E

Letter E: Displaying 501 - 520 of 544
eswiɑː
Orthographic Variants: 
ezuia

to become bloody, to bleed; or, to make something bleed (see Molina)

1. to smear blood on s.o. 2. for a healer to sprinkle blood on paper cuttings of deities.
# niqu. Una persona, un animal domestico y un animal silvestre lo embarre a otro de sangre en su cuerpo. “Edgar me embarró de sangre con su mano cuando se cortó”.
Orthographic Variants: 
ezuitum

for a woman to have her monthly period arrive (see Molina)

a bloody captive; also, a personal name (attested as male)

(Tepetlaoztoc, mid-sixteenth century)
Barbara J. Williams and H. R. Harvey, The Códice de Santa María Asunción: Facsimile and Commentary: Households and Lands in Sixteenth-Century Tepetlaoztoc (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1997), 75, 149.

esmeːyɑ
Orthographic Variants: 
ezmēya

to spurt blood (see Karttunen)

esmoloːni

for one's blood to flow, to bleed (see Molina)

esmoloːnilistɬi

a bloody rain, or a bloody downpour (see Molina)

for blood to spurt and bubble out of a wound.
blood sausage.
esneloɑ

to become bloody, to get someone else bloody, or to make something bloody (see Molina)

Orthographic Variants: 
eezo

bloody

to get bloody (see Molina)

Orthographic Variants: 
eezotia

to make something bloody (see Molina)

an ingredient used in a medicine for those who are spitting up blood

Martín de la Cruz, Libellus de medicinalibus indorum herbis; manuscrito azteca de 1552; segun traducción latina de Juan Badiano; versión española con estudios comentarios por diversos autores (Mexico: Fondo de Cultural Económica; Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, 1991), 33 [20r.].

espɑhtɬy
Orthographic Variants: 
ezpahtly, ezpatly, ezpahtli

medicinal plant, the bark of which produces a red dye (Jatropha spatulata) (see Karttunen)

espetɬɑtɬ

a mat that has been prepared or painted red (see Molina)

espipikɑ

to bleed (see Molina)

espipikɑlistɬi

a bloody rain (see Molina); i.e. a loss of blood, or a flowing or spilling of blood (Siméon)

1. to smear blood on s.o. or s.t. 2. for the healer to apply chicken or turkey blood to paper cuttings during the Tlatlacualtiah ceremony.
1. to scratch a rash and cause it to bleed. 2. to hit s.o. and cause them to bleed.