agriculture: A Linguistic Puzzle from Southern California. Anthropological Linguistics 59(1): 1–23.
  49. 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
  50. Introduction: SUALEX

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