Cuapeso (MH579v)
This black-line drawing of the simplex glyph for the personal name Cuapeso (“Head-Scale,” or "Wooden Scale," attested here as a man’s name) shows a frontal view of a European-style scale involving a balance with two cups suspended from a horizontal bar that is also suspended itself. What may be vertical bar hangs down between the cups.
Stephanie Wood
The loanword "peso" came from Spanish into Nahuatl, often as peso and sometimes as pexo (and other spellings), as our Online Nahuatl Dictionary shows. Peso refers to the weight or the act of weighing (the verb is pesar). Balanza is typically the word for the scale. If part of this scale is wooden, then the (cua-) part of the name should possibly be written as cuauh-.
Stephanie Wood
juā. guapeso
Juan Cuapeso
Stephanie Wood
1560
Jeff Haskett-Wood
weights, pesos, balances, scales, heads, cabezas, balanzas, quapeso, cuapexo, quapexo, tlaoctacatiloni

cua, head, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/cua-2
cua(itl), head, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/cuaitl
peso, a scale, or a coin, a Spanish unit of money; this is a loanword from Spanish, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/peso
Cabeza-Balanza
Stephanie Wood
Matrícula de Huexotzinco, folio 579v, https://www.loc.gov/resource/gdcwdl.wdl_15282/?sp=238&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).
