yacatl (Mdz10v)
This element for a nose (yacatl) has been carved from the compound sign for the place name, Tepeyacac. It is a nose drawn in profile, facing to the viewer's left, and painted a terracotta color.
Stephanie Wood
This nose is not intended to convey any meaning about human anatomy other than that a nose is reminiscent of a point. But here, the landscape feature of importance is a ridge, point, or peak.
Stephanie Wood
c. 1541, but by 1553 at the latest
Stephanie Wood
noses, narices, picos, crestas, puntas, ridges
yaca(tl), nose, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/yacatl
-yacac (locative suffix), at the point of, at the ridge, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/yacac
nose
Stephanie Wood
Codex Mendoza, folio 10 verso, https://digital.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/objects/2fea788e-2aa2-4f08-b6d9-648c00..., image 31 of 188.
The Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, hold the original manuscript, the MS. Arch. Selden. A. 1. This image is published here under the UK Creative Commons, “Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License” (CC-BY-NC-SA 3.0).