-
Cotoname was a
Pakawan language spoken by
Native Americans indigenous to the
lower Rio
Grande Valley of
northeastern Mexico and
extreme southern Texas...
- with the
Cotoname and Coa****lteco
languages into a
family called Coa****ltecan. John R.
Swanton (1915)
grouped together the Comecrudo,
Cotoname, Coa****lteco...
-
called Meacknan or Miákan by the
neighboring Cotoname (Gatschet 1886: 54)
while they
called the
Cotoname Yué.
Garza is
Spanish for "heron." Berlandier...
- diversity. A few
words are
known from
seven different languages: Comecrudo,
Cotoname, Aranama, Solano, Mamulique, Garza, and Coa****lteco or Pakawa.[citation...
- † Coa****lteco †
Comecrudan (United
States & Mexico) (3) †
Coosan (2) †
Cotoname †
Eskaleut (7)
Esselen †
Haida Iroquoian (11)
Kalapuyan (3) † Karankawa...
-
found the last
known survivors of Coa****ltecan bands: 25 Comecrudo, 1
Cotoname, and 2 Pakawa. They were
living near Reynosa, Mexico. The Coa****ltecan...
-
today extinct. Five
clear Pakawan languages are attested: Coa****lteco,
Cotoname, Comecrudo,
Garza and Mamulique. The
first three were
first proposed to...
- Cocopah,
Coeur d'Alene,
Colorado River, Columbia-Moses, Comanche, Coree,
Cotoname, Cowlitz, Cree, Crow, Cruzeño, Cupeño,
Eastern Pomo, Erie, Esselen, Etchemin...
-
Pueblo Indigenous languages Araname† Atacapan† Borrado†
Caddo Coa****ltecan†
Cotoname† Garzan† Pakawan† Solano†
Tamaulipecan Tanpachoan† Tiwa Tonkawan† Wichita†...
-
which became extinct.
Other language isolates such as Coa****lteco and
Cotoname,
sometimes grouped under Pakawan, were once
spoken in
Southern Texas. Other...