• Civilization 7 has been announced. For more info please check the forum here .

19 of 18 Civs now confirmed!

what is that spanish map for and what do you really discuss? i couldn't understand.
noone is underestimating spain and knowledge of seafaring.
i would like to see spain in vanilla, waiting till EP will be late. but it seems 18 is full already.

i really feel quechua of inca was not a mistake of that magazine and 18civs are mostly confirmed, persia being the 18th.
in just a few days maybe we get clearer answers.

btw, i wish we would have 25 flavours with 25 civs.
 
There is another possibility although remote. The author of the article could have mixed up Quechua with Quichean, one of the language of the ancient Mayans.

I see it as remote though as they wouldn't leave South America without representation I think.

Proto Mayan certainly is an extinct language though.




Mayan languages
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Mayan languages (alternatively: Maya languages)[1] form a language family spoken in Mesoamerica and northern Central America. Mayan languages are spoken by at least 6 million indigenous Maya, primarily in Guatemala, Mexico, Belize and Honduras. In 1996, Guatemala formally recognized 21 Mayan languages by name,[2] and Mexico recognizes eight more.[3]

The Mayan language family is one of the best documented and most studied in the Americas.[4] Modern Mayan languages descend from Proto-Mayan, a language thought to have been spoken at least 5,000 years ago; it has been partially reconstructed using the comparative method.

Mayan languages form part of the Mesoamerican Linguistic Area, an area of linguistic convergence developed throughout millennia of interaction between the peoples of Mesoamerica. All Mayan languages display the basic diagnostic traits of this linguistic area. For example, all use relational nouns instead of prepositions to indicate spatial relationships. They also possess grammatical and typological features that set them apart from other languages of Mesoamerica, such as the use of ergativity in the grammatical treatment of verbs and their subjects and objects, specific inflectional categories on verbs, and a special word class of "positionals" which is typical of all Mayan languages.

During the pre-Columbian era of Mesoamerican history, some Mayan languages were written in the Maya hieroglyphic script. Its use was particularly widespread during the Classic period of Maya civilization (c. 250–900 CE). The surviving corpus of over 10,000 known individual Maya inscriptions on buildings, monuments, pottery and bark-paper codices,[5] combined with the rich postcolonial literature in Mayan languages written in the Latin alphabet, provides a basis for the modern understanding of pre-Columbian history unparalleled in the Americas.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_language
 
Top Bottom