xoxouhqui (Mdz23r)
This element for "something blue-green" (xoxouhqui) has been carved from the compound sign for the place name, Xoxouhtla. It is a circle with the interior painted turquoise blue. The black ink blob was not intentional.
Stephanie Wood
This element underlines how blue and green overlap in Nahua color naming. Turquoise can be both green and blue, or something in between, at least in Western estimations. This visual representation of a color is reminiscent of the way yellow has been contained in a geometric shape and painted and turquoise again in texotli. Sometimes the shape that is colored in a glyph is shared by another glyph in a compound, as we see with the huarache colored turquoise (see below, right).
Stephanie Wood
c. 1541, but by 1553 at the latest
Stephanie Wood
colors, greens, blues, turquoise, colores, azules, verdes, turquesa
xoxouh(qui), something green, or blue-green, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/xoxouhqui
blue-green
verde
Stephanie Wood
Codex Mendoza, folio 23 recto, https://digital.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/objects/2fea788e-2aa2-4f08-b6d9-648c00..., image 56 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).