Tlacaxipehualiztli

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from Classical Nahuatl Tlācaxīpēhualiztli, from tlācatl (person) +‎ xīpēhua (to skin) +‎ -liztli (action suffix).

Proper noun[edit]

Tlacaxipehualiztli

  1. An Aztec religious festival.
    • [1604, José de Acosta, translated by E. G., The Naturall and Morall Historie of the East and West Indies, London, translation of Historia natural y moral delas Indias, page 386:
      THere was an other kinde of ſacrifice which they made in divers feaſts, which they called Racaxipe Velitzli[sic], which is as much as the fleaing of men.]
  2. A month of the Aztec calendar.
    • 1916, Herbert J. Spinden, “The question of the zodiac in America”, in American Anthropologist, volume 18, number 1, page 66:
      Tlacaxipeualiztli, the second Mexican month according to some authorities and the first according to others, began in 1521 on March 8th of our present calendar.