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Classical Nahuatl grammar : ウィキペディア英語版 | Classical Nahuatl grammar The grammar of Classical Nahuatl is agglutinative, head-marking, and makes extensive use of compounding, noun incorporation and derivation. That is, it can add many different prefixes and suffixes to a root until very long words are formed. Very long verbal forms or nouns created through incorporation and accumulation of prefixes are common in literary works. This also means that new words can be created at will. == Orthography used in this article== Vowel length was phonologically distinctive in this language. Long vowels are indicated with a macron above the vowel letter: <ā, ē, ī, ō>. Saltillo (glottal stop consonant, ()) is indicated with an ''h''. The grammarian Horacio Carochi (1645) represented ''saltillo'' by marking diacritics on the preceding vowel: grave accent on nonfinal vowels <à, ì, è, ò> and circumflex on final vowels <â, î, ê, ô>. In the history of this language, both in its actual use and in the studies by all other colonial era grammarians other than Carochi, long vowels and the ''saltillo'' were rarely indicated. To give an adequate description of the classical Nahuatl language, it is, however, essential to mark them.
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