Pisaflores Tepehua

It is spoken in the towns of Ixhuatlán de Madero and Pisaflores.[2] Pisaflores Tepehua syllable structure is summarized by MacKay and Treschel (2013) as:[3] That is, Pisaflores Tepehua syllables must start with a consonant or two-consonant cluster, have one vowel sound, and may end without consonants or with a consonant or two-consonant cluster.Phonological restrictions apply:This article related to the Indigenous languages of the Americas is a stub.You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article about culture in Mexico is a stub.
MexicoVeracruzLanguage familyTotonacanTepehuaISO 639-3GlottologTepehua languageIxhuatlán de MaderoPisafloresLabialAlveolarAlveo-palatalPalatalGlottalcentrallateralpulmonicejectiveAffricateFricativeApproximantsyllable structureNucleusEthnologueInternational Journal of American LinguisticsThe University of ChicagoIndigenous languages of the Americas