Page 113 - Key to Social Studies 6
P. 113

Let’s Observe                                Let’s Connect







 Languages That Developed in the Americas  The Americas' Languages in the Past vs. Today


 Nahuatl
            The Mesoamerican Languages in the Past
 Being a language of prestige in the
            The Mesoamerican area in the past did not have one common language, and there was not a time when
 Americas, Nahuatl was spread by the
            one language dominated the area. Historians explain that there were around 125 languages in the
 Aztecs. They also developed the
            Mesoamerican area, where each civilization spoke more than one language. Some languages were even
 language into a literary one and used it
            unwritten; they were sometimes drawn as most people in these civilizations used  gures and symbols as
 in poetry, chronicles, and literary works.
            their written language.
 The Spanish and the English languages
            The Central American Languages Today
 were also a ected by the Nahuatl
            Most countries in Central America today use Spanish as their main language in both speaking and
 language after the European conquests.
            writing. However, there are still some native languages, but the ones that exist today are fewer than in
 Some English words like chocolate,
            the past. Mayan languages are the second major languages spoken in Central America after Spanish,
 coyote, avocado, and tomato are of
            and then there are English and a number of other languages from the indigenous people of the
 Nahuatl origin.  Americas.
 A ceremony reviving the Aztec rituals in Mexico
 Quechua

 The Inca Empire spread the Quechua

 language in an attempt to expand their
            Mayan hieroglyphs
 empire and make all the people speak a

 common language so it would be easier

 for them to control.

 Quechua is known and still used to date

 along the Andes Mountains in countries

 such as Peru, Ecuador, and Bolivia.












 An indigenous Quechua girl in Peru
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