Resources

Teenek Resources

The greeting tajk'aneenek, meaning 'it has brightened', is the traditional way to say 'good morning' in Wastek Mayan (also written Huastec or Huasteco), which native speakers refer to as Teenek. This is my primary language of study in Mayan linguistics. Along with wakleneenek 'it has become afternoon' and thamk'uneenek 'it has become evening', tajk'aneenek is most often shortened to k'aneenek or just neenek when greeting people! 

Platform for finding, sharing and discussing Teenek linguistics 

Resources in Spanish for learning the Teenek (Wastek) language

Fieldwork

Repository of downloadable story cards for field work 

Questionnaires, stimuli, and other field work tools

Comparative Linguistics

Kaufman and Justeson's 2003 reconstruction of Mayan etyma

BLR 3 - the most current reconstructions for Proto-Bantu

Searchable database of Aramaic lexical items spanning all dialects and periods

Interactive audio and visual lexicon across Celtic languages - in progress

Database of etyma from Pokorny's 1959 Indogermanisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch

Archived PDFs of Pokorny's 1959 Indogermanisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch

Database of etyma for Late PIE based on Fernando López-Menchero's 2017 work

Project identifying syntactic differences between English dialects

Some conferences I attended

Find genral information on conference dates, calls for abstracts, etc. 

Find conference dates, news, and the journal Linguistic Typology

CILLA VIII site - Keep up to date on Linguist List for next conference date/location

FAMLi 5 site - Keep up to date on Linguist List for next conference date/location

ICHL24 site - Keep up to date on Linguist List for next conference date/location

WSCLA 23 site - Keep up to date on Linguist List for next conference date/location