X

Letter X: Displaying 841 - 860 of 1049
to get wet.
# persona, animal silvestre, animal domestico y cosas, una cosa que le haya agua. “ese bebe se mojo ayer y ahora le dio gripe.”
to wet s.o., an animal or s.t.
# una persona, animal silvestre y animal domestico le hecha agua o lo mete en el agua otro o una cosa. “Isabel mojo el piso porque esta sucio y quiere lavarlo.”
to get s.o.’s relative, animal or property wet.
# Persona deja que le halle agua una cosa de otro. “Ofelia cuando riega agua adentro siempre moja el libro de su hermanito.”

stupidity (see attestations)

ʃolopihkwiːtiɑ

to make someone stupid, or foolish (see Molina)

ʃolopihwiɑ
Orthographic Variants: 
xolopiuia

to do, or say nonsense (see Molina)

stupid, or poorly disciplined (see Molina)

stupidity (see Molina)

ʃolopihti

to become stupid (see Molina); to be foolish, to joke and lie like a fool (see Karttunen)

ʃolopihtikɑ

stupidly (see Molina)

ʃolopihtilistɬi
Orthographic Variants: 
xolopihtiliztli

a lie, a falsehood (see Karttunen)

ʃolopihtɬi
Orthographic Variants: 
xolopictli

idiot, simpleton, fool, dolt (see Molina, Lockhart, and Karttunen); also attested in contemporary Nahuatl as the devil (see attestations)

ʃolopihyoːtɬ
Orthographic Variants: 
xolopiotl

idiocy, stupidity, an act of stupidity

James Lockhart, Nahuatl as Written: Lessons in Older Written Nahuatl, with Copious Examples and Texts (Stanford: Stanford University Press and UCLA Latin American Studies, 2001), 241.

a person's name (attested as male), someone from Xolotlan; Xolotl can refer to a divine force and to the founder of the Chichimec empire; Xolotl can appear visually as a dog-like head or as pieces of wood or trees (see attestations)

nude person.
# persona, animal domestico o animal silvestre encuerado porque no tiene ropa o porque no tiene plumas. “ese puerco encuerado porque todavía no le salen vellos.”
ʃoloːtilmɑhtɬi

servant's livery (see Molina)

1) Xolotl, the name of a Chichimec ruler; said to have died at the age of 200, after ruling 112 years; 2) there is a sixteenth-century manuscript, the Codex Xolotl; 3) Xolotl, the name of the divine force of lightning and death, typically depicted as a dog-headed man; and 4), xolotl or xoloitzcuintli, a type of dog, the Mexican hairless

root of XŌLŌTIC. page, servant.

a little servant, a page boy (see Molina); perhaps also some kind of trade good (see attestations)

ʃomɑhwiɑ
Orthographic Variants: 
xomauia

to take something out with a spoon (see Molina)