popoca (MH483v)
This element for the verb "it smokes" (popoca) has been carved from the compound sign for the personal name, Atlpopoca. It consists of three upright, curling puffs of smoke, drawn in dark in and left natural. Two or three additional, straight lines emanate up from the same region. In the original compound glyph, these marks were rising up from swirling water with flames on top.
Stephanie Wood
1560
Stephanie Wood
smoke, humo, smoking, humear, humeando
popoca, to smoke, i.e. for smoke to emerge from something, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/popoca
el humo se eleva
Matrícula de Huexotzinco, folio 483v, World Digital Library. https://www.loc.gov/resource/gdcwdl.wdl_15282/?sp=46&st=image.
This manuscript is hosted by the Library of Congress and the World Digital Library; used here with the Creative Commons, “Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License” (CC-BY-NC-SAq 3.0).